Harry Craft
Harry Craft | ||
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Runs batted in 267 | | |
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Managerial record at Baseball Reference | ||
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Harry Francis Craft (April 19, 1915 – August 3, 1995) was an American
From 1962 through September 18, 1964, Craft was the first manager in
Playing career
A top-flight defensive outfielder, Craft was an average hitter in his short career. His best season came, basically, as a rookie (he had 42
On June 8, 1940, he
In six seasons, Craft had an all-time .253 batting average with 533 hits, 85
Managerial career
Minor leagues

Craft began his managing career in the
"I was lucky to have Harry as skipper my first two years", Mantle said years later. "He started me out right." [1] Craft would also manage Roger Maris at the Major League level in 1958–1959 with the Kansas City Athletics, just before the young right fielder was traded to the Yankees. Maris credited Craft with helping him with his hitting.
Major League
Kansas City Athletics
Craft went from the minor league Blues to the Major League Athletics in 1955, their first year in Kansas City after transferring from Philadelphia, when he was named a coach on the staff of Lou Boudreau. After over 2+1⁄2 losing seasons, Boudreau was released on August 6, 1957, and Craft was named his successor.[2] Craft's Athletics went 23–27 to finish the 1957 season. He then lasted two more full campaigns, 1958 and 1959, before his firing. Craft finished with a 162–196 record at Kansas City. His best finish was seventh place in the eight-team American League.
Chicago Cubs
A year after joining the coaching staff of the 1960 Chicago Cubs, Craft became a member of Cubs' owner Phil Wrigley's ill-fated College of Coaches. From 1961 to 1965, the team had no permanent manager, and rotated the "head coach" job among its coaching staff. Craft led the Cubs for 16 games in 1961, coming out 7–9 as one of four head coaches that year.
During 1961, Craft briefly returned to managing in the minors for the
Houston Colt .45s
Craft managed the Colt .45s from 1962 to 1964, before his replacement by Lum Harris in the closing days of the 1964 season.[4] His first team, the 1962 Colt .45s, finished eighth in the ten-team league, but six full games ahead of the ninth-place Cubs, then in their 87th year in the NL. But in 1963 and 1964, the Colt .45s fell into ninth place, ahead of only their expansion brethren, the New York Mets.
Craft ended 191–280 with the Colt .45s, never having managed an above .500 team in all or parts of seven seasons as a big league manager. He remained in the game, however, as a scout and farm system official for the Baltimore Orioles, San Francisco Giants and the Yankees, retiring in 1991.
Craft ended his managing career with a 360–485 record in 849 games, a .426 winning percentage. His best finish was seventh place. The authors of one baseball book had this to say about Craft's career, perhaps unfairly given what little he had to work with on those clubs: "Of course, if you are really lousy at what you do, there's always a chance you can work your way into management, that being the American Way... Harry Craft managed three teams in a seven year span... They finished 7th, 7th, 7th, 7th, 8th, 9th and 9th. Do I detect a trend in there somewhere?"[5]
Death
Harry Craft died after a long illness in Conroe, Texas, at the age of 80 on Thursday, August 3, 1995.[6][7]
See also
References
- ISBN 978-1-4165-8928-0
- ^ Athletics Discharge Boudreau And Name Harry Craft Manager; Kansas City, in Eighth Place, Puts Coach at Helm--Lou Gets Front-Office Offer
- ^ Harry Craft named Manager of Houston Colts
- ^ Harry Craft fired as Colt Manager
- ISBN 0316104299.
- ^ Former Manager Harry Craft dies[permanent dead link ]
- The Associated Press (August 5, 1995). "Harry Craft; Mantle's First Manager, 80". The New York Times. p. 10.
Further reading
- Faber, Charles F. "Harry Craft". SABR.
- Van Blair, Rick (1994). ISBN 078640017X.
External links
- Career statistics from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors), or Retrosheet
- Harry Craft managerial career statistics at Baseball-Reference.com
- Harry Craft at the SABR Baseball Biography Project