- Billy Hitchcock
William Clyde "Billy" Hitchcock (
July 31 1916 –April 9 2006 ) was an Americaninfielder , coach, manager and scout inMajor League Baseball . He also served as president of the class AA Southern League from 1971-80. His brother Jim played briefly for the 1938 Boston Braves.Career in uniform
Born in Inverness,
Alabama and a graduate ofAuburn University , Hitchcock played all four infield positions during a nine-yearAmerican League active career. He broke in with the by|1942Detroit Tigers , spent three years in the Army Air Force in the Pacific duringWorld War II , and resumed his major league career from 1946-53. A right-handed batter and thrower, he batted .243 with fivehome run s in 703 games with the Tigers, Washington Senators,Boston Red Sox , St. Louis Browns and Philadelphia Athletics.After AAA managing assignments in 1954 and 1961, sandwiched around a six-year (1955-60) term as a Detroit coach, Hitchcock was manager of the 1962-63
Baltimore Orioles , but the team barely broke the .500 mark (163-161); he was replaced byHank Bauer , and moved into Baltimore's minor league department as field coordinator.Hitchcock began the by|1966 season as a coach for the
Atlanta Braves underBobby Bragan , but when the Braves won only 52 of their first 111 games, Hitchcock took over. The Braves won 33 of their last 51 games to finish fifth in theNational League in their maiden season in Georgia, and Hitchcock was invited back for by|1967, but he was fired with the team in the seventh place with three games remaining on the schedule. His career managing record was 274 wins, 261 losses (.514). Hitchcock then scouted for the Montreal Expos from 1968-71.Minor league executive, college athletic star
With Hitchcock as league president, the Southern League added teams, expanded the playoffs and introduced split-season play. The league's attendance figures rose dramatically during his tenure, from 333,500 in 1971 to over 1.7 million in 1980. The league's championship trophy is named after him.
In addition to his baseball resume, Hitchcock also made a name for himself in
college football andgolf . As an All-Conferencetailback , he led Auburn to its first bowl game (a 7-7 tie against Villanova on January 1, 1937). Later in life, he established the Billy Hitchcock Golf Tournament at his alma mater. In recognition of his contribution to the school, Auburn renamed its renovated baseball stadium "Hitchcock Field " in 2003. Also in that year, "Baseball America " named it the best college baseball facility in the country.Death
Hitchcock died at his home in
Opelika, Alabama at age 89.External links
*baseball-reference|id=h/hitchbi01
* [http://bioproj.sabr.org/bioproj.cfm?a=v&v=l&bid=289&pid=6372 SABR biography]
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