- Buddy Bell
Infobox MLB retired
name=Buddy Bell
position=Third baseman / Manager
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date and age|1951|8|27Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
debutdate=April 15
debutyear=by|1972
debutteam=Cleveland Indians
finaldate=June 17
finalyear=by|1989
finalteam=Texas Rangers
stat1label=Batting average
stat1value=.279
stat2label=Hits
stat2value=2,514
stat3label=Home run s
stat3value=201
teams=As Player:
*Cleveland Indians (by|1972-by|1978)
* Texas Rangers (by|1979-by|1985, by|1989)
*Cincinnati Reds (by|1985-by|1988)
*Houston Astros (by|1988)As Manager:
*Detroit Tigers (by|1996-by|1998)
*Colorado Rockies (by|2000-by|2002)
*Kansas City Royals (by|2005-by|2007)
highlights=
* 5x All-Star selection (1973, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1984)
* 6xGold Glove Award winner (1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984)
*Silver Slugger Award winner (1984)
* 1988Lou Gehrig Memorial Award David Gus "Buddy" Bell (born
August 27 1951 inPittsburgh, Pennsylvania ) is a formerthird baseman and manager inMajor League Baseball . After an 18-year career with four teams, most notably theCleveland Indians and Texas Rangers, he managed theDetroit Tigers ,Colorado Rockies andKansas City Royals for three seasons each. The son ofoutfielder Gus Bell and the father of third basemen David and Mike, he is well-liked by former teammates and fans and continues to be remembered by the organizations for which he played.Bell was born while his father was playing for the
Pittsburgh Pirates . He was drafted in 1969 by the Indians and was regarded as a promising prospect from the beginning. He first appeared in the Major Leagues with the Indians in by|1972, appearing mostly in the outfield as a rookie, but afterwards becoming a fixture at third base. Bell was a solid, but not overpowering, right-handed hitter on a mostly lackluster Indians team. He was named to the All-Star team in 1973.Bell gained the nickname "Buddy" because his parents couldn't remember his name. They were big
Gilligan's Island fans, so they referred to him as "little buddy".After the by|1978 season Bell was traded to the Texas Rangers in exchange for
Toby Harrah – a player who seemed similar in many ways, a good-hitting infielder in the middle of his career.Bell enjoyed his best season with the Rangers in by|1979, collecting 200 hits, 101 RBI, and his first
Gold Glove Award . He followed with solid seasons through 1984, including several All-Star selections.In the middle of the by|1985 season, Bell was sent to the
Cincinnati Reds , where his father also had been a popular player in the late 1950s. This was a very popular addition with Reds fans, and Buddy responded with two more solid years. In the by|1988 season he began to fade, and was traded to theHouston Astros . Bell was released in December and returned with the Rangers before the by|1989 season, in which he appeared sparingly.In an 18-year career, Bell posted a .279
batting average with 201home run s and 1106 RBI in 2405 games. He also won six Gold Gloves, and made five All-Star Game appearances.Following retirement, Bell worked for several years as a coach in the Reds and from 94-95 for the Indians, and managed the
Detroit Tigers from 1996-98, when he resigned after 135 games because he "couldn't stand the losing" (and the Tigers were a terrible team at the time). He then managed theColorado Rockies from by|2000 through part of by|2002 when he was fired in April after a 6-16 start. As a manager both for Detroit and Colorado, Bell compiled a 184-277 record.In November by|2002, Bell returned to coaching for the Cleveland Indians.
On May 31, 2005, the Kansas City Royals hired Bell as their manager, three weeks after
Tony Peña resigned. Bell won his first four games as a manager, becoming only the second Royals manager (afterWhitey Herzog ) to do so and guiding the Royals to their first four-game winning streak since by|2003.Bell took a medical leave of absence from the team on September 20, 2006 after a lump was discovered on his tonsils. Bell had experienced difficulty swallowing in the previous weeks [http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/sports/15576946.htm] , but he only agreed to go to the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale,
Arizona following the advice of Royals medical staff. Bell's wife has battledtonsil cancer as well.On August 1, 2007, Bell announced that he would not be returning to the Royals bench at the conclusion of the 2007 season. Bell has stated that his decision was his own, and was not based on performance or pressure from the Royals front office. Bell stated that he wishes to spend more time with his family - a sentiment solidified in 2006 with his cancer diagnosis. [http://www.kansascity.com/sports/royals/story/214535.html]
Managerial record
(updated thru Oct. 8, 2007)
ee also
*
Top 500 home run hitters of all time
*List of Major League Baseball players with 400 doubles
*List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 runs
*List of Major League Baseball players with 1000 RBI
* List of second generation MLB players
*List of Major League Baseball managers in 2006
*List of Major League Baseball managers in 2007 External links
* [http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/B/Bell_Buddy.stm Baseball Library] - Profile
*baseball-reference manager|id=bellbu01
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