He combined for a 1–7 record with a 4.24 earned run average in 48 games for Rome (12) and Trenton (36), allowing 87 hits in 87.0 innings of work.
Winsch was ascended to Class-A in 1944, his last minor league season, and finished with a 4–4 mark and a 4.04 ERA in 24 games with the Utica Blue Sox.
[2] In a three-year career, Winsch posted a 15–20 record with a 4.36 ERA in 112 games, allowing 216 runs (45 unearned) and 332 hits in 353.0 innings of work.
[2] In 1947 Winsch married Jean Faut, who at the time was ranked among the premier players in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
Winsch enjoyed a distinguished career in the last four years of the circuit, leading South Bend to consecutive championship titles in 1951 and 1952 and a playoff berth in 1954.
The Rockford Peaches held a 2–0 advantage in the series and looked to take it all, but South Bend rebounded and won the last three games to clinch the title.
In a four-year managing career, Winsch collected a record of 232 wins and 187 losses (.554 W-L%) during the regular season and went 11–7 (.611) in the postseason.
[3] Winsch is part of the AAGPBL permanent display at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum at Cooperstown, New York, opened in 1988, which is dedicated to the entire league rather than any individual player.