|
William Nathaniel "Buck" Showalter (born May 23, 1956
in DeFuniak Springs, Florida) is an American former professional baseball
player and the current manager of the Texas Rangers.
Buck Showalter
played college baseball at Mississippi State University, where he was an
All-American who batted .459 in 1977. He was selected by the New York
Yankees in the fifth round of the draft, and spent seven seasons in the
Yankees' minor league system where he had a career average of .294 with 17
home runs and 36 RBIs. Showalter never played in the majors with the
Yankees in part because he played first base, the same position as Yankee
great Don Mattingly.
While Showalter didn't have an impressive
playing career, he had a knack for the mental part of baseball and was
hired as manager of the single-A minor league Oneonta Tigers in 1985,
leading them to 114 victories in two seasons. In 1987 he became manager of
the minor league Fort Lauderdale Yankees, leading the league with an 85-53
record in his first season. By 1989, Showalter was with the double-A
Albany-Colonie Yankees of the Eastern League, where he was named Minor
League Manager of the Year.
In 1990, Showalter was promoted to the
coaching staff of the New York Yankees, and eventually succeeded Stump
Merrill as the team's manager for the 1992 season. During his four years
as the Yankees' skipper, the team posted a record of 313-268, finishing
first during the strike-shortened 1994 season when he was also named the
American League's Manager of the Year. The Yankees won the AL wild card in
1995, participating in the playoffs for the first time since 1981; but as
so many Yankee managers before him, there was personal animosity between
Showalter and team owner George Steinbrenner, and he was forced out in
favor of Joe Torre. The Yankees won the World Series the following
year.
In 1996, Showalter was quickly hired by the expansion Arizona
Diamondbacks two years before the team was scheduled to begin play in order
to take a more active role in developing the eventual roster. In the
Diamondbacks' first season (1998), Showalter managed the team to a 65-97
record; but following numerous off-season player acquisitions which
included Randy Johnson, Armando Reynoso, Todd Stottlemyre and Steve
Finley, Showalter managed the team to a 100-62 record, the best in the
National League's Western Division. However, following a mediocre third
season, the Diamondbacks fired Showalter, leaving his 3-year record at
250-236. Just as the Yankees did after replacing him, the Diamondbacks won
the World Series the following year (coincidentally defeating the
Yankees).
After a few years as an analyst on ESPN, Buck Showalter
was hired as manager of the Texas Rangers on October 11, 2002, following
an abysmal last-place season under manager Jerry Narron. In his first
season with the Rangers, Showalter managed the team to a 71-91 record -
again in last place; but following the high-profile, off-season trade
which sent Alex Rodriguez to the Yankees, Showalter's Rangers jumped out
to a surprising, early-season record of 17-9 by early May of the 2004
season. The Rangers stayed in playoff contention for most of the season,
performing far better than most had predicted. The Rangers failed to make
the playoffs, finishing third in the contentious AL West, though Showalter
was again named Manager of the Year.
* Buck Showalter fan site *
Baseball-Reference.com - managing
record
Showalter,
Buck Showalter, Buck Showalter, Buck Showalter,
Buck Showalter, Buck Showalter, Buck Showalter, Buck de:Buck
Showalter
The Wikipedia article is licensed under
http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html and uses material from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_Showalter. A preview of this article is
available at http://www.blinkbits.com/en_wikifeeds/Buck_Showalter.
|