Pinky Higgins

Pinky Higgins

.

Boston got Higgins back in mid-by|1946 and he was the team's regular third baseman as they won the AL pennant by 12 games (although they dropped the 1946 World Series). He was released by them at the end of the season and then retired to become a manager in the Red Sox farm system. His final numbers included a .292 batting average with 140 home runs and 1,075 RBIs. He accumulated 1,941 career hits in 6,636 at bats. He made the All-star game three times (1934, '36, '44).

Managing and front office career

Higgins started his managing career with the Class B Roanoke Red Sox of the Piedmont League in the Red Sox farm system in 1947. After eight seasons of managing in the minors — including four (1951-54) at the helm of the Red Sox' AAA affiliate, the Louisville Colonels of the American Association — he became Boston's skipper in by|1955. Higgins managed the Red Sox through the mideason of by|1959, when he was replaced by Billy Jurges. He then became a special assistant to owner Tom Yawkey, with whom he had become friends.

But Jurges struggled as a manager and was fired midway through the by|1960 season with the Sox in last place. After coach Del Baker handled the Red Sox for seven games, Higgins resumed his old job. However, the Red Sox continued to lose. Nevertheless, on September 30, 1960, Higgins was signed to a three-year contract extension as field manager, and given control of all playing personnel in the Boston organization — effectively serving as general manager (without the formal title) as well as skipper. [The New York Times, October 1, 1960]

Higgins formally hung up his uniform and joined Boston's front office full-time as executive vice president and general manager after the by|1962 campaign, finishing his managerial career with a record of 560-556 (.502) in 1,119 games. His best finish was third place (by|1957-58), although his best winning percentage came in by|1955 and by|1956, when he ended both seasons with an 84-70 record, a .545 winning percentage (Boston finished fourth in each season).

He was 53 when he fully retired from managing. As a skipper, Higgins was known for being well-liked by players and very laid back. He would not go out to the mound to talk to his pitcher very often and once said, "I don't believe in that business of walking out to the mound every time a pitcher's in trouble. You can't tell him anything new."

Role in forestalling integration

Red Sox historians often single out Higgins, along with long-time Red Sox owner Tom Yawkey, when they discuss the root of the club's reputation for resisting racial integration. The Red Sox were the last of the then-16 major league teams to play an African American. Higgins was quoted by one Boston baseball writer, the late Al Hirshberg, as saying, "There'll be no niggers on this ball club as long as I have anything to say about it." [Hirshberg, Al. "What's the Matter with the Red Sox", New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1973] He also reportedly called sportswriter Clif Keane "a fucking nigger lover" [Halberstam, David. "Summer of '49", New York: William Morrow and Company, 1989] upon hearing Keane praise the talents of outfielder Minnie Miñoso, a Cuban of African descent.

The Red Sox' first African-American player, utility infielder Pumpsie Green, was recalled from the minor leagues in July 1959, during Jurges' brief tenure as pilot.

However, Higgins had no control over the big league roster until he became Red Sox manager in 1955, and the club's hostility toward breaking the color line appeared to be in place well before then under Yawkey and his front office bosses, Eddie Collins and Joe Cronin. [Bryant, Howard. "Shut Out: Race and Baseball in Boston", New York: Routledge, 2002]

When Higgins returned to his managerial post from mid-1960 through 1962, he managed an integrated roster, and did acquire a few nonwhite players (outfielders Roman Mejias, Lenny Green and Al Smith and infielders Felix Mantilla and Billy Harrell) during his GM tenure.

Higgins' record as a general manager, like his managing record, was mediocre. The major league team continued to struggle, and in 1965 it lost 100 games for the only time during the Yawkey era. Higgins made a few major trades during his first offseason, one of them netting slugging Dick Stuart, but they did not materially improve the club on the field. But at the minor league level, the team - led by its farm director, Neil Mahoney - was amassing talent (including African-American players such as Reggie Smith, George Scott and Joe Foy) that would lead to an improbable AL pennant in by|1967. Higgins, however, was finally ousted by Yawkey on September 16, by|1965 - ironically the day on which 21-year-old Boston right-hander Dave Morehead threw a no hitter. Higgins then joined the Houston Astros as a scout, his last job in baseball.

In February 1968, Higgins was arrested after killing one and injuring three others with his car. He suffered two heart attacks between the time of his conviction and sentencing. He pled guilty to driving while drunk, and was sentenced to four years, but was paroled after two months of his sentence.

One day after being paroled, he died of a heart attack in Dallas, Texas at the age of 59.

Postseason

Higgins made it to two World Series: One with Detroit in 1940 and one with Boston in 1946. His team lost both, but Higgins had a solid .271 all-time postseason batting average with 1 home run (DET) and 8 RBIs (6 DET, 2 BOS). He had 13 hits in 48 at bats.

ee also

* Top 500 home run hitters of all time
* List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 RBI
* Hitting for the cycle
* Major League Baseball hitters with three home runs in one game

References

External links

* [http://www.baseball-reference.com/h/higgipi01.shtml Baseball-Reference.com] - career playing stats and managing record


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