- Jim Frey
James Gottfried Frey (born
May 26 ,1931 inCleveland, Ohio ) is a former manager and coach inMajor League Baseball . He led theKansas City Royals to their firstAmerican League championship in 1980, in his first year with the team. In the World Series, they lost to thePhiladelphia Phillies , who won their first and onlyWorld Series championship.Frey, a lifelong friend of
Don Zimmer , never reached the major leagues as a player. A left-handed-batting and -throwing outfielder, he spent much of his career in thefarm system s of the Boston/Milwaukee Braves and theSt. Louis Cardinals , then joined theBaltimore Orioles as a scout and minor league manager. He was promoted to the Orioles' coaching staff underEarl Weaver in 1970, and coached on threeAmerican League pennant winners and one World Series champion through 1979 before his hiring by the Royals.Frey led the Royals to a 97-65 mark and the
American League West Division title in 1980; then, in the1980 American League Championship Series , the Royals defeated their long-time postseason nemesis, theNew York Yankees in three straight games to capture the AL title. (The Yanks had defeatedWhitey Herzog 's Royals for three consecutive seasons (1976-78) in the ALCS). But Frey's Royals dropped the 1980 series in six games. The following year was marked by the1981 baseball strike and the Royals never got untracked. They had lost 40 of their first 70 games when Frey was replaced byDick Howser on August 31. Ironically, Howser had managed the Yankees the year before (and was fired after the Royals swept them out of the playoffs) and, because of the split-season format in use because of the strike, the Royals were actually in first place (with a 10-10 record) in the second-half AL West standings at the time of Frey's dismissal.Frey then returned to the coaching ranks with the
New York Mets for 1982-83. Frey was hired by theChicago Cubs for the 1984 season, and again struck paydirt as the Cubs won the division title, earning their first post-season appearance since 1945. During the clubhouse celebration following the division-clinching in Pittsburgh, Frey declared, "The monkey's off our back!"The Cubs won the first two games against the San Diego Padres in the
National League Championship Series atWrigley Field , before they went to San Diego needing to win just one of the next three games. The Cubs lost the next three games, and many critics blamed Frey for mishandling the pitching staff. Still, the 1984 Cubs are still revered among Cubs fans.After a trying 1985 season in which the entire five-man starting rotation simultaneously spent time on the disabled list, the Cubs sputtered in 1986. Frey was fired two months into the season and replaced by
John Vukovich . The next year, Frey surfaced as a color commentator on the Cubs' WGN Radio broadcasts.In December 1987, the Tribune Co. hired Frey to replace his old boss,
Dallas Green , who resigned two months earlier. Frey hired his lifelong friend, Zimmer, to manage the team, and immediately made his presence felt. Within weeks of his hire, he dealt relief pitcher Lee Smith to Boston for journeymanAl Nipper andCalvin Schiraldi , who was best known for playing a part in the Red Sox'1986 World Series collapse. Frey also traded the popularKeith Moreland to San Diego for closerGoose Gossage , who had played a big part on the San Diego team that eliminated the Cubs four years earlier. Neither move worked, and the Cubs were without a closer.So Frey made a bold move in the winter of 1988, trading budding star
Rafael Palmeiro and young pitcherJamie Moyer to the Texas Rangers for a number of players, includingMitch Williams . The trade paid off for the Cubs in 1989 as Williams saved 36 games, the Cubs won a division title and Moyer and Palmeiro struggled in Texas. But Williams had just one more forgettable year for the Cubs before being traded to Philadelphia in 1991, and Palmeiro and Moyer went on to have all-star careers.After a disappointing 1990 season, Frey was active on the free agent market, acquiring former Toronto Blue Jay and 1987 American League MVP George Bell, former Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher
Danny Jackson and formerHouston Astros closer Dave Smith. Jackson and Smith flopped in their roles in 1991, and Zimmer was fired - apparently on orders fromTribune Co. CEODonald Grenesko in May 1991.Jim Essian , a former journeyman catcher andIowa Cubs manager, replaced Zimmer for the remainder of the season. Frey was reassigned within the organization after the 1991 season, replaced by formerChicago White Sox general managerLarry Himes . He is currently Vice Chairman of theSomerset Patriots .External links
* [http://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/freyji99.shtml Baseball-Reference.com] - career managing record
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