Dave Garcia

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Games618
Win–loss record307–311[1]
Winning%.497
Dave Garcia
Manager
Born: (1920-09-15)September 15, 1920
East St. Louis, Illinois, U.S.
Died: May 21, 2018(2018-05-21) (aged 97)
San Diego, California, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB statistics
Games618
Win–loss record307–311[1]
Winning %.497
Stats at Baseball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Teams
As manager

As coach

David Garcia (September 15, 1920 – May 21, 2018)[2] was an American coach, scout and manager in Major League Baseball who spent over 65 years in professional baseball. He served as manager of the California Angels (1977–78) and Cleveland Indians (1979–82). Including three games as acting manager of the 1975 Indians, during his first coaching tenure there, he compiled a career record of 310 wins and 311 defeats (.499).[3]

Garcia was born in East St. Louis, Illinois, to Spanish immigrant parents[4] and entered the game in 1939. Derailed by injury as a player,[4] Garcia was a minor league infielder for almost 20 seasons — much of that time in the farm system of the New York Giants — and never made it to the major leagues. His playing career also was interrupted by three years (1943–45) of service in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II,[5] and much of his later active career was spent as a player-manager in the low minor leagues. As the playing skipper of the 1951 Oshkosh Giants of the Class D Wisconsin State League, Garcia won the league's triple crown, with 23 home runs, 127 runs batted in and a batting average of .369. He threw and batted right-handed was listed as 6 feet (1.8 m) tall and 185 pounds (84 kg).

He began managing at age 27 in 1948 with the Giants' Knoxville Smokies farm team of the Class B Tri-State League, and would continue to manage in the New York and San Francisco Giants' minor league organization over the next two decades (1949–55; 1957; 1964; 1967–68). He also coached for Triple-A Minneapolis (1956) and scouted for the Giants (1957–63; 1965–66). Garcia then joined the San Diego Padres as a minor league manager in 1969, their maiden National League season.

The following season, in his 50th year, Garcia finally reached the majors as San Diego's third-base coach. He coached with the Padres (1970–73), Indians (1975–76; 1979) and Angels (1977) and in 1977 he was named manager of the Angels when Norm Sherry was fired on July 11. While the Angels continued to stumble under him in 1977 (with a 35–46 record), the Halos stood at 25–20 when Garcia was released in favor of Jim Fregosi on June 1, 1978.

Garcia got another chance to manage with the Cleveland Indians when Jeff Torborg was fired on July 23, 1979. Cleveland played at a 38–28 clip under Garcia for the remainder of the season, and compiled a mark of 52–51 during the strike-shortened 1981 campaign, but they never finished higher than fifth in the American League East. After a sixth-place finish in 1982, Garcia resigned under fire. But he remained in the game into his mid 80s, as a coach for the Milwaukee Brewers (1983–84), a special assignment scout for the Brewers and Kansas City Royals, and — from 200002 — a coach with the Colorado Rockies. Garcia was named to the Rockies' staff when he was 79 years of age by then-skipper Buddy Bell.[6] He also scouted for other MLB teams, including the Seattle Mariners and Chicago Cubs.

As a minor league manager in the Giants, Padres and Angels organizations, Garcia won 889 games and lost 796 (.528) and won three championships. He is one of only four individuals to play, coach or announce professional baseball during part of eight decades. (Vin Scully, Tommy Lasorda and Don Zimmer being the other three.)

Managerial Record

TeamYearRegular seasonPostseason
GamesWonLostWin %FinishWonLostWin %Result
CAL1977 813546.432Interim
CAL1978 462521.543Fired
CAL total1276067.47200
CLE1979 663828.576Interim
CLE1980 1607981.4946th in the AL East
CLE1981 502624.5206th in the AL East
532627.4915th in the AL East
CLE1982 1627884.4817th in the AL East
CLE total491244247.49700
Total[7]618307311.49700

Personal life

References

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