- Emil Fuchs (baseball)
Emil Fuchs (born
July 17 ,1878 - 1961) was the owner of the Boston Braves from 1923 to 1935. He bought the team, along withChristy Mathewson and James McDonough. His tenure as the Braves owner was marked by severe financial problems. AfterJack Slattery quit as manager, he hiredRogers Hornsby to manage the rest of the 1928 season. But Fuchs needed money to run the team, so he sold Hornsby to theChicago Cubs , and he managed the team himself for one season, guiding them to a last-place finish. Financial troubles plagued the Braves, and in 1931, theNational League cut rosters down from 25 men to 23 to save money, and thePhiladelphia Phillies also loaned $35,000 to Fuchs to keep the club afloat. In 1935, he retired from baseball and filed for bankruptcy soon after.Fuchs was also the last baseball manager with no playing experience at any level for 48 years (
Ted Turner managed one game for theAtlanta Braves in 1977) and since his one-year stint as Braves manager, only John Boles of theFlorida Marlins has since skippered a team without any prior playing experience.
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