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Wikipedia

Al López

Alfonso Ramón López (August 20, 1908 – October 30, 2005) was a Spanish-American professional baseball catcher and manager. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Brooklyn Robins / Dodgers, Boston Bees, Pittsburgh Pirates, and Cleveland Indians between 1928 and 1947, and was the manager for the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago White Sox from 1951 to 1965 and during portions of the 1968 and 1969 seasons.[1] Due to his Spanish ancestry and "gentlemanly" nature, he was nicknamed "El Señor".

Al López
Catcher / Manager
Born: (1908-08-20)August 20, 1908
Tampa, Florida, U.S.
Died: October 30, 2005(2005-10-30) (aged 97)
Tampa, Florida, U.S.
Batted: Right
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 27, 1928, for the Brooklyn Robins
Last MLB appearance
September 16, 1947, for the Cleveland Indians
MLB statistics
Batting average.261
Home runs51
Runs batted in652
Managerial record1,410–1,004
Winning %.584
Teams
As player

As manager

Career highlights and awards
Member of the National
Baseball Hall of Fame
Induction1977
Election methodVeterans Committee

As a player, López was a two-time All-Star known for his defensive skills, leadership, and durability, as he established a major league record for career games played at catcher (1,918) that stood for decades. As a manager, his .584 career winning percentage ranks fourth best in major league history among managers of at least 2,000 games. His 1954 Cleveland Indians and 1959 Chicago White Sox teams were the only squads to interrupt the New York Yankees' string of American League pennants from 1949 to 1964, inclusive. Over the course of 18 full seasons as a baseball manager (15 in the major leagues and 3 in the minor leagues), López's teams never finished with a losing record. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977.

Al López's parents immigrated to the United States from Spain shortly before his birth, and he grew up in the immigrant community of Ybor City in Tampa, Florida. He retired with his family to his hometown after his baseball career, and his accomplishments were commemorated in Tampa in the name of a baseball stadium (Al López Field) and a public park which bears his name and features his statue. His childhood home was moved next door to Ybor City State Museum and is being renovated to house the Tampa Baseball Museum.[2]

Early life

Al López was the son of Modesto and Faustina (née Vásquez) López, who were married in Spain before immigrating to Havana, Cuba in the mid-1890s. They had several children in Cuba as Modesto worked as a tabaquero (cigar maker) in one of Havana's many cigar factories.[3] In 1906, Modesto went to the Cuban-Spanish-Italian immigrant community of Ybor City in Tampa, Florida to seek better wages and living conditions, temporarily leaving his family behind until he had established a home in their new country.[4] Faustina and their six children joined him in Ybor City several months later, and the family made Tampa their permanent home. Alfonso Ramón López, the seventh of nine children, was born there on August 20, 1908.[5]

Ybor City was a thriving immigrant neighborhood during Al López's childhood with a population of over 10,000. The cigar industry was the most important in town, and most residents were employed either by one of the dozens of large cigar factories or by businesses catering to the cigar industry and its employees. Modesto Lopez found work as a skilled selector in a cigar factory, which involved sorting raw tobacco leaves for use in different grades of cigars. Al often visited his father's workplace as a child and later said that he "hated" the smell of tobacco leaves that permeated the building and clung to his father's clothing when he came home from the factory. "I vowed never to work in one."[6][7]

As a teenager, López took a job delivering Cuban bread door to door for La Joven Francesca Bakery, which was located in a building which later became the Ybor City State Museum.[7] He began to follow baseball when his elder brother Emilio introduced him to the game during the 1920 World Series, which coincidentally involved two teams that Lopez would later play for - Cleveland and Brooklyn. According to Al López, his brother Emilio also had excellent baseball talent, but he himself was more driven to excel at the game.[8]

Baseball player

López's professional career began in 1924 when, at the age of 16, he signed on as a catcher with the Class-D Tampa Smokers of the Florida State League, quitting his job at the bakery and dropping out of high school at Sacred Heart College (later known as Jesuit High School) to focus on baseball.[9] His starting salary with the Smokers was $150 ($2,372 today) per month, which was much needed by the large Lopez family since his father's health was deteriorating and he could not work regularly.[10] (Modesto Lopez died of throat cancer in 1926.[10])

Soon after signing with the Smokers, Al López impressed Hall of Fame pitcher Walter Johnson with his catching skills during a winter barnstorming exhibition game. At Johnson's recommendation, Al was hired as a practice catcher for the Washington Senators during spring training in 1925, a valuable learning opportunity that he later credited with making him a better ballplayer.[7][11] The Senators offered the Smokers $1000 for López's contract, but the minor league club demanded $10,000, which the major league club thought too exorbitant for a young player with only one year of professional baseball experience.[12] Instead, López moved steadily up the minor leagues ranks in subsequent seasons and made his major league debut in 1928 with Brooklyn.[6]

After splitting time between the major and minor leagues for two seasons, López became the Dodgers' primary catcher in 1930 at the age of 21, and he remained a regular starter in the major leagues over the next 17 seasons. His best offensive campaign came in 1933, when he hit .301, stole 10 bases, and finished 10th in National League MVP voting. Overall, he compiled modest career batting numbers, including 613 runs, 51 home runs, and 652 RBIs and a .261 batting average. He was better known for his defense, leadership, and his ability to work with various pitchers, which earned him two trips to the All-Star game and respect around the league.[6][7]

Over a major league playing career which ran from 1928 until 1947, López played for the Brooklyn Robins / Dodgers (1928, 1930-1935), Boston Bees (1936-1940), Pittsburgh Pirates (1940-1946) and Cleveland Indians (1947). In 1945, López surpassed Gabby Hartnett's major league record for career games as a catcher, and when he retired after the 1947 season, his major league record for games caught stood at 1,918.[10] This record was not broken until 1987 by Bob Boone, and the National League record was broken by Gary Carter in 1990. He caught 117 shutouts during his career, ranking him 13th all-time among major league catchers.[13]

Baseball manager

Minor leagues

López decided to seek a job as a baseball coach or manager upon retiring after the 1947 season, which he'd spent as the backup catcher for the Cleveland Indians. Bill Veeck, the new owner of the team, was unhappy with how Indians player-manager Lou Boudreau had handled the club, and he asked López if he would be interested in taking the position. López declined, explaining that he did not want to appear to have undermined Boudreau to steal his job and preferred to gain managerial experience with another club.[14] The decision was a positive one for both parties, as the Indians won the 1948 World Series and Boudreau was named the American League MVP.

Meanwhile, López began his managing career in 1948 with the Indianapolis Indians, the Pittsburgh Pirates's Class AAA minor league affiliate. He spent three years in Indianapolis, leading his squads to one first place and two second-place finishes in the American Association while also serving as the team's reserve catcher.[7] Before the 1950 season, López re-signed with the Indianapolis Indians for the largest salary of any manager in American Association history, with a clause in his contract which allowed for him to leave if offered a managerial position with a major league club.[15]

Major Leagues

Cleveland Indians

After having declined an opportunity to become the club's manager in 1947, López accepted an offer to become the Cleveland Indians's new manager in 1951. Under López, the Indians won over 90 games each season from 1951 to 1953, but came in second to the New York Yankees each year. In 1954, Lopez's squad won a then-American League record 111 games to capture the AL pennant, but were swept by Willie Mays and the New York Giants in the 1954 World Series in one of the biggest upsets in World Series history.[16] Lopez's Indians again finished in second place behind the Yankees in 1955 and 1956. During the latter season, López became "incensed" at Cleveland fans and management as the season progressed. Star third baseman Al Rosen slumped late in the year while playing injured, and López felt that the Indians' team management had not supported or defended his injured player from fans' booing and criticism. López was so disheartened over the situation that he resigned from the club on the last day of the season.[17] Lopez finished his Indians career with a record of 570 wins and 354 losses, and his .617 winning percentage is still the best in franchise history.[18]

Chicago White Sox

 
López in 1965

Lopez agreed to become the new manager of the Chicago White Sox about a month after resigning in Cleveland.[17] The White Sox did not have the power hitters of Lopez's Cleveland teams, but they had more speed with players such as Nellie Fox, Minnie Miñoso and Luis Aparicio. Consequently, López changed his offensive strategy to fit the roster. The White Sox stole over 100 bases every season from 1957 to 1961, consistently leading the American League in that category and often almost doubling the total of the next highest team, earning them the nickname "Go-Go Sox".

In 1957, his first year in Chicago, López's White Sox won 90 games and finished in second place behind the Yankees while the Indians suffered through a losing season. Chicago again finished second in 1958, but finally broke through and won the American League pennant in 1959, losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series. By this time, Lopez was very well respected and in-demand manager, and in the middle of the 1960 season, a friend of New York Yankees president Dan Topping told an Associated Press reporter that López would replace Yankees manager Casey Stengel.[19] (Stengel had managed López years earlier when López was a catcher for Brooklyn and Boston.) Despite rumored and confirmed inquiries from other teams, López stayed with Chicago until 1965, finishing in second place five times and never posting fewer than 82 wins.[18]

López retired to the White Sox front office after the 1965 season due to a chronic stomach condition and assumed the title of team vice president.[20][21] He returned to managing in July 1968, when White Sox manager Eddie Stanky was fired. Lopez was able to get most of his former coaches to return to the team. However, he had to undergo an appendectomy shortly after taking over as manager and missed most of the rest of the season. He agreed to manage the White Sox again in 1969, but continuing health issues forced him to resign in early May, less than a month into the season.[22]

Managing style

 
López, circa 1966

López was known for never scolding or shouting at his players and avoiding pep talks in lieu of constructive criticism.[23] Indians owner Bill Veeck commented that López's only fault as a manager was that he was "too decent", a description that López took as a compliment.[24] Veeck also said that López's "completely relaxed" leadership "squeezed every drop of talent out of his teams".[25]

Describing López and his managerial style, a 1957 Sports Illustrated piece said, "For Lopez, managing is a constant worry, a nervous strain, a jittery agony. Some managers thus beset relieve the harrowing pressure by exploding in sudden rages at players and sportswriters, or else by maintaining an almost sphinx-like silence in an effort to remain calm. But Lopez is a gentleman — a decent, thoughtful, exceptionally courteous man. He seldom permits himself the luxury of a temper tantrum, and he talks to anyone who talks to him."[26] Later, his son shared that, while he did not demonstratively show it, his father hated to lose, and suffered from chronic insomnia and stomach issues during the baseball season.[23]

Tommy John, who spent 26 years in MLB, said "Lopez had a better handle on all the facets of the game than any manager I ever played for. He knew about hitting, offense, defense, pitching, catching, and strategy. The Senior, as he was dubbed, also understood player psychology, and knew how to communicate with his players. He was tough to play for in that he demanded so much out of you, but that just made you a better performer. Al was the type of manager who was smart enough, and secure enough, not to overmanage. He threw the bats and balls out on the field and simply let you play."[27]

Because of his Spanish ancestry and his "gentlemanly" nature, López was given the nickname "El Señor".

Managerial record

López's .584 winning percentage is 9th all time in Major League Baseball history. At the time of his retirement, his 1,410 MLB managerial wins ranked 11th all-time, and were the 26th most wins as of the end of the 2016 season. In 18 full seasons as a minor league and major league manager, he never had a losing record. His 1954 Indians and 1959 White Sox teams were the only non-Yankee clubs to win the AL pennant between 1949 and 1964 inclusive, and his 840 wins with the White Sox still rank second in franchise history, behind Jimmy Dykes (899).[18]

 
Al López's plaque at the Baseball Hall of Fame
Team Year Regular season Postseason
Games Won Lost Win % Finish Won Lost Win % Result
CLE 1951 154 93 61 .604 2nd in AL
CLE 1952 154 93 61 .604 2nd in AL
CLE 1953 154 92 62 .597 2nd in AL
CLE 1954 154 111 43 .721 1st in AL 0 4 .000 Lost World Series (NYG)
CLE 1955 154 91 63 .591 2nd in AL
CLE 1956 154 88 66 .571 2nd in AL
CLE total 924 570 354 .617 0 4 .000
CWS 1957 154 90 64 .584 2nd in AL
CWS 1958 154 82 72 .532 2nd in AL
CWS 1959 154 94 60 .610 1st in AL 2 4 .333 Lost World Series (LAD)
CWS 1960 154 87 67 .565 3rd in AL
CWS 1961 162 86 76 .531 4th in AL
CWS 1962 162 85 77 .525 5th in AL
CWS 1963 162 94 68 .580 2nd in AL
CWS 1964 162 98 64 .605 2nd in AL
CWS 1965 162 95 67 .586 2nd in AL
CWS 1968 11 6 5 .545 leave
36 15 21 .417 8th in AL
CWS 1969 17 8 9 .471 resigned
CWS total 1490 840 650 .564 2 4 .333
Total[18] 2414 1410 1004 .584 2 8 .200

Personal life and legacy

 
Al López (at left) with Ronald Reagan and Walter Alston, 1982

Al López met Evelyn "Connie" Kearney, a dancer at the Hollywood Club in New York, while he was playing for Brooklyn in the early 1930s, and the couple often went on double dates with teammate Tony Cuccinello and his wife. When López was traded to Boston in 1935, he and Connie found it difficult to conduct a long-distance relationship, so she soon joined him. They married on October 7, 1939 and had a son, Al Jr., in 1940.[28][7]

Honors

Al and Connie López retired to his hometown in 1970 to live near family and friends. López was the first Tampa native to play in the major leagues, the first to manage a major league team, the first to manage his team to a World Series (Lou Piniella and Tony La Russa each did so later), and the first to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. As such, he was the recipient of many honors in his hometown, both during and after his long baseball career.

Lopez was the manager of the Cleveland Indians and had just led them to the World Series when the city of Tampa built a new minor league and spring training ballpark. It was named Al López Field, and the date of the dedication ceremony (October 6, 1954) was declared "Al López Day" in the city of Tampa.[29] The Chicago White Sox were the ballpark's first spring training tenants, and when Lopez became the new White Sox manager in 1957, he had the unusual honor for several seasons of managing home games in his hometown in a ballpark named after himself. Later in life, López would recall a spring training incident in which an umpire with whom he was arguing threatened to throw him out of a game there. "You can't throw me out of this ballpark", protested Lopez, "This is my ballpark – Al López Field!" The umpire ejected him anyway, causing Lopez to exclaim, "He threw me out of my own ballpark!"[30]

López was selected for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee as part of the Class of 1977.[31] He served as the AL's honorary team captain in the 1990 Major League Baseball All-Star Game.[32]

 

Al López Field was demolished in 1989 to make room for a potential major league facility that was never built. López lived a few miles from the ballpark that bore his name. In a 1992 interview, he said that the razing of the stadium "wasn't very disappointing. I saw a diagram of the new stadium, and I didn't feel bad because I thought they were going to build a bigger one and a better one. After that, something happened, and they never built the ballpark. Then it was a disappointment."[33] Soon thereafter, the city of Tampa changed the name of Horizon Park, a large city park near the site of the razed stadium, to Al López Park, and installed a large statue of López in his catching gear.[34] The statue was dedicated on October 3, 1992, a date which was officially proclaimed as a second "Al López Day" in the city.[35] Soon thereafter, his high school, Jesuit High School, which is located across the street from Al López Park, named its new athletic center in Lopez's honor.[36]

When the expansion Tampa Bay Devil Rays began play in 1998 in nearby St. Petersburg, Lopez threw one of several ceremonial first pitches along with fellow Hall of Famers Ted Williams, Stan Musial, and Monte Irvin.[37][7] The Rays annually award the "Al López Award" to the "most outstanding rookie" in the team's spring camp each year.[7]

In 2013, López's boyhood home was moved to a lot across the street from the Ybor City State Museum, where it is undergoing renovation to become the "Tampa Baseball Museum at the Al López House".[38]

Death

Al López died on October 30, 2005 at the age of 97 after suffering a heart attack at his son's home. His death came four days after the White Sox won the 2005 World Series, their first world championship in 88 years and their first AL pennant since Lopez had led them to the World Series in 1959. Lopez was the last living person who had played major league baseball during the 1920s, and was the longest-lived member of the Baseball Hall of Fame until Bobby Doerr passed him in 2015.[39]

Connie López had died in September 1983. Al López was survived by his son, three grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren.[24]

See also

References

  • Singletary, Wes (1999). Al López : The life of baseball's El Señor. Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co. ISBN 0786406569.


  1. ^ "Al López Statistics and History". "baseball-reference.com. Retrieved on 2017-05-12.
  2. ^ Smashing start Tampa Baseball Museum WTSP
  3. ^ Singletary, p.10
  4. ^ George, Justin. He was 'pride of Tampa Latinos' 2011-05-24 at the Wayback Machine. Tampa Bay Times. November 1, 2005. Accessed August 22, 2013.
  5. ^ Singletary, p. 11
  6. ^ a b c Al López, a Hall of Fame Manager, is Dead at 97. The New York Times. Octobrt 31, 2005. Accessed August 22, 2013.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h "Al López - Society for American Baseball Research". sabr.org. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  8. ^ Singletary, p.14.
  9. ^ Singletary, p. 19.
  10. ^ a b c Al López, A Legend 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine. Tampa Tribune.
  11. ^ Singletary, p. 22
  12. ^ Singletary, p, 24
  13. ^ "The Encyclopedia of Catchers - Trivia December 2010 - Career Shutouts Caught". The Encyclopedia of Baseball Catchers. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
  14. ^ Singletary, p.114
  15. ^ "Al López signed again as chief". Palm Beach Post. September 22, 1950. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  16. ^ "Top 10 World Series upsets - FOX Sports". foxsports.com. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  17. ^ a b "Tampa's Lopez named to manage White Sox". St. Petersburg Times. 30 October 1957. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
  18. ^ a b c d "Al López". Baseball Reference. Sports Reference. Retrieved October 24, 2015.
  19. ^ Eck, Frank (August 7, 1960). "Eck sees Al López as next pilot of Yanks". Reading Eagle. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  20. ^ "Lopez, Al". Baseball Hall of Fame. Retrieved November 1, 2014.
  21. ^ "Al López resigns managerial post with Chicago White Sox". Ellensburg Daily Record. November 5, 1965. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  22. ^ "Al López resigns". Ocala Star-Banner. May 4, 1969. Retrieved November 8, 2014.
  23. ^ a b Singletary, p.118
  24. ^ a b Goldstein, Richard (31 October 2005). "Al Lopez, a Hall of Fame Manager, is Dead at 97". The New York Times.
  25. ^ Singletary, p. 117
  26. ^ Creamer, Robert (July 1, 1957). "The Good Days And The Bad Days Of Al López". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  27. ^ John, Tommy; Valenti, Dan (1991). TJ: My Twenty-Six Years in Baseball. New York: Bantam. p. 90. ISBN 0-553-07184-X.
  28. ^ Singletary, pp. 98-99.
  29. ^ "Tampa Gives Hero's Welcome to Modest Al". St. Petersburg Times. 7 October 1954. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  30. ^ "St. Petersburg Times - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com. Retrieved 1 July 2017.
  31. ^ "Baseball Hall of Fame: Al López". Baseball Hall of Fame. 2017-07-05.
  32. ^ Basse, Craig (October 31, 2005). "Baseball legend Lopez dies". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved November 1, 2014.
  33. ^ Basse, Craig (31 October 2005). "Baseball legend Lopez dies". St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved 21 August 2016.
  34. ^ Hall of Famer Lopez passes at 97. MLB.com. Accessed August 22, 2013.
  35. ^ Singletary, p. 230.
  36. ^ The Tiger Tradition 2014-07-01 at the Wayback Machine. Jesuit High School. Accessed August 22, 2013.
  37. ^ "Devil Rays Timeline". tampabay.rays.mlb.com - The Official Website of the Tampa Bay Rays. 2017-07-05.
  38. ^ Morel, Laura C. Al López house moves to Ybor City for new life as museum. Tampa Bay Times. May 16, 2013. Accessed August 22, 2013.
  39. ^ "Bobby Doerr Becomes Oldest Hall of Famer". baseballhall.org. Retrieved 1 July 2017.

External links

  • Al López at the Baseball Hall of Fame
  • Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference, or Fangraphs, or Baseball Reference (Minors)
  • Al López managerial career statistics at Baseball-Reference.com
  • Al López at Find a Grave  
  • from the Tampa Tribune
  • Al Lopez Oral History Interview (1 of 2) - National Baseball Hall of Fame Digital Collection
  • Al Lopez Oral History Interview (2 of 2) - National Baseball Hall of Fame Digital Collection

lópez, alfonso, ramón, lópez, august, 1908, october, 2005, spanish, american, professional, baseball, catcher, manager, played, major, league, baseball, brooklyn, robins, dodgers, boston, bees, pittsburgh, pirates, cleveland, indians, between, 1928, 1947, mana. Alfonso Ramon Lopez August 20 1908 October 30 2005 was a Spanish American professional baseball catcher and manager He played in Major League Baseball MLB for the Brooklyn Robins Dodgers Boston Bees Pittsburgh Pirates and Cleveland Indians between 1928 and 1947 and was the manager for the Cleveland Indians and the Chicago White Sox from 1951 to 1965 and during portions of the 1968 and 1969 seasons 1 Due to his Spanish ancestry and gentlemanly nature he was nicknamed El Senor Al LopezCatcher ManagerBorn 1908 08 20 August 20 1908Tampa Florida U S Died October 30 2005 2005 10 30 aged 97 Tampa Florida U S Batted RightThrew RightMLB debutSeptember 27 1928 for the Brooklyn RobinsLast MLB appearanceSeptember 16 1947 for the Cleveland IndiansMLB statisticsBatting average 261Home runs51Runs batted in652Managerial record1 410 1 004Winning 584TeamsAs player Brooklyn Robins Dodgers 1928 1930 1935 Boston Bees 1936 1940 Pittsburgh Pirates 1940 1946 Cleveland Indians 1947 As manager Cleveland Indians 1951 1956 Chicago White Sox 1957 1965 1968 1969 Career highlights and awards2 All Star 1934 1941 Cleveland Guardians Hall of FameMember of the NationalBaseball Hall of FameInduction1977Election methodVeterans CommitteeAs a player Lopez was a two time All Star known for his defensive skills leadership and durability as he established a major league record for career games played at catcher 1 918 that stood for decades As a manager his 584 career winning percentage ranks fourth best in major league history among managers of at least 2 000 games His 1954 Cleveland Indians and 1959 Chicago White Sox teams were the only squads to interrupt the New York Yankees string of American League pennants from 1949 to 1964 inclusive Over the course of 18 full seasons as a baseball manager 15 in the major leagues and 3 in the minor leagues Lopez s teams never finished with a losing record He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1977 Al Lopez s parents immigrated to the United States from Spain shortly before his birth and he grew up in the immigrant community of Ybor City in Tampa Florida He retired with his family to his hometown after his baseball career and his accomplishments were commemorated in Tampa in the name of a baseball stadium Al Lopez Field and a public park which bears his name and features his statue His childhood home was moved next door to Ybor City State Museum and is being renovated to house the Tampa Baseball Museum 2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Baseball player 3 Baseball manager 3 1 Minor leagues 3 2 Major Leagues 3 2 1 Cleveland Indians 3 2 2 Chicago White Sox 3 3 Managing style 3 4 Managerial record 4 Personal life and legacy 4 1 Honors 4 2 Death 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life EditSee also History of Ybor City Al Lopez was the son of Modesto and Faustina nee Vasquez Lopez who were married in Spain before immigrating to Havana Cuba in the mid 1890s They had several children in Cuba as Modesto worked as a tabaquero cigar maker in one of Havana s many cigar factories 3 In 1906 Modesto went to the Cuban Spanish Italian immigrant community of Ybor City in Tampa Florida to seek better wages and living conditions temporarily leaving his family behind until he had established a home in their new country 4 Faustina and their six children joined him in Ybor City several months later and the family made Tampa their permanent home Alfonso Ramon Lopez the seventh of nine children was born there on August 20 1908 5 Ybor City was a thriving immigrant neighborhood during Al Lopez s childhood with a population of over 10 000 The cigar industry was the most important in town and most residents were employed either by one of the dozens of large cigar factories or by businesses catering to the cigar industry and its employees Modesto Lopez found work as a skilled selector in a cigar factory which involved sorting raw tobacco leaves for use in different grades of cigars Al often visited his father s workplace as a child and later said that he hated the smell of tobacco leaves that permeated the building and clung to his father s clothing when he came home from the factory I vowed never to work in one 6 7 As a teenager Lopez took a job delivering Cuban bread door to door for La Joven Francesca Bakery which was located in a building which later became the Ybor City State Museum 7 He began to follow baseball when his elder brother Emilio introduced him to the game during the 1920 World Series which coincidentally involved two teams that Lopez would later play for Cleveland and Brooklyn According to Al Lopez his brother Emilio also had excellent baseball talent but he himself was more driven to excel at the game 8 Baseball player EditLopez s professional career began in 1924 when at the age of 16 he signed on as a catcher with the Class D Tampa Smokers of the Florida State League quitting his job at the bakery and dropping out of high school at Sacred Heart College later known as Jesuit High School to focus on baseball 9 His starting salary with the Smokers was 150 2 372 today per month which was much needed by the large Lopez family since his father s health was deteriorating and he could not work regularly 10 Modesto Lopez died of throat cancer in 1926 10 Soon after signing with the Smokers Al Lopez impressed Hall of Fame pitcher Walter Johnson with his catching skills during a winter barnstorming exhibition game At Johnson s recommendation Al was hired as a practice catcher for the Washington Senators during spring training in 1925 a valuable learning opportunity that he later credited with making him a better ballplayer 7 11 The Senators offered the Smokers 1000 for Lopez s contract but the minor league club demanded 10 000 which the major league club thought too exorbitant for a young player with only one year of professional baseball experience 12 Instead Lopez moved steadily up the minor leagues ranks in subsequent seasons and made his major league debut in 1928 with Brooklyn 6 After splitting time between the major and minor leagues for two seasons Lopez became the Dodgers primary catcher in 1930 at the age of 21 and he remained a regular starter in the major leagues over the next 17 seasons His best offensive campaign came in 1933 when he hit 301 stole 10 bases and finished 10th in National League MVP voting Overall he compiled modest career batting numbers including 613 runs 51 home runs and 652 RBIs and a 261 batting average He was better known for his defense leadership and his ability to work with various pitchers which earned him two trips to the All Star game and respect around the league 6 7 Over a major league playing career which ran from 1928 until 1947 Lopez played for the Brooklyn Robins Dodgers 1928 1930 1935 Boston Bees 1936 1940 Pittsburgh Pirates 1940 1946 and Cleveland Indians 1947 In 1945 Lopez surpassed Gabby Hartnett s major league record for career games as a catcher and when he retired after the 1947 season his major league record for games caught stood at 1 918 10 This record was not broken until 1987 by Bob Boone and the National League record was broken by Gary Carter in 1990 He caught 117 shutouts during his career ranking him 13th all time among major league catchers 13 Baseball manager EditMinor leagues Edit Lopez decided to seek a job as a baseball coach or manager upon retiring after the 1947 season which he d spent as the backup catcher for the Cleveland Indians Bill Veeck the new owner of the team was unhappy with how Indians player manager Lou Boudreau had handled the club and he asked Lopez if he would be interested in taking the position Lopez declined explaining that he did not want to appear to have undermined Boudreau to steal his job and preferred to gain managerial experience with another club 14 The decision was a positive one for both parties as the Indians won the 1948 World Series and Boudreau was named the American League MVP Meanwhile Lopez began his managing career in 1948 with the Indianapolis Indians the Pittsburgh Pirates s Class AAA minor league affiliate He spent three years in Indianapolis leading his squads to one first place and two second place finishes in the American Association while also serving as the team s reserve catcher 7 Before the 1950 season Lopez re signed with the Indianapolis Indians for the largest salary of any manager in American Association history with a clause in his contract which allowed for him to leave if offered a managerial position with a major league club 15 Major Leagues Edit Cleveland Indians Edit After having declined an opportunity to become the club s manager in 1947 Lopez accepted an offer to become the Cleveland Indians s new manager in 1951 Under Lopez the Indians won over 90 games each season from 1951 to 1953 but came in second to the New York Yankees each year In 1954 Lopez s squad won a then American League record 111 games to capture the AL pennant but were swept by Willie Mays and the New York Giants in the 1954 World Series in one of the biggest upsets in World Series history 16 Lopez s Indians again finished in second place behind the Yankees in 1955 and 1956 During the latter season Lopez became incensed at Cleveland fans and management as the season progressed Star third baseman Al Rosen slumped late in the year while playing injured and Lopez felt that the Indians team management had not supported or defended his injured player from fans booing and criticism Lopez was so disheartened over the situation that he resigned from the club on the last day of the season 17 Lopez finished his Indians career with a record of 570 wins and 354 losses and his 617 winning percentage is still the best in franchise history 18 Chicago White Sox Edit Lopez in 1965 Lopez agreed to become the new manager of the Chicago White Sox about a month after resigning in Cleveland 17 The White Sox did not have the power hitters of Lopez s Cleveland teams but they had more speed with players such as Nellie Fox Minnie Minoso and Luis Aparicio Consequently Lopez changed his offensive strategy to fit the roster The White Sox stole over 100 bases every season from 1957 to 1961 consistently leading the American League in that category and often almost doubling the total of the next highest team earning them the nickname Go Go Sox In 1957 his first year in Chicago Lopez s White Sox won 90 games and finished in second place behind the Yankees while the Indians suffered through a losing season Chicago again finished second in 1958 but finally broke through and won the American League pennant in 1959 losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the World Series By this time Lopez was very well respected and in demand manager and in the middle of the 1960 season a friend of New York Yankees president Dan Topping told an Associated Press reporter that Lopez would replace Yankees manager Casey Stengel 19 Stengel had managed Lopez years earlier when Lopez was a catcher for Brooklyn and Boston Despite rumored and confirmed inquiries from other teams Lopez stayed with Chicago until 1965 finishing in second place five times and never posting fewer than 82 wins 18 Lopez retired to the White Sox front office after the 1965 season due to a chronic stomach condition and assumed the title of team vice president 20 21 He returned to managing in July 1968 when White Sox manager Eddie Stanky was fired Lopez was able to get most of his former coaches to return to the team However he had to undergo an appendectomy shortly after taking over as manager and missed most of the rest of the season He agreed to manage the White Sox again in 1969 but continuing health issues forced him to resign in early May less than a month into the season 22 Managing style Edit Lopez circa 1966 Lopez was known for never scolding or shouting at his players and avoiding pep talks in lieu of constructive criticism 23 Indians owner Bill Veeck commented that Lopez s only fault as a manager was that he was too decent a description that Lopez took as a compliment 24 Veeck also said that Lopez s completely relaxed leadership squeezed every drop of talent out of his teams 25 Describing Lopez and his managerial style a 1957 Sports Illustrated piece said For Lopez managing is a constant worry a nervous strain a jittery agony Some managers thus beset relieve the harrowing pressure by exploding in sudden rages at players and sportswriters or else by maintaining an almost sphinx like silence in an effort to remain calm But Lopez is a gentleman a decent thoughtful exceptionally courteous man He seldom permits himself the luxury of a temper tantrum and he talks to anyone who talks to him 26 Later his son shared that while he did not demonstratively show it his father hated to lose and suffered from chronic insomnia and stomach issues during the baseball season 23 Tommy John who spent 26 years in MLB said Lopez had a better handle on all the facets of the game than any manager I ever played for He knew about hitting offense defense pitching catching and strategy The Senior as he was dubbed also understood player psychology and knew how to communicate with his players He was tough to play for in that he demanded so much out of you but that just made you a better performer Al was the type of manager who was smart enough and secure enough not to overmanage He threw the bats and balls out on the field and simply let you play 27 Because of his Spanish ancestry and his gentlemanly nature Lopez was given the nickname El Senor Managerial record Edit Lopez s 584 winning percentage is 9th all time in Major League Baseball history At the time of his retirement his 1 410 MLB managerial wins ranked 11th all time and were the 26th most wins as of the end of the 2016 season In 18 full seasons as a minor league and major league manager he never had a losing record His 1954 Indians and 1959 White Sox teams were the only non Yankee clubs to win the AL pennant between 1949 and 1964 inclusive and his 840 wins with the White Sox still rank second in franchise history behind Jimmy Dykes 899 18 Al Lopez s plaque at the Baseball Hall of Fame Team Year Regular season PostseasonGames Won Lost Win Finish Won Lost Win ResultCLE 1951 154 93 61 604 2nd in AL CLE 1952 154 93 61 604 2nd in AL CLE 1953 154 92 62 597 2nd in AL CLE 1954 154 111 43 721 1st in AL 0 4 000 Lost World Series NYG CLE 1955 154 91 63 591 2nd in AL CLE 1956 154 88 66 571 2nd in AL CLE total 924 570 354 617 0 4 000CWS 1957 154 90 64 584 2nd in AL CWS 1958 154 82 72 532 2nd in AL CWS 1959 154 94 60 610 1st in AL 2 4 333 Lost World Series LAD CWS 1960 154 87 67 565 3rd in AL CWS 1961 162 86 76 531 4th in AL CWS 1962 162 85 77 525 5th in AL CWS 1963 162 94 68 580 2nd in AL CWS 1964 162 98 64 605 2nd in AL CWS 1965 162 95 67 586 2nd in AL CWS 1968 11 6 5 545 leave 36 15 21 417 8th in ALCWS 1969 17 8 9 471 resigned CWS total 1490 840 650 564 2 4 333Total 18 2414 1410 1004 584 2 8 200Personal life and legacy Edit Al Lopez at left with Ronald Reagan and Walter Alston 1982 Al Lopez met Evelyn Connie Kearney a dancer at the Hollywood Club in New York while he was playing for Brooklyn in the early 1930s and the couple often went on double dates with teammate Tony Cuccinello and his wife When Lopez was traded to Boston in 1935 he and Connie found it difficult to conduct a long distance relationship so she soon joined him They married on October 7 1939 and had a son Al Jr in 1940 28 7 Honors Edit Al and Connie Lopez retired to his hometown in 1970 to live near family and friends Lopez was the first Tampa native to play in the major leagues the first to manage a major league team the first to manage his team to a World Series Lou Piniella and Tony La Russa each did so later and the first to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame As such he was the recipient of many honors in his hometown both during and after his long baseball career Lopez was the manager of the Cleveland Indians and had just led them to the World Series when the city of Tampa built a new minor league and spring training ballpark It was named Al Lopez Field and the date of the dedication ceremony October 6 1954 was declared Al Lopez Day in the city of Tampa 29 The Chicago White Sox were the ballpark s first spring training tenants and when Lopez became the new White Sox manager in 1957 he had the unusual honor for several seasons of managing home games in his hometown in a ballpark named after himself Later in life Lopez would recall a spring training incident in which an umpire with whom he was arguing threatened to throw him out of a game there You can t throw me out of this ballpark protested Lopez This is my ballpark Al Lopez Field The umpire ejected him anyway causing Lopez to exclaim He threw me out of my own ballpark 30 Lopez was selected for induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee as part of the Class of 1977 31 He served as the AL s honorary team captain in the 1990 Major League Baseball All Star Game 32 Al Lopez Field was demolished in 1989 to make room for a potential major league facility that was never built Lopez lived a few miles from the ballpark that bore his name In a 1992 interview he said that the razing of the stadium wasn t very disappointing I saw a diagram of the new stadium and I didn t feel bad because I thought they were going to build a bigger one and a better one After that something happened and they never built the ballpark Then it was a disappointment 33 Soon thereafter the city of Tampa changed the name of Horizon Park a large city park near the site of the razed stadium to Al Lopez Park and installed a large statue of Lopez in his catching gear 34 The statue was dedicated on October 3 1992 a date which was officially proclaimed as a second Al Lopez Day in the city 35 Soon thereafter his high school Jesuit High School which is located across the street from Al Lopez Park named its new athletic center in Lopez s honor 36 When the expansion Tampa Bay Devil Rays began play in 1998 in nearby St Petersburg Lopez threw one of several ceremonial first pitches along with fellow Hall of Famers Ted Williams Stan Musial and Monte Irvin 37 7 The Rays annually award the Al Lopez Award to the most outstanding rookie in the team s spring camp each year 7 In 2013 Lopez s boyhood home was moved to a lot across the street from the Ybor City State Museum where it is undergoing renovation to become the Tampa Baseball Museum at the Al Lopez House 38 Death Edit Al Lopez died on October 30 2005 at the age of 97 after suffering a heart attack at his son s home His death came four days after the White Sox won the 2005 World Series their first world championship in 88 years and their first AL pennant since Lopez had led them to the World Series in 1959 Lopez was the last living person who had played major league baseball during the 1920s and was the longest lived member of the Baseball Hall of Fame until Bobby Doerr passed him in 2015 39 Connie Lopez had died in September 1983 Al Lopez was survived by his son three grandchildren and nine great grandchildren 24 See also Edit Biography portal Baseball portalList of Major League Baseball managers by winsReferences EditSingletary Wes 1999 Al Lopez The life of baseball s El Senor Jefferson N C McFarland amp Co ISBN 0786406569 Al Lopez Statistics and History baseball reference com Retrieved on 2017 05 12 Smashing start Tampa Baseball Museum WTSP Singletary p 10 George Justin He was pride of Tampa Latinos Archived 2011 05 24 at the Wayback Machine Tampa Bay Times November 1 2005 Accessed August 22 2013 Singletary p 11 a b c Al Lopez a Hall of Fame Manager is Dead at 97 The New York Times Octobrt 31 2005 Accessed August 22 2013 a b c d e f g h Al Lopez Society for American Baseball Research sabr org Retrieved 1 July 2017 Singletary p 14 Singletary p 19 a b c Al Lopez A Legend Archived 2011 07 16 at the Wayback Machine Tampa Tribune Singletary p 22 Singletary p 24 The Encyclopedia of Catchers Trivia December 2010 Career Shutouts Caught The Encyclopedia of Baseball Catchers Retrieved 29 December 2015 Singletary p 114 Al Lopez signed again as chief Palm Beach Post September 22 1950 Retrieved November 8 2014 Top 10 World Series upsets FOX Sports foxsports com Retrieved 1 July 2017 a b Tampa s Lopez named to manage White Sox St Petersburg Times 30 October 1957 Retrieved 29 December 2015 a b c d Al Lopez Baseball Reference Sports Reference Retrieved October 24 2015 Eck Frank August 7 1960 Eck sees Al Lopez as next pilot of Yanks Reading Eagle Retrieved November 8 2014 Lopez Al Baseball Hall of Fame Retrieved November 1 2014 Al Lopez resigns managerial post with Chicago White Sox Ellensburg Daily Record November 5 1965 Retrieved November 8 2014 Al Lopez resigns Ocala Star Banner May 4 1969 Retrieved November 8 2014 a b Singletary p 118 a b Goldstein Richard 31 October 2005 Al Lopez a Hall of Fame Manager is Dead at 97 The New York Times Singletary p 117 Creamer Robert July 1 1957 The Good Days And The Bad Days Of Al Lopez Sports Illustrated Retrieved August 22 2013 John Tommy Valenti Dan 1991 TJ My Twenty Six Years in Baseball New York Bantam p 90 ISBN 0 553 07184 X Singletary pp 98 99 Tampa Gives Hero s Welcome to Modest Al St Petersburg Times 7 October 1954 Retrieved 21 August 2016 St Petersburg Times Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved 1 July 2017 Baseball Hall of Fame Al Lopez Baseball Hall of Fame 2017 07 05 Basse Craig October 31 2005 Baseball legend Lopez dies St Petersburg Times Retrieved November 1 2014 Basse Craig 31 October 2005 Baseball legend Lopez dies St Petersburg Times Retrieved 21 August 2016 Hall of Famer Lopez passes at 97 MLB com Accessed August 22 2013 Singletary p 230 The Tiger Tradition Archived 2014 07 01 at the Wayback Machine Jesuit High School Accessed August 22 2013 Devil Rays Timeline tampabay rays mlb com The Official Website of the Tampa Bay Rays 2017 07 05 Morel Laura C Al Lopez house moves to Ybor City for new life as museum Tampa Bay Times May 16 2013 Accessed August 22 2013 Bobby Doerr Becomes Oldest Hall of Famer baseballhall org Retrieved 1 July 2017 External links EditAl Lopez at the Baseball Hall of Fame Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference or Fangraphs or Baseball Reference Minors Al Lopez managerial career statistics at Baseball Reference com Al Lopez at Find a Grave Al Lopez chronology from the Tampa Tribune Al Lopez Oral History Interview 1 of 2 National Baseball Hall of Fame Digital Collection Al Lopez Oral History Interview 2 of 2 National Baseball Hall of Fame Digital Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Lopez amp oldid 1132888951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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