Joe Donald Stanka (July 23, 1931 – October 15, 2018) was an Americans professional baseball player. The right-handed pitcher from Hammon, Oklahoma played for the Chicago White Sox of Major League Baseball in , and the Nankai Hawks and Taiyo Whales in Nippon Professional Baseball from to . He stood at tall and weighed .
In two games pitched and 5 MLB innings pitched, Stanka allowed two hits, two and four bases on balls; he strikeout three. His career 1–0 win–loss record was accompanied by a 3.38 earned run average.
He signed with the Nankai Hawks (now the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks) during the 1959 off-season. He was one of the first players to be signed from the Triple-A class of the minor leagues, and the team calculated that he should be able to win over 15 games in the Pacific League. White Sox owner Bill Veeck let him leave for Nankai on the condition that the Hawks would loan their ace, Tadashi Sugiura, to the White Sox if the Hawks were either out of or locked up the Pacific League pennant race by September . This never came to fruition, as the Hawks would battle the Daimai Orions to the end of the season, eventually finishing 2nd to the Orions by only four games.
Stanka entered the starting rotation in his first year, and marked a 17–12 record in his first year, leading the league with 103 walks allowed. He played his best season in 1964, winning 26 games, becoming the first player of non-Japanese descent to win Pacific League MVP, and the first to do so in Japan as a whole since Bucky Harris won it with the Korakuen Eagles in the fall of 1937. He then pitched shutouts in Games 1, 6, and 7 of the 1964 Japan Series against the Hanshin Tigers to win the Japan Series MVP award as well.
He continued to pitch for the Hawks in 1965, but left the team after his eldest son died in a tragic accident. He played for the Taiyo Whales in 1966 before retiring. He is tied with Gene Bacque for the most wins among American players in Japan, going 100–72 during his seven-year career in Japan.
Stanka appeared as himself on the January 1, 1962 episode of the game show To Tell The Truth.
Stanka died on October 15, 2018. In Memory of Joe Stanka
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