When I was in Maine last Thursday, I tuned into the Red
Sox-Orioles game and learned that former MLB manager Dick Williams
had passed away at the age of 82 of a ruptured aortic aneurysm.
Williams had an undistinguished career
in the bigs in the 1950s and early 1960s playing for the Brooklyn
Dodgers, Baltimore Orioles, Kansas City Athletics and Boston Red
Sox. But as a manager he would find his calling.
In 1967, the 38-year-old Williams turned a moribund Red Sox
franchise with his hard-nosed, no nonsense approach into a winner
and gave Boston its first American League pennant in twenty-one
years. That season was became known as The Impossible Dream.
Unfortunately, this approach proved to be his undoing in Boston.
By September 1969, Williams was out of a job after fining Red Sox
superstar Carl Yastrzemski for not hustling. Yaz complained to Red
Sox owner Tom Yawkey who sided with his top player against
Williams.
Williams was then hired to manage the Oakland A's in 1971. He
would guide them to back to back World Series titles in 1972 and
1973. However, he resigned following the '73 Fall
Classic when mercurial A's owner Charlie Finley forcibly
benched A's infielder Mike Andrews for a pair of errors in Game 2
of the Series.
In 1984, Williams would be at the helm of the San Diego Padres
first National League pennant winning team. The Padres would face
the Detroit Tigers in the World Series who were managed by Sparky
Anderson. Williams and Anderson went toe to toe in 1972 when the
A's bested Anderson's Cincinnati Reds. But this time around, the
Padres were no match for the Tigers. Williams is remembered for
letting Goose Gossage convince him to pitch to Kirk Gibson with
first base open in Game 5 of that Series. Gibby hit Gossage's first
pitch into Tiger Stadium's right field upper deck. Interestingly,
Williams and Gossage would be inducted together into the Baseball
Hall of Fame in 2008.
Yet I remember Williams best from his days with the Montreal
Expos. After a less than pleasant stint at the helm of the
California Angels, Williams was hired to manage the team in
1977 after the Expos lost 107 games the previous season. After some
growing pains in '77 and '78, the Expos turned into one of
baseball's best teams in 1979 with an outfield of Andre Dawson,
Warren Cromartie and Ellis Valentine, an all-star catcher in Gary
Carter not to mention the likes of Larry Parrish, Rodney Scott,
Steve Rogers, Woodie Fryman and Tony Perez. The talent was there.
They just needed someone to prod them and not gently. The
Expos came within a heartbeat of winning the NL East but came
up short against Willie Stargell's "We Are Family" Pittsburgh
Pirates. Ditto for 1980 when they came up short against the
Philadelphia Phillies via a long homerun by Mike Schmidt on the
final weekend of the regular season. It is easy to forget when
Canadians embraced the Expos and when fans flocked to Olympic
Stadium. Indeed, I would attend my first MLB game in Montreal on
August 30, 1981 to see the Expos fall to the Atlanta Braves 5-4
in 12 innings.
Of course, it was in 1981 when the Expos would finally hit
paydirt making their only post-season appearance in franchise
history. However, Williams would not join them. In early September
(a little over a week after I saw him in uniform), Williams was
abruptly fired and replaced by longtime Expos front office man Jim
Fanning. Would the Expos have had a Blue
Monday had Williams remained in the dugout? Would there
still be major league baseball played in Montreal? We
will never know.
I will always appreciate and remember with a smile how Williams
was able to keep Finley from ruining a great A's team until 1975.
He was a great manager for the team. RIP Mr. Williams
Occam's Tool| 7.12.11 @ 10:37AM
Nice guys. Finish last.
Sean| 7.12.11 @ 12:21PM
I will always appreciate and remember with a smile how Williams was able to keep Finley from ruining a great A's team until 1975. He was a great manager for the team. RIP Mr. Williams