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:For musicians of this name, see Billy Martin
(musician)
Alfred Manuel "Billy" Martin,
a.k.a. Alfred Manuel Pesano, "The Brat" and "Billy the Kid."(May 16, 1928
- December 25, 1989), American baseball player and manager, was the
manager of the New York Yankees five different times and won three league
championships and one World Series as manager.
As a manager, Martin
was known for being able to win with any team, and for arguing animatedly
with umpires, including a widely parodied routine where he kicked dust on
their feet, but he was criticized for not getting along with veteran
players, burning out young pitchers, and drinking too heavily.
Born
and raised in Berkeley, California, Martin was born to a father of
Portuguese descent and a mother of Italian ancestry, who separated after
Martin was born. Martin was raised by his mother, who doted on her son,
frequently calling him "bella," or "beautiful" in Italian. This was the
origin of his nickname "Billy." Martin signed a minor league contract with
the Oakland Oaks of the Pacific Coast League, playing for that team in 1948
and 1949. He is a graduate of Berkeley High School, California.
He
started his major league career in 1950 as a second baseman for the
Yankees. He was the MVP of the 1953 World Series, and retired in 1961 with
a career batting average of .257. As a player, Martin was known for making
clutch plays and partying hard. The Yankees traded him in 1957, a month
after a group of Yankees met at the Copacabana to celebrate Martin's 29th
birthday. The party ended in a brawl, and general manager George Weiss,
believing Martin's nightlife was a bad influence on teammates Whitey Ford
and Mickey Mantle, sent him to the Kansas City Athletics.
On August
4, 1960, Martin, then playing for the Cincinnati Reds, charged the mound in
the second inning after receiving a brushback pitch from Chicago Cubs
pitcher Jim Brewer. Martin threw his bat at Brewer, who picked up the bat
and started to hand it to Martin as he approached. Martin punched Brewer
in the right eye. Brewer was hospitalized for two months and Martin served
a five-day suspension. The Cubs sued Martin for $1 million for the loss of
Brewer's services. While the Cubs dropped their case, Brewer pursued his,
and in 1969, a judge ordered Martin to pay $10,000 in damages.
In
1969, Martin became manager of the Minnesota Twins and won a division
championship in his first season. He was fired after the season following
a fight with one of his pitchers. He managed the Detroit Tigers from 1971
to 1973, taking the team to first place in 1972 but was fired in 1973 for
ordering his pitchers to throw at batters. He then moved to the Texas
Rangers, where he took the club from last place to second place in 1974,
but was fired in 1975.
He returned to the Yankees for the first of
his managerial stints in 1975, and took the Yankees to the World Series in
1976 and 1977, winning the 1977 World Series. He feuded publicly with both
Yankee owner George Steinbrenner and star outfielder Reggie Jackson. He
briefly resigned in 1978 after telling reporters, "They deserve each
other. One's a born liar [Jackson], and the other's convicted
[Steinbrenner]" (Martin was referring to Steinbrenner's conviction
for making illegal donations to Richard Nixon's 1972 election campaign).
He returned in 1979, only to be fired after a fight with a marshmallow
salesman.
Martin resurfaced with the Oakland Athletics, where he
perfected a style of play that became known as "Billyball." He won the
Western Division title in the split season of 1981 but was fired when the
1982 Athletics plumeted to a 68-94 record. Martin had overused Oakland's
young pitchers and they all developed sore arms. He returned to the
Yankees in 1983, 1985, and 1988, but never for more than one full season.
He was the perfect short-term manager as his competitive fire and daring
tactics won over fans, management, and players. This love affair was
always brief, especially with the players and management, as his paranoid
disdain for authority figures as well as players who dared disagree with
him or did not reflect his fiery temperment, were bound to create
clubhouse tension and organizational turmoil.
On August 10, 1986,
the Yankees retired his uniform number 1 and dedicated a plaque in his
honor for their Monument Park at Yankee Stadium. The plaque contains the
words, "There has never been a greater competitor than Billy."
Martin told the crowd, "I may not have been the greatest Yankee, but I
am the proudest."
He was working as a special consultant to
Steinbrenner when he was killed in a one-car crash near his home in
Fenton, New York on Christmas Day in 1989, aged 61. Martin had been
drinking heavily with his friend, William Reedy, who was driving the
pick-up at the time of the accident. He is interred in the Cemetery of the
Gate of Heaven in Hawthorne, New York.
See also
*New York
Yankees/Managers and ownership
External
link
*Baseball-Reference.com - playing statistics and managing
record
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