- Dan Duquette
-
Daniel F. Duquette (born 1958) is the Executive Vice-President of Baseball Operations for the Baltimore Orioles. He was the General Manager of the Montreal Expos from September 1991 through January 1994 and for the Boston Red Sox from 1994 through March 2002. He was also a founding member of the Israel Baseball League in 2007.
Duquette oversaw quick turnarounds during his tenure as GM of the Expos and Red Sox, expanding fan interest in both markets. As farm system director of the Expos from 1987 to 1991, Duquette helped build the player development operations.
Contents
Early life
A native of Dalton, Massachusetts, Duquette attended Amherst College, where he was a catcher on the varsity baseball team.
Executive career
Early career
Duquette got his start in professional baseball as a scouting assistant with the Milwaukee Brewers in 1980 after a fellow Amherst alumnus, Harry Dalton, the Milwaukee general manager, saw his letter seeking employment in the game.[citation needed]
Montreal Expos
In 1987 he became Montreal's director of player development. In his three years in that role, the Expos drafted Marquis Grissom, Cliff Floyd and Rondell White and signed Vladimir Guerrero, Javier Vazquez, Orlando Cabrera and many other major leaguers. Duquette replaced Dave Dombrowski as Expos' GM on September 19, 1991. Under Duquette the Expos acquired elite pitchers Ken Hill, John Wetteland, Jeff Shaw and traded for Pedro Martínez from the Dodgers for second baseman Delino DeShields. Duquette is credited with building the 1994 Expos team,[citation needed] which had the best record in baseball at the time of the 1994-95 Major League Baseball strike.
Boston Red Sox
Duquette became the GM of his hometown Red Sox and built a baseball operations department which has allowed the Red Sox to be the only team in MLB to set attendance and revenue records every year since 1998.[citation needed]
The Red Sox went 656-574 in the 8 seasons under Duquette, setting attendance records every year after 1998 winning the AL East once and finishing 2nd behind the Yankees 5 other seasons. The Red Sox won the AL East pennant in 1995 before bowing to the Cleveland Indians in the ALDS and made the playoffs as a Wild Card in 1998 and 1999, only to lose to the Cleveland Indians again in the ALDS and the New York Yankees in the ALCS.
Under Duquette, the Red Sox made exceptional strides in improving their dismal history of poor race relations as an organization in the hiring of both coaching and administrative personnel with minority candidates. The Minor League facilities and coaching availability were upgraded at every level during his tenure, and Red Sox favorites such as Nomar Garciaparra and Kevin Youkilis were drafted into the system. Other notable draftees in his Red Sox term were future MLB shortstops David Eckstein, Adam Everett and Hanley Ramirez as well as second baseman Freddy Sanchez.
In 1996 Duquette signed Jaime Moyer to a free agent contract and then traded him to Seattle for outfielder Darren Bragg when manager Kevin Kennedy didn't pitch him much and Moyer expressed he didn't like playing in Boston. Despite being only 66-77 at the time of that trade, Moyer went on to win 139 games in just over 9 seasons with the Mariners and achieved over 250 wins in his career. Duquette is also famously known for his quote about Roger Clemens in which he said that "we had hoped to keep him in Boston during the twilight of his career" in 1996 after Clemens left as a free agent following a 39-40 record over his last four seasons pitching in Boston.[1] Clemens would go on to win the Cy Young Award and the pitching Triple Crown in both of the next two seasons. The free agency losses of Clemens and first baseman Mo Vaughn were major points of discontent amongst some Red Sox fans with regards to Duquette. He also did not resign Jose Canseco or Mike Greenwell. At present, Clemens remains under an indictment for lying to Congress that he used performance enhancing drugs (PED's) beginning in the period immediately following his departure from Boston to Toronto.
Duquette is also noted for several major acquisitions that would ultimately play a part in the Red Sox 2004 World Championship, including acquiring knuckleballer Tim Wakefield in 1995, Pedro Martínez in 1997 from Montreal, the 1997 trade with Seattle for both pitcher Derek Lowe and All-Star catcher Jason Varitek the free agent signings of Manny Ramírez in 2000 and Johnny Damon in December, 2001 and the Sox traded over 35 players in Duquette's farm system to staff the team including LHP Jorge De la Rosa traded for Curt Schilling.
He was dismissed from his general manager post in 2002 when John W. Henry bought the team from the JRY Trust, headed by John Harrington.[2]
After Boston
After being fired by the Red Sox, Duquette started a sports academy for children in Hinsdale, Massachusetts. The academy is described by its website as "a sports training center for boys and girls ages 8–18 who are interested in learning baseball, softball, basketball and life skills from distinguished high school, college and professional coaches."
Duquette worked to start the Israel Baseball League after being appointed director of baseball operations, but the league had financial difficulties and folded in 2008 after one season. He had a role in a Western Massachusetts community theatre production of Damn Yankees.
Duquette is also past president and owner of the Pittsfield Dukes, a summer collegiate baseball team in the New England Collegiate Baseball League. He purchased the team, formerly known as the Thread City Tides of Willimantic, Connecticut, after the 2003 season, and moved the team to his Dan Duquette Sports Academy in Hinsdale. After negotiating a deal with the city of Pittsfield, he moved the franchise again in 2005 to historic Nokona Stadium at Wahconah Park. In the fall of 2008, Duquette partnered with Chairman Buddy Lewis and CEO Jerry O'Connor from Nokona and Terry Allvord, founder of the U.S. Military All-Stars "Red, White and Blue Tour" to acquire a new Can-Am independent professional team called the American Defenders of New Hampshire and rename his NECBL team the "Pittsfield American Defenders" featuring top collegiate prospects alongside players currently enrolled at our nations service academies and military institutions.
Baltimore Orioles
Duquette will be introduced as GM for the Baltimore Orioles in November 2011.[3]
Personal
Duquette's cousin, Jim Duquette, is a former executive of the Baltimore Orioles and the New York Mets.
Honors
Duquette was twice honored as the Major League Baseball Executive of the Year, first by The Sporting News in 1992 with the Expos,[4] and later by the Boston Baseball Writers Association in 1995 with the Red Sox.
References
- ^ Silverman, Michael. Baseball END OF AN ERA Boston Herald Retrieved on 14 February 2008
- ^ New Owners of Red Sox Quickly Fire Duquette New York Times Retrieved on 10 December 2007
- ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/sports/nationals/orioles-sign-former-expos-red-sox-gm-dan-duquette-as-new-president-of-baseball-operations/2011/11/06/gIQAuy9HtM_story.html
- ^ Sporting News Executive of the Year Baseball Almanac Retrieved on 11 December 2007
External links
- Dan Duquette Sports Academy
- U.S. Military All-Stars
- Nokona Baseball Factory
- Baseball America Executive Database
Sporting positions Preceded by
Dave DombrowskiMontreal Expos General Manager
1991 - 1994Succeeded by
Kevin MalonePreceded by
Lou GormanBoston Red Sox General Manager
1994 - 2002Succeeded by
Mike Port (Interim)Preceded by
Andy MacPhailBaltimore Orioles General Manager
2011 -Succeeded by
IncumbentAwards Preceded by
Andy MacPhailSporting News Major League Baseball Executive of the Year
1992Succeeded by
Lee ThomasMontreal Expos/Washington Nationals general managers Montreal Expos (1969-2004) Washington Nationals (2005-Present) Boston Red Sox general managers Baltimore Orioles general managers Current Major League Baseball presidents American League East Division Dan Duquette (Baltimore Orioles)
Larry Lucchino (Boston Red Sox)
Randy Levine (New York Yankees)
Matthew Silverman (Tampa Bay Rays)
Paul Beeston (Toronto Blue Jays)Central Division Jerry Reinsdorf (Chicago White Sox)
Mark Shapiro (Cleveland Indians)
Dave Dombrowski (Detroit Tigers)
Dan Glass (Kansas City Royals)
Dave St. Peter (Minnesota Twins)West Division John Carpino (Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim)
Michael Crowley (Oakland Athletics)
Chuck Armstrong (Seattle Mariners)
Nolan Ryan (Texas Rangers)National League East Division John Schuerholz (Atlanta Braves)
David Samson (Miami Marlins)
Saul Katz (New York Mets)
David Montgomery (Philadelphia Phillies)
Vacant (Washington Nationals)Central Division Theo Epstein (Chicago Cubs)
Robert Castellini (Cincinnati Reds)
Tal Smith (Houston Astros)
Mark Attanasio (Milwaukee Brewers)
Frank Coonelly (Pittsburgh Pirates)
Bill DeWitt III (St. Louis Cardinals)West Division Derrick Hall (Arizona Diamondbacks)
Vacant (Colorado Rockies)
Vacant (Los Angeles Dodgers)
Tom Garfinkel (San Diego Padres)
Laurence Baer (San Francisco Giants)Major League Baseball general managers by team American League East Division Dan Duquette (Baltimore Orioles)
Ben Cherington (Boston Red Sox)
Brian Cashman (New York Yankees)
Andrew Friedman (Tampa Bay Rays)
Alex Anthopoulos (Toronto Blue Jays)Central Division Kenny Williams (Chicago White Sox)
Chris Antonetti (Cleveland Indians)
Dave Dombrowski (Detroit Tigers)
Dayton Moore (Kansas City Royals)
Terry Ryan (Minnesota Twins)West Division Jerry Dipoto (Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim)
Billy Beane (Oakland Athletics)
Jack Zduriencik (Seattle Mariners)
Jon Daniels (Texas Rangers)National League East Division Frank Wren (Atlanta Braves)
Michael Hill (Miami Marlins)
Sandy Alderson (New York Mets)
Rubén Amaro, Jr. (Philadelphia Phillies)
Mike Rizzo (Washington Nationals)Central Division Jed Hoyer (Chicago Cubs)
Walt Jocketty (Cincinnati Reds)
Ed Wade (Houston Astros)
Doug Melvin (Milwaukee Brewers)
Neal Huntington (Pittsburgh Pirates)
John Mozeliak (St. Louis Cardinals)West Division Kevin Towers (Arizona Diamondbacks)
Dan O'Dowd (Colorado Rockies)
Ned Colletti (Los Angeles Dodgers)
Josh Byrnes (San Diego Padres)
Brian Sabean (San Francisco Giants)Categories:- 1958 births
- Living people
- Amherst Lord Jeffs baseball players
- Baltimore Orioles executives
- Boston Red Sox executives
- Major League Baseball farm directors
- Major League Baseball general managers
- Milwaukee Brewers scouts
- Montreal Expos executives
- People from Berkshire County, Massachusetts
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