- Grover Resinger
Grover S. Resinger (
October 20 ,1915 —january 11 ,1986 ) was an American coach inMajor League Baseball during the 1960s and 1970s. Previously, he was a minor leaguethird baseman andmanager . A native ofSt. Louis, Missouri , the 5'9" (175 cm), 160-pound (73 kg) Resinger batted and threw right-handed.As a player, Resinger peaked at the Class A1 level (equivalent to Class AA today) with the
Little Rock Travelers (1941 and 1946) of theSouthern Association . He began his managerial career in 1947 as skipper (and third baseman) of thePensacola, Florida , "Flyers" of the Class BSoutheastern League , but he was released as manager on June 14 with a 28-31 record. He remained in the league, but strictly as a third baseman, with theMeridian, Mississippi , "Peps" through 1949. During his 11-year minor league playing career, Resinger batted over .300 six times.After spending the 1950s out of organized baseball, Resinger returned to the game in 1960 as a coach with the
Houston Buffaloes of the AAA American Association. He then joined theSt. Louis Cardinals organization in 1961 as a manager in theirfarm system . His 1962Billings Mustangs won thePioneer League championship. In 1963-64 he managed theTulsa Oilers of the AATexas League and in 1965 he was the pilot of theJacksonville Suns of the AAAInternational League . His minor league managing record was 420 wins, 395 losses (.515).At age 50, Resinger was promoted to his first major-league coaching assignment with the 1966
Atlanta Braves , although he resigned August 10 upon the firing of his boss, managerBobby Bragan . But he returned to the majors in 1967 as the third-base coach of theChicago White Sox (1967-68) andDetroit Tigers (1969-70). In his final MLB assignment, he was the bench coach forDick Williams with the California Angels in 1975-76.Resinger was a colorful figure who promoted a fiery, hustling brand of play. In the waning days of his Detroit tenure, in September 1970, he bemoaned a listless performance on the field, saying: "You know, when country-club teams like the Red Sox and Tigers get together, they should play baseball one day, polo the next, golf the next, and sail boats the fourth day." ["They Said It," Sports Illustrated, September 21, 1970]
Resinger died in St. Louis at age 70.
References
* Creamer, Robert,
Sports Illustrated , September 21, 1970.
* Duxbury, John, ed., "The Baseball Register." St. Louis:The Sporting News , 1968.
* [http://www.retrosheet.org/ Retrosheet]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.