Roel de Mon


Roel de Mon was a Dutch baseball player. He was claimed to be the fastest Dutch pitcher of all time. He played most of his career between 1940 and 1948, winning the Hoofdklasse national baseball championship four times with and Schoten.

Career

Considered one of the most dominant pitchers of his era, Dutch baseball historian Chris Kabout observed that "when you managed to get a hit against , you had a starting spot in the Dutch national team."
World War II disrupted de Mon's international career. He played only two games internationally against Belgium and, right after the war, one against an American-Canadian Army team. An army officer who was a Major League manager in daily life invited de Mon to come and play baseball in the U.S. However, de Mon stayed in the Netherlands to help build up the country after the war.

Legacy

de Mon still possesses the Hoofdklasse records for single-season strikeouts and single-game strikeouts. He fanned 683 batters in 40 games in 1940, 1941 and 1943, averaging over 17 per game.
de Mon’s notorious superfast pitching had a backside: it caused a serious injury to his right arm and he had to end his baseball career in the late 1940s, to become an early living baseball legend.
de Mon died in 1973 after serious heart failure, at age 53. He was inducted into the Netherlands Baseball Hall of Fame in 1984.
Since 1969, the Roel de Mon Award has been awarded to the best pitcher in the Dutch youth league, which was called the Roel de Mon League till the late 1980s. Winners have included, Alexander Smit, David Bergman, and Tom de Blok.