- Jim Fanning
:"For the fictional
James Bond character, who appears in the filmOctopussy , seeJim Fanning (James Bond) ."William James Fanning (bornSeptember 14 ,1927 inChicago, Illinois ) is a formercatcher , manager and front office executive inMajor League Baseball . The first general manager of theMontreal Expos of theNational League (appointed in August 1968), he served the Expos in a number of capacities for almost 25 years, and as their field manager in 1981 he guided Montreal into the playoffs for the only time in the 36-year history of the franchise.Fanning attended
Buena Vista College inStorm Lake, Iowa . In his professional playing days, he was a catcher who played most of his career in the minor leagues. He spent parts of four seasons (1954-57) with theChicago Cubs , compiling an anemicbatting average of .170 with nohome run s and five RBI. He then became a manager in the minor leagues, eventually joining the Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves organization, where in the middle of the 1960s he was promoted to the positions of Director of Minor League Operations and assistant general manager.After leaving the Braves, he briefly served as the first director of the Major League Scouting Bureau in 1968, but when his old Milwaukee boss,
John McHale , became the first president of the expansion Expos, Fanning accompanied him to Canada as the Expos' general manager. Fanning and McHale built the Expos from scratch; in those days, prior to the era offree agency , newly-formed clubs could only rely on expansion and amateur drafts and trades to build their talent base.Fanning drafted wisely in the 1968 NL expansion lottery, and parlayed some of his drafted players to obtain via trade
Rusty Staub from theHouston Astros . Dubbed "le Grand Orange", Staub was one of the early folk heroes of "les Expos", along with fellow outfielderMack Jones and no-hitpitcher (and current baseball executive)Bill Stoneman . With opportunistic managerGene Mauch at the helm, Fanning achieved a degree of success during his eight years as GM, but when Montreal regressed in 1976, Fanning was replaced byCharlie Fox .He then served in a number of front office posts with Montreal, including Director of Scouting, when, during the 1981 stretch run, he was called back into uniform. Manager
Dick Williams , who had led the Expos into contention in 1979 and 1980, had alienated his players and clashed with the front office over his use of bullpen closerJeff Reardon . With 27 games left in the season, Williams was sacked and Fanning was named his surprise replacement - he had not managed in almost 20 years.Fanning's calm and professional style favorably contrasted with Williams' hard edge, and the Expos won 16 of their last 27 games to capture the second-half NL East title, thus qualifying for the playoffs per 1981's strike-shortened, split-season format. The Expos then defeated the defending world champion
Philadelphia Phillies in the first round of the playoffs to advance to the NLCS against theLos Angeles Dodgers . In the deciding fifth game, on what became known in Montreal as "Blue Monday" (October 19 , 1981), LA outfielderRick Monday hit a tie-breaking home run in the ninth inning off Montreal ace pitcher Steve Rogers. The Dodgers won, 2-1, and advanced to the World Series, where they defeated theNew York Yankees . None knew it then, but 1981 would represent Montreal's only trip to the baseball playoffs; in 2005, the club relocated to D.C. and became theWashington Nationals .Fanning returned as pilot in 1982, but the Expos finished a disappointing third, six games behind the
St. Louis Cardinals . Fanning moved back into the front office, handing over the baseball manager's job toBill Virdon , recently fired by theHouston Astros . But Virdon could not arrest the Expos' decline in 1983 and was fired with 30 games left in the 1984 campaign. Once more, Fanning came down to the field and took over the club, but with poor (14-16) results, as the team finished a disappointing fifth.Fanning, with a career major league managing record of 116-103 (.530), hung up his uniform at the close of the 1984 season and returned to Montreal's front office. He was succeeded as pilot by
Buck Rodgers . After leaving the Montreal organization, Fanning was a scout for theColorado Rockies prior to becoming an assistant general manager and then ambassador to amateurbaseball /Canada for theToronto Blue Jays from 2000-04. He was elected to theCanadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 2000.Managerial Statistics
External links
* [http://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/fanniji01.shtml Baseball-Reference.com] - career managing record and playing statistics
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