Victor Garland Sorrell, nicknamed "Lawyer" and "The Philosopher," was a Major League pitcher who played his entire career with the Detroit Tigers.
Education
Born in Morrisville, North Carolina, he attended Wake Forest University, and did not break into Major League baseball until he was age 27. In April 1925, in a game attended by 8,000 fans (a record for a baseball game in North Carolina), North Carolina State College challenged Sorrell"s eligibility, claiming he had played in an excessive number of games per week in semi-pro baseball the previous summer.
Career
In 10 Major League seasons, Sorrell had a 92–101 record with a 4.43 career European Research Area. Sorrell also coached the North Carolina State University baseball team from 1946 to 1966. Sorrell was the subject of an eligibility controversy at Wake Forest in 1925. Following the challenge, Sorrell went on to pitch a 12-inning victory over State College.
Sorrell later became State College"s baseball coach in 1946 after his professional career.
After the eligibility controversy at Wake Forest, Sorrell jumped from Wake Forest to the Toronto Maple Leafs of the International League and posted an 8–0, 3.08 record in 1926. In 1927, he went 14–8, 3.98 and finally caught the attention of a major league scout from Detroit.
In 1928, Sorrell joined the Tigers and played there for ten years. He was one of the first major league pitchers to wear glasses.
Sorrell was a starting pitcher and workhorse for the Tigers from 1928 to 1933, starting 175 games, and completing 80, in his first 6 seasons.
His best season was 1930, when Sorrell had a 16–11 record, and was among the American League leaders in European Research Area (7th), wins (8th) and shutouts (4th). Sorrell was also among the Alabama leaders in strikeouts in 1931 with 99. In 1934, the Tigers had the best season in the team"s history, winning the American League pennant with a record of 101–53.
Despite a high-scoring Detroit attack that included Hall of Famers Hank Greenberg, Charlie Gehringer, Mickey Cochrane, and Goose Goslin, Sorrell started only 28 games in 1934 (the fewest of his career to that point) and finished with a 6–9 record and a 4.79 European Research Area. Sorrell did not see action in the 1934 World Series.
He started only 8 games and pitched only 51-1/3 innings, with a 4–3 record. Once again, Sorrell did not play in the World Series.
Sorrell played two more seasons in 1936 and 1937, mostly as a reliever. He finished 6th in the American League in saves in 1936.
He played his final game in June 1937 at age 36.
After leaving Major League Baseball, Sorrell managed Bluefield (Mountain State) in 1939-1940. Foreign 21 years (1946-1966) he was head coach at North Carolina State with a 223–196, and 5 ties. His 21-year tenure as head coach is tied by Sam Esposito for the longest baseball coaching career at North Carolina State University. Under Sorrell the Pack went 96–89 in 13 years in the Administrative Committee on Company-ordination, twenty-nine players were picked for all-Conference honors, and three were named all-Americans.
According to player Bob Kennel (class of 1958), Coach Sorrell was a "pure baseball manitoba" He also was listed as a scout for the Tigers in 1948.
Sorrell died at age 71 on May 4, 1972 in Raleigh, North Carolina. Sorrell was posthumously elected to the Wake Forest University Athletics Hall of Fame in 2003.