Cedric Tallis

Cedric Tallis

Cedric Tallis (July 29, 1914May 8, 1991) was an American executive in Major League Baseball who served as the first general manager of the expansion Kansas City Royals and later played an important role in the New York Yankees' dynasty of the late 1970s.

Tallis was the general manager of teams in minor league baseball, including the Vancouver Mounties of the Pacific Coast League, through the end of the 1960 season. His first major league job was as business manager of one of the first American League expansion teams, the Los Angeles Angels, whom he joined in their maiden season, 1961. Seven years later, Tallis was hired by Royals owner Ewing Kauffman to build his team when it entered the AL in 1969. Tallis recruited a management team that included future GMs John Schuerholz, Lou Gorman, Syd Thrift and Jack McKeon. He drafted wisely in the 1968 AL Expansion Draft, supervised the founding and operation of the Kansas City Royals Baseball Academy, a revolutionary training ground for athletes without significant baseball experience, and built a strong farm system. By 1971, their third season, the Royals sported a winning record — earning Tallis the Executive of the Year Award from The Sporting News that season — and they would go on to dominate the American League West Division from the mid-1970s through mid-1980s.

But by then, Tallis was working for one of the Royals' chief nemeses. He was replaced as Kansas City's GM by Joe Burke, former general manager of the Texas Rangers, in June 1974, and then joined the front office of the Yankees, reporting to George Steinbrenner and Yankee president/GM Gabe Paul. Tallis' first task in the Bronx was to serve as the Yanks' supervisor of the successful 1974-75 renovation of Yankee Stadium. After the 1977 season, and the Yankees' first world championship in 15 years, Paul left the club to become president of the Cleveland Indians. In the front office overhaul that followed, Tallis was named Yankee general manager.

Tallis would hold the title during the 1978 and 1979 seasons, although owner Steinbrenner took a very involved role in the team's day-to-day operations and at one point named mercurial ex-manager Billy Martin as the team's GM-designate during the middle of the '78 season. With Tallis in command, the Yankees continued their aggressive role in baseball free agency and, in his first season, New York roared back from a 14½-game midseason deficit to beat the Boston Red Sox in a one-game playoff for the AL East flag, defeat Tallis' old Royals club for the third consecutive season in the ALCS, then take the 1978 World Series in six games from the Los Angeles Dodgers. The following season, however, the Yankees suffered the tragic loss of catcher and team captain Thurman Munson in a plane crash and finished fourth, 13½ games in arrears of the Baltimore Orioles. Tallis was replaced by Gene Michael at the end of the season.

He spent three more years in the Yankee front office as an executive vice president before leaving the organization in 1982. He then became executive director of the Tampa Bay Baseball Group, which was established to lure a major league club to the Tampa Bay area. Although the group nearly convinced the Chicago White Sox to move to the Florida enclave, it did not succeed in its mission during Tallis' lifetime. He died of a heart attack in Tampa at the age of 76 in 1991. All told, Tallis had a 43-year career in baseball management.

References

*Obituary, The New York Times, May 8, 1991.
*Baseball America Executive Database.


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