- Moby Benedict
-
Milbry Eugene "Moby" Benedict (born March 29, 1935) is a former baseball shortstop and coach.
A native of Detroit, Michigan, Benedict played baseball at Detroit Southwestern High School before attending the University of Michigan. He played for the Michigan Wolverines from 1953–1956 and played for the College World Series championship team in 1953. He played in the minor leagues in the late 1950s before accepting a position as assistant coach at the University of Michigan from 1960-1962. He was an assistant coach on the Wolverines' College World Series championship team in 1962, making him the only person to be part of the school's only two World Series championship teams.
After winning the College World Series, Michigan's head coach Don Lund took a position in the Detroit Tigers' minor league organization and recommended Benedict as his replacement. In 1963, Benedict took over as Michigan's head baseball coach. He spent 17 years as the Michigan head coach, compiling a record of 367-251-5. Michigan won three Big Ten Conference championships under Benedict (1975, 1976, and 1978) and finished in the top three in the Big Ten in 14 of Benedict's 17 years as head coach. The 1978 team, featuring Rick Leach and Steve Howe advanced to the College World Series in 1978, finishing fifth.
Benedict coached 25 future major league players as Michigan's head coach, including Leach, Howe, Elliott Maddox, Dave Campbell, Leon Roberts, Geoff Zahn and Lary Sorensen. Benedict retired as Michigan's coach after the 1979 season.[1][2] He came out of retirement to manage the Montreal Expos' Class A minor league team, the Jamestown Expos, in the New York-Pennsylvania League, from 1982-1984. He subsequently became the director of intramural sports at the University of Michigan.
Michigan retired Benedict's uniform number (#1), only the second number retired by the school after Bill Freehan. In 1994, he was inducted into the University of Michigan Athletic Hall of Honor.
See also
References
- ^ Bock, Hal (6 June 1979). "Baseball Draft A Fitting Tribute To Retiring Coach". The Daily Courier: p. 10. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=5BsLAAAAIBAJ&sjid=J1ADAAAAIBAJ&pg=4576,1014621&dq=moby-benedict+baseball&hl=en. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
- ^ "Michigan baseball coach gets nice retirement gift". The Leader-Post. June 6, 1979. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FHZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wz4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=1163,7348537&dq=benedict+moby-benedict&hl=en.
References
- ^ Bock, Hal (6 June 1979). "Baseball Draft A Fitting Tribute To Retiring Coach". The Daily Courier: p. 10. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=5BsLAAAAIBAJ&sjid=J1ADAAAAIBAJ&pg=4576,1014621&dq=moby-benedict+baseball&hl=en. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
- ^ "Michigan baseball coach gets nice retirement gift". The Leader-Post. June 6, 1979. http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=FHZVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=wz4NAAAAIBAJ&pg=1163,7348537&dq=benedict+moby-benedict&hl=en.
Michigan Wolverines head baseball coaches No coach (1866–1890) • Pete Conway (1891–1892) • No coach (1893–1895) • Frank Sexton (1896) • Charles F. Watkins (1897–1898) • Henry Clarke (1898–1899) • Charles F. Watkins (1900) • Frank Sexton (1901–1902) • Skel Roach (1903) • Jerome Utley (1904) • Sport McAllister (1905–1906) • Bobby Lowe (1907) • Sport McAllister (1908–1909) • Branch Rickey (1910–1913) • Carl Lundgren (1914–1920) • Ray Fisher (1921–1958) • Don Lund (1959–1962) • Moby Benedict (1963–1979) • Bud Middaugh (1980–1989) • Bill Freehan (1990–1995) • Geoff Zahn (1996–2001) • Chris Harrison (2002) • Rich Maloney (2003– )
Categories:- 1935 births
- Living people
- Michigan Wolverines baseball coaches
- Michigan Wolverines baseball players
- People from Detroit, Michigan
- American baseball shortstop stubs
- American baseball manager stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.