Glynn played for the Utica Blue Sox in 1947, a team that won the Governor's Cup as Eastern League champions. The Blue Sox were then a farm club of the Philadelphia Phillies. He briefly played for the 1949 Phils as a late September call-up. Traded to the Sacramento Solons of the Pacific Coast League after the 1951 campaign, he was acquired by the Indians in July of the following season. He remained with the Tribe into the spring of 1955, with his last MLB appearance occurring during the 1954 World Series against the New York Giants. Glynn appeared in Games 1 and 3, striking out against Marv Grissom in the tenth inning of the former, and doubling off Rubén Gómez in the latter.[2] His Indians lost both contests as the Giants swept them in four straight games.
^Marsh, Richard. "Bill Glynn". SABR.org. SABR. Retrieved August 11, 2016. William Vincent Glynn, who played for three seasons with the Indians in a four-year major-league career, was born on June 30, 1925, in Sussex, New Jersey, the second son of Marshall Nelson, a laborer in a zinc mine, and his wife, Esta. A premier athlete at Franklin High School, Glynn lettered as a first baseman in baseball, a running back in football, and a forward in basketball.