Hal McRae
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Hal McRae | ||
|---|---|---|
| Outfielder / Designated Hitter | ||
| Born: July 10 1945 | Batted: Right | Threw: Right |
| MLB debut | ||
| July 11, 1968 for the Cincinnati Reds | ||
| Final game | ||
| July 17, 1987 for the Kansas City Royals | ||
| Career statistics | ||
| Batting average | .290 | |
| Hits | 2091 | |
| Home Runs | 191 | |
| Teams | ||
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As Player
As Manager
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| Career highlights and awards | ||
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Harold Abraham McRae (born July 10, 1945 in Avon Park, Florida) is a former outfielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Cincinnati Reds (1968, 1970-72) and Kansas City Royals (1973-87). McRae batted and threw right-handed. He is the father of Brian McRae. Son Cullen McRae is the Florida Marlins video coordinator.
McRae was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the 6th round of the 1965 draft with the 117th overall pick. He was considered a below-average outfielder with the Reds. In 1972, McRae was traded to the Kansas City Royals along with Wayne Simpson in exchange for Roger Nelson and Richie Scheinblum. McRae developed as a consistent designated hitter in the American League. His playing career spanned 23 years, including 14 seasons with Kansas City. Selected a three-time All-Star, he hit over .300 six times for the Royals and was named Designated Hitter of the Year three times both by The Sporting News and Associated Press.
In 1976 McRae was on top of the American League batting title race going into the final game of the season, in which his teammate George Brett went 2-for-4 to clinch the title over McRae by a margin of less than .001. McRae finished second. Oddly, the other two of the top four finishers that season, Minnesota Twins' Rod Carew and Lyman Bostock, played in that same game.
In a 19-year MLB career, McRae posted a .290 batting average (2091-for-7218) with 191 home runs, 1097 RBI, 484 doubles, 65 triples, and 109 stolen bases in 2084 games played. He added a .351 on base percentage and a .454 slugging average for a combined .805 OPS.
Following his playing retirement, McRae managed the Kansas City Royals (1991-94) and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (2001-02). He also served as a hitting coach for the Reds and Phillies, and is currently the hitting coach of the St. Louis Cardinals. McRae, who won a World Series ring playing for Kansas City against the Cardinals in 1985, won a ring as a coach for the Cardinals when they defeated the Detroit Tigers in the 2006 World Series, four games to one.
[edit] Trivia
- While managing for Kansas City Royals, McRae was involved in an infamous incident after a game on April 26, 1993 (a 5-3 loss against the Detroit Tigers ) in which he lost his temper with reporters and trashed his entire office, throwing things off of his desk and yelling profanities at reporters.[1] It was recently voted the biggest pro-athlete blow up on The Best Damn Sports Show Period.
[edit] External links
- Hal McRae at:
- As Player:
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- As Manager:
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference
- Baseball Library
| Preceded by Eddie Murray | American League RBI Champion 1982 | Succeeded by Cecil Cooper & Jim Rice |
| Preceded by Bob Schaefer | Kansas City Royals managers 1991–1994 | Succeeded by Bob Boone |
| Preceded by Bill Russell | Tampa Bay Devil Rays Bench Coach 2001 | Succeeded by Billy Hatcher |
| Preceded by Larry Rothschild | Tampa Bay Devil Rays managers 2001–2002 | Succeeded by Lou Piniella |
Kansas City Royals managers |
|---|
| Gordon • Metro • Lemon • McKeon • Herzog • Frey • Howser • Ferraro • Gardner • Wathan • Schaefer • McRae • Boone • Muser • Mizerock • Peña • Schaefer • Bell • Hillman |
Tampa Bay Rays managers |
|---|
| Tampa Bay Devil Rays (1998-2007) Rothschild • McRae • Piniella • Maddon Tampa Bay Rays (2008-present) Maddon |
Kansas City Royals 1985 World Series roster |
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| 1 Buddy Biancalana | 2 Onix Concepcion | 3 Jorge Orta | 4 Greg Pryor | 5 George Brett | 6 Willie Wilson | 8 Jim Sundberg | 9 Dane Iorg | 11 Hal McRae | 12 John Wathan | 15 Pat Sheridan | 20 Frank White | 21 Lonnie Smith | 24 Darryl Motley | 25 Danny Jackson | 27 Joe Beckwith | 29 Dan Quisenberry | 31 Bret Saberhagen | 35 Lynn Jones | 37 Charlie Leibrandt | 40 Bud Black | 45 Steve Balboni Manager 10 Dick Howser |
Categories: American League All-Stars | American League RBI champions | Major league designated hitters | Cincinnati Reds players | Kansas City Royals players | Kansas City Royals managers | Tampa Bay Devil Rays managers | Indianapolis Indians players | American baseball players | Florida A&M University alumni | Major league players from Florida | 1945 births | Living people | African American sportspeople

