- Phil Seghi
Philip Dominic Seghi (
March 9 ,1909 --January 8 ,1987 ) was an American front-office executive inMajor League Baseball . A longtime associate ofGabe Paul , Seghi was credited with scouting and signingPete Rose , the all-time leader in hits, when Seghi wasfarm system and scouting director of theCincinnati Reds in 1960. A native ofCedar Point, Illinois , Seghi attendedNorthwestern University . During his active career, he was aninfielder inminor league baseball .During the years after
World War II , Seghi was a manager in the lower minor leagues, working in thePittsburgh Pirates andCleveland Indians organizations. He succeeded Bill McKechnie Jr. as Cincinnati's farm director in the mid-1950s. Serving under Paul and his successor,Bill DeWitt , Seghi remained with the Reds until 1968, a period during which the Reds developed one of the most fruitful player development organizations in the game.In 1963, Seghi was promoted to assistant general manager, but a change in ownership and the arrival of
Bob Howsam in 1967 as GM caused Seghi to leave Cincinnati for theOakland Athletics between 1968 and 1971. Led by flamboyant ownerCharlie Finley and awash with young talent, the A's were on the verge of a dynasty, winning five consecutiveAmerican League West Division titles (1971-75) and three consecutive AL pennants andWorld Series titles (1973-75). Seghi served as farm and scouting director and assistant to Finley, who was his own general manager.By 1972, however, Seghi was back working with Paul as assistant general manager of the Cleveland Indians, and succeeded Paul as the Indians' GM in 1973. His most notable achievement occurred after the 1974 season, when he and owner
Alva "Ted" Bonda appointedFrank Robinson (signed and developed by Seghi's Cincinnati farm system of the 1950s) as major league baseball's firstAfrican-American manager. Seghi would serve 13 full seasons as Cleveland's general manager, but the Indians enjoyed only three winning seasons during that time.Seghi stepped down after the 1985 campaign to become a senior player personnel adviser with Cleveland. He died of
cancer inThousand Oaks, California , on January 8, 1987, at the age of 77.External links
* [http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Phil_Seghi BR Bullpen]
References
*Obituary,
The New York Times , January 9, 1987.
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