- Bobby Mattick
Robert James "Bobby" Mattick (
December 5 ,1915 -December 16 ,2004 ) was ashortstop , manager and scout inMajor League Baseball , most notably in theToronto Blue Jays organization.Born in
Sioux City, Iowa , Mattick was the son ofoutfielder Wally Mattick , who played for theChicago White Sox in 1912 and 1913 and theSt. Louis Cardinals in 1918. Bobby played only one season as a regular with theChicago Cubs in 1940, although he played for the Cubs from 1938 to 1940 and theCincinnati Reds in 1941 and 1942. Hampered in 1936 by afoul ball which cracked his skull above his right eye and causeddouble vision , he was a career .233 hitter with nohome run s and 64 RBIs in 206 games.Mattick began his managerial career in the Southern League in 1944 and 1945. From 1946 to 1978, Mattick worked for nine different
baseball organizations including theMontreal Expos . He was credited by some baseball personnels as an incomparable longtime scout and player development specialist, signing such stars asFrank Robinson ,Vada Pinson ,Curt Flood ,Rusty Staub ,Don Baylor , andGary Carter . One of the Blue Jays' original employees in its inaugural season, Bobby first joined the team in 1976 as the scouting supervisor, and helped draft the expansion Blue Jays. In 1978 Mattick was appointed the director of player development. 1980 saw him take over the role of manager fromRoy Hartsfield , the Blue Jays' original manager, becoming the oldest rookie manager to start a season at 64. The 1981 season was interrupted by a player strike, and the Jays improved their winning percentage in 1981 but still finished in last place in theAmerican League East Division in both halves of the season.Following the 1981 season and a 104-164 career record during his two-year tenure as manager, he continued to work in the Jays' organization as executive co-ordinator of baseball operations before his promotion to vice president of baseball in 1984. Mattick played a key administrative role in scouting and development, leading to the Blue Jays' five AL East Division championships, and
World Series crowns in 1992 and 1993.Mattick was inducted into the
Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999, and the club renamed itsspring training complex TheBobby Mattick Training Center in 2007. He was part of the Blue Jays' delegation at the 2004Major League Baseball winter meeting s inAnaheim, California .According to the information from the Blue Jays [ [http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/news/story?id=1948473 ESPN - Mattick managed Toronto in 1980, '81 - MLB ] ] , Mattick died 11 days after his 89th birthday after suffering a
stroke at hisScottsdale, Arizona home. Mattick's wife Jackie died about two years previously. They had no children.Managerial record
ee also
*
List of second generation MLB players References
External links
*
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.