Frank Mancuso Net Worth

Frank Mancuso Net Worth is
$950,000

Frank Mancuso Bio/Wiki, Net Worth, Married 2018

Frank Octavius Mancuso (May 23, 1918 – August 4, 2007) was a catcher in Major League Baseball who played for two teams between 1944 and 1947. Listed at 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m), 195 lb., Mancuso batted and threw right-handed. He was born in Houston, Texas. His older brother, Gus Mancuso, also was a major league catcher. Following his 18-year baseball career, Mancuso almost certainly had the longest continuous tenure of any elected city official in Houston history.Mancuso began playing baseball in 1937 in the minor league system of the New York Giants. After hitting .417 for Fort Smith in 1938, the Giants moved him up to their major league roster for the entire 1939 season as a third string catcher, but he did not get into a single game during the regular season. That disappointment was offset by the opportunity he had to warm up pitcher Carl Hubbell, and sharing the company of other great Giants like OF Mel Ott and manager Bill Terry. He was sent back to the minors before the 1940 season.After hitting .300 or more in three minor league seasons, Mancuso entered the U.S. Army as a paratrooper at Fort Benning, Georgia in December 1942 and was on his way to an accident that forever altered the course of his baseball career. In 1943, he suffered a broken back and leg when his chute opened late and improperly. He almost died from his injuries and was subsequently discharged from the service for medical reasons. A part of his injury was an unfortunate condition for a catcher, where in looking straight up caused him to lose the flow of oxygen to the brain, and he would pass out. As a result, he never regained all of his mobility after the parachute jump and was never responsible for catching pop-ups.Mancuso spent the rest of his life with back and legs pains, but he worked himself back into shape and returned to baseball in 1944 as one of two catchers for the only St. Louis Browns club to ever win an American League pennant. He shared duties with Red Hayworth, hitting .205 with one home run and 24 RBI in 88 games. The Browns lost to the St. Louis Cardinals in the 1944 World Series in six games, but Mancuso hit .667 (2-for-3) and collected one RBI in injury-limited pinch-hitting duty. His most productive season came in 1945, when he posted career-numbers in games (119), batting average (.268), RBI (38) and runs (39). In 1946 he hit .240 with a career-high three home runs in 87 games. He played his last major-league season with the Washington Senators in 1947.In a four-season career, Mancuso was a .241 hitter (241-for-1002) with five home runs and 98 RBI in 337 games, including 85 runs, 37 doubles, seven triples, and two stolen bases.From 1948 to 1955, Mancuso earned further respect as a catcher for top minor league clubs like Toledo and Beaumont, among others, and with the 1953 Houston Buffs, a minors club that preceded the Colt .45s & Astros. He also played winter baseball in the Venezuelan League during the 1950-51 and 1951-52 seasons. In his first season, he

Date Of Birth1918-05-23
Died2007-08-04
ProfessionActor

Actor

TitleYearStatusCharacter
Brooklyn's Finest2009Undercover Cop (uncredited)
The Departed2006Inmate (uncredited)
Say No to Strangers1990Video shortPolice Officer
The Street1988TV SeriesThug
Internal Affairs1988TV MovieColobian Drug Dealer (uncredited)
The Green Flash1988ShortHood #1 (uncredited)
Heart1987Security Guard (uncredited)
Slammer Girls1987Cop
Kojak: The Price of Justice1987TV MovieSecurity Guard (uncredited)
Wimps1986VideoOfficer #2
Apology1986TV MoviePolice Officer (uncredited)

Self

TitleYearStatusCharacter
The Montel Williams Show2007TV SeriesRapist
Icy Death1991Video documentary shortPolice Officer
Source
IMDB Wikipedia

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