Eddie Stanky
| Eddie Stanky | |
|---|---|
Stanky as player-manager of the Cardinals. | |
| Second baseman / Manager | |
| Born: September 3, 1916 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | |
| Died: June 16, 1999 (aged 82) Fairhope, Alabama | |
| Batted: Right | Threw: Right |
| MLB debut | |
| April 21, 1943, for the Chicago Cubs | |
| Last MLB appearance | |
| July 25, 1953, for the St. Louis Cardinals | |
| Career statistics | |
| Batting average | .268 |
| Hits | 1,154 |
| Runs batted in | 364 |
| Teams | |
| As player
As manager | |
| Career highlights and awards | |
Edward Raymond Stanky (September 3, 1916 – June 16, 1999), nicknamed "The Brat", was an American second baseman and manager in Major League Baseball. He played for the Chicago Cubs (1943–1944), Brooklyn Dodgers (1944–1947), Boston Braves (1948–1949), New York Giants (1950–1951) and St. Louis Cardinals (1952–1953). He was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and his original nickname, "The Brat from Kensington," is in reference to the neighborhood where he grew up.[1] It took Stanky 8 years to reach the major leagues at age 27, after starting out at Greenville, Mississippi, in the East Dixie League, where he was a teammate of future St. Louis Cardinals star Harry Brecheen, whom Stanky would manage in St. Louis in 1952.
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[edit] 'All he can do is win'
Stanky was famous for his ability to draw walks; he drew 100 or more walks in each of six different seasons, 140 or more in two of them. In 1946, he hit just .273 but his 137 walks allowed him to lead the league in OBP with .436, edging out Stan Musial—who led in more than ten hitting categories. His best season was probably 1950 with the Giants, when he hit an even .300 and led the league in walks (144) and OBP (.460). On August 30, he tied a major league record when he walked in seven consecutive at-bats (in two games).
Leo Durocher, who managed him with the Dodgers and Giants, once summed up Stanky's talents: "He can't hit, can't run, can't field. He's no nice guy ... all the little SOB can do is win." Yankee shortstop Phil Rizzuto still complained years later about a notorious play during Game 3 of the 1951 World Series in which Stanky kicked the ball loose from Rizzuto's glove as he slid into second base, instrumental in the Giant win that put them ahead two games to one, although they lost the next three and the Series with it. As a runner at third base with less than two out, he would station himself several feet back of the bag, in shallow left field. He would time the arc of any outfield fly and then take off running, step on third as the catch was being made and continue to run at full speed, making it almost impossible to throw him out at home, a tactic eventually outlawed as a result. He was also (in)famous for what came to be called "the Stanky maneuver", distracting opposing hitters by jumping up and down and waving his arms behind the pitcher from his second base position. As Cardinal player-manager, he would hold up games close to being called on account of darkness or curfew when that would benefit his team, by walking leisurely to the mound from second base or the dugout (when not playing) after every pitch to confer with his pitcher, eventually resulting in the one-trip-per-inning rule.
[edit] Contribution to breaking the color barrier
Stanky contributed to the breaking of the color barrier in 1947. When Jackie Robinson joined the Dodgers, he was treated harshly and discriminated against. Stanky stayed silent at first, but finally yelled back at the Phillies' racist insults during a game. Not long afterward, the other Dodgers began to stand up for Robinson as well.[2] The incident is portrayed in the film 42. Stanky is played by Jesse Luken.
[edit] Manager of Cardinals and White Sox
He appeared in three World Series in the five years between 1947 and 1951 — with three different National League champions, the Dodgers, Braves and Giants, all of whom lost to their American League opponents. Following the 1951 World Series, in which he played in all six games for the Giants but hit an anemic .136, he was traded to the Cardinals as player-manager.
In 1952, his Cardinals won seven more games than they had in 1951 and he was chosen Major League Manager of the Year by The Sporting News even though the Redbirds didn't move up in the standings, finishing in third place both years. But his time as Cardinal manager coincided with the slow decline of the team and its farm system from its glory days in the 1940s and the ownership transition from Fred Saigh to August "Gussie" Busch, and on May 27, 1955, after a 17-19 start he was fired.
He then briefly managed in the minors before returning to the majors as a coach for the Cleveland Indians (1957–58) and then to the Cardinal front office in charge of player development (1959–64), moving on to the New York Mets in a similar capacity in 1965 before succeeding Al Lopez as Chicago White Sox manager starting in 1966. His 1967 White Sox team — built on speed and pitching but hampered by an impotent offense — contended for the American League pennant until the last week of the season in a thrilling four-team race, when they lost their last five games to the lowly Kansas City Athletics and Washington Senators, and finished three games behind the surprise pennant winners, the "Impossible Dream" Boston Red Sox. In 1968, the White Sox got off to a terrible start at 34-45 by July 11, when Stanky was fired.
[edit] Success as college baseball coach
After his firing in Chicago, Stanky became the head baseball coach of the University of South Alabama in 1969, compiling a 488-193 (.717) record with five NCAA Baseball Tournament appearances over 14 seasons. He returned to the professional arena briefly in 1977 as manager of the Texas Rangers, succeeding Frank Lucchesi in midseason. He won his first game on June 22, but had second thoughts about leaving his adopted state of Alabama, resigned after a mere 18 hours on the job (one of the shortest managerial stints in MLB history) and went back to college coaching at South Alabama. His career MLB managerial mark was 467-435 (.518).
Stanky was inducted into the Mobile Sports Hall of Fame in 1990. He died in 1999 at age 82 in Fairhope, Alabama, leaving four children: Beverly, Kay, Mariann and Mike. He was buried in the Catholic Cemetery of Mobile,[3] alongside his father-in-law, Milt Stock, a major league infielder and coach in the first half of the twentieth century.[4]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Spink, J.G. Taylor, ed., 1952 Official Baseball Register. St. Louis: The Sporting News, 1952
- ^ Coombs, Karen (1997). Jackie Robinson. Berkly Heights: Enslow Publishers.
- ^ Find-a-Grave "Eddie 'the Brat' Stanky"
- ^ Find-a-Grave "Milton 'Mitt' Stock"
[edit] External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- The Deadball Era
- Eddie Stanky at Find a Grave
| Managerial jobs | ||||||||||||
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- 1916 births
- 1999 deaths
- Baseball coaches
- Baseball players from Pennsylvania
- Boston Braves players
- Brooklyn Dodgers players
- Chicago Cubs players
- Chicago White Sox managers
- Cleveland Indians coaches
- Greenville Buckshots players
- Macon Peaches players
- Major League Baseball player–managers
- Major League Baseball second basemen
- Milwaukee Brewers (minor league) players
- National League All-Stars
- New York Giants (NL) players
- People from Mobile, Alabama
- Sportspeople from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Portsmouth Cubs players
- Portsmouth Pirates players
- St. Louis Cardinals executives
- St. Louis Cardinals managers
- St. Louis Cardinals players
- Texas Rangers managers
- South Alabama Jaguars baseball coaches
- University of South Alabama alumni
- Williamsport Grays players
- Burials at the Catholic Cemetery, Mobile





