| Harvey Kuenn | |
|---|---|
![]() Kuenn, circa 1959 | |
| Outfielder /Shortstop | |
| Born:(1930-12-04)December 4, 1930 West Allis, Wisconsin, U.S. | |
| Died: February 28, 1988(1988-02-28) (aged 57) Peoria, Arizona, U.S. | |
Batted: Right Threw: Right | |
| MLB debut | |
| September 6, 1952, for the Detroit Tigers | |
| Last MLB appearance | |
| October 2, 1966, for the Philadelphia Phillies | |
| MLB statistics | |
| Batting average | .303 |
| Hits | 2,092 |
| Home runs | 87 |
| Runs batted in | 671 |
| Stats atBaseball Reference | |
| Managerial record at Baseball Reference | |
| Teams | |
As player
As manager As coach | |
| Career highlights and awards | |
Harvey Edward Kuenn Jr. (/kiːn/; December 4, 1930 – February 28, 1988) was an American professionalbaseball player,coach,manager andscout. He played inMajor League Baseball (MLB) as ashortstop andoutfielder, most prominently as a member of theDetroit Tigers where he won the 1953American League Rookie of the Year Award and the 1959 American Leaguebatting championship. A ten-timeAll-Star, Kuenn also played for theCleveland Indians,San Francisco Giants,Chicago Cubs, andPhiladelphia Phillies. He retired as a player with over 2,000 hits and a lifetime batting average of .303.
After his playing career, he led his hometown team as the manager of theMilwaukee Brewers, winning the 1982American League pennant and came within one game of winning the1982 World Series. He later worked as a major league scout for the Brewers. Kuenn was inducted into theMilwaukee Brewers Walk of Fame in 2005, and theMilwaukee Brewers Wall of Honor in 2014.
Kuenn was born on December 12, 1930, inWest Allis, Wisconsin, but raised in neighboringMilwaukee and attendedLutheran High School. He was the only child born toGerman-Americans Harvey and Dorothy (Wrensch) Kuenn.[1] He played baseball, football and basketball at Lutheran.[2] He playedquarterback, and once kicked (dropkicked) a 52-yard field goal for Lutheran in a football game,[1][2] which is tied for the eighth-longest field goal in Wisconsin high school football history.[citation needed] He was also a star basketball player on teams that won three conference titles.[1]
Kuenn played collegiate baseball at theUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison, where he was a member ofDelta Upsilon fraternity. As a junior in 1952, Kuenn was the Badgers captain and Most Valuable Player (MVP). In 1952, he was named anAll-American and All-Big Ten at shortstop, leading the Big Ten conference with a .436 batting average and in five other offensive categories (runs batted in,runs,doubles,triples andhits). He had a .382 careerbatting average at Madison.[1][3][4]
Kuenn was signed by Detroit as an amateurfree agent on June 9, 1952, after the collegiate baseball season ended.[3] He was originally assigned to theDavenport Tigers of theClass BIllinois-Indiana-Iowa (Triple-I) League. The 21-year old Kuenn hit .340 in 63 games.[5] This would be his only time spent in the minor leagues.[6] Kuenn was named the starting shortstop after joining the Tigers late in the season, starting in 19 games and hitting .325 in 80 at bats, and had a .962 fielding percentage at shortstop.[7]
In his first full season in 1953, he hit .308 with 94 runs and led the major leagues with 209 hits,[8][7] setting a major league rookie record with 167singles,[9][10] leading the league in that category as well. Kuenn also led the league inat bats andplate appearances, and had the fourth best at bats per strikeout ratio.[8] He received theAmerican League Rookie of the Year andThe Sporting News (TSN)Rookie of the Year awards.[11][12] He received 23 of 24 possible votes from theBaseball Writers' Association of America.[13] Also in that season, he received the first of his ten consecutive selections to theAll-Star Game (with two All-Star Games in 1959 and 1960).[14][7]
A line drive hitter who hit to all fields,[1] Kuenn showed consistency in the next two seasons, compiling very similar numbers: he hit .306 with 81 runs and a league-leading 201 hits in 1954, then hit .306 with 101 runs and 190 hits in 1955.[7] In 1954, he struck out only 13 times in a league-leading 656 at bats, second only toNellie Fox in at bats to strikeout ratio (50.5).[7][15] During his early years with the Tigers, he was mentored defensively at shortstop byJohnny Pesky andJoe Gordon.[16] In 1956, he set career highs with 12 home runs and 88 runs batted in (RBI) and raised his average to .332,[7] surpassed only byMickey Mantle (.353) andTed Williams (.345) in the batting race.[17]
A year later, he slumped badly to .277; the only time he hit less than .300 for the Tigers.[7] But he rebounded in 1958 with a .319 average,[7] ending third in the league behind Williams (.328) andPete Runnels (.322), and surpassingAl Kaline,Vic Power,Bob Cerv, Mantle,Rocky Colavito,Minnie Miñoso and Nellie Fox.[18] In that season, he switched to the outfield, where he played all three positions over the remainder of his career.[7]
After winning theAmerican League batting crown in 1959 with a .353 average, being named to both all-star games, and coming in 8th in MVP voting,[7] Kuenn was traded to Cleveland for Rocky Colavito before the 1960 season. Colavito had tiedHarmon Killebrew for the 1959 American Leaguehome run title, with 42, and was 4th in MVP voting.[19][20][21] (The trade is often referred to by Cleveland fans as "the curse of Rocky Colavito".[22]). With the Indians, playing in right field, Kuenn hit .308 in the 1960 season, high average on the team.[23] It was his last all-star season, and only year in Cleveland.[7]
In December 1960, Cleveland traded Kuenn to the San Francisco Giants forJohnny Antonelli andWillie Kirkland.[21] In 1961, he played right field, left field and third based for the Giants, hitting a then career low .265.[7] In 1962, led byWillie Mays, the Giants won the National League pennant, and Kuenn rebounded with a .304 average. He would never hit above .300 again as a full-time player. Kuenn played principally in left field, though he also started 29 games at third base.[7][24] The Giants lost to the Yankees 4–3 in the1962 World Series.[25]
Kuenn played two more years with the Giants (1963-64). He hit .290 in 1963, but had less than 500 plate appearances for the first time. In 1964, his average fell to .262 and his playing time again decreased.[7] On May 29, 1965, the Giants traded Kuenn,Ed Bailey andBob Hendley to the Chicago Cubs forDick Bertell andLen Gabrielson.[21] Kuenn played in only 54 games for the Cubs, with a .217 batting average. After playing only three games for the Cubs in 1966, his rights were sold to the Philadelphia Phillies. He played in 86 games, batting .296, but was released at the end of the season.[7][21] He retired before the 1967 season began.[1]
In a 15-season playing career, Kuenn was a .303 hitter with 87 home runs and 671 RBIs in 1833games. He led the AL in hits four times and doubles three times, and finished with 2,092 hits. Playing all three outfield positions and the infield except catcher and second base, Kuenn recorded a .966fielding percentage.[7] In addition to his ten all-star game appearances, from 1953 to 1962, Kuenn was voted in the top-10 for American League most valuable player three times, and the top-20 seven times.[7]
He finished his career with a 17.1 at bats to strike out ratio.[9] Hall of Fame managerCasey Stengel[26] said that Kuenn was one of the "'most dangerous hitters in baseball. The guy can hurt you a million ways. He has no weakness at the plate that I have ever noticed.'”[4]
Kuenn had the dubious distinction of making the final out in two ofSandy Koufax's fourno-hitters—in 1963 and 1965. In the former, the final out was on a ground ball back to Koufax.[27] In the latter, he struck out for the final out inKoufax's perfect game.[28][1]
Kuenn was hired as the Milwaukee Brewers batting coach in 1971. The Brewers activated Kuenn as a player on September 1, 1971, for the sake of his pension benefits. He never appeared in a game, however.[1][7]
Kuenn remained as the Brewers hitting coach from 1971 to 1982. When managerDel Crandall was fired with two games to go in the1975 season, Kuenn served as aninterim manager.[1] He experienced a series of medical complications beginning in the mid-1970s, including heart and stomach surgeries, and in February 1980, he had his right leg amputated just below the knee after ablood clot cut circulation. He returned to coaching only six months after the operation, with a prosthetic leg.[29][10]
After 47 games into the Brewers1982 season, the team was 23–24. General managerHarry Dalton fired managerBuck Rodgers, and made Kuenn interim manager.[30] Under Kuenn, the Brewers went on to finish the season with a 72–43 record, winning theAmerican League east title on the last day of the season over theBaltimore Orioles, with whom they had been tied.[31][32] Many Brewers players believed Kuenn's managerial philosophy led to their success, as he encouraged his players to relax and have fun while playing the game.[10] As a team, the Brewers had a .279 batting average, with 216 home runs and 891 runs scored.[33] The Brewers were nicknamed "Harvey's Wallbangers" after their manager.[34]
In 1982, Kuenn managed theMilwaukee Brewers to their onlyWorld Series appearance to date (as of 2025).[35] He was selected by theAssociated Press as the ALManager of the Year, after taking the Brewers in June from a 23–24 start to the AL East title with a 95–67 overall record.[36] Milwaukee then won the AL pennant after rallying from a 2–0 deficit and beating theCalifornia Angels in the best-of-fiveAmerican League Championship Series.[37] They ultimately lost the1982 World Series to theSt. Louis Cardinals in seven games.[38] Because of an injury, the Brewers top relief pitcher, future Hall of FamerRollie Fingers, was unavailable for the World Series. Fingers was the 1981 American LeagueCy Young Award winner and Most Valuable Player, and had 29 saves during an All-Star 1982 season.[39][40][41][42]
In addition to Fingers, the 1982 Brewers' roster included All-StarsCecil Cooper[43] andBen Oglivie,[44] American League home run leaderGorman Thomas,[45] 1982 Cy Young Award winnerPete Vuckovich,[39] and futureHall of FamersPaul Molitor,Ted Simmons andRobin Yount (who was also the 1982 AL MVP).[46][47][48][49][40] As a hitting instructor, Kuenn had worked with Yount, Molitor, Thomas and Oglivie, as well as Brewers playersCharlie Moore,Sixto Lezcano andJim Gantner.[50]
Kuenn was fired as manager after theBrewers finished fifth in the AL East with an otherwise respectable 87–75 record in 1983, replaced byRene Lachemann (who was fired after one year). The 1983 Brewers had been without the services of Fingers for the entire year, and Vuckovich until August.[1] Overall Kuenn compiled a 160–118 managerial record.[51][52]
After being replaced as manager, Kuenn worked as a major leaguescout and minor league hitting consultant for the Brewers, until his death in 1988.[1]
In addition to being named American League manager of the year and rookie of the year, Kuenn was inducted into theWisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame,[53] and the University of Wisconsin Athletic Hall of Fame (1991).[3] In 2005, he was honored with inclusion in theMilwaukee Brewers Walk of Fame atAmerican Family Field.[54] He was part of the inaugural class included in the Brewers Wall of Honor in 2014.[55][56]
On October 29, 1955, he married formerMiss Wisconsin 1954, Dixie Ann Sarchet in her hometown ofStevens Point, Wisconsin. They were divorced in 1971. In 1974, Kuenn married Audrey Cesar, with hall of fame broadcasterBob Uecker as his best man.[1][57] Audrey Kuenn remained an ongoing presence with the Milwaukee Brewers, even after Kuenn's death.[58] Her family's tavern, Cesar's Inn, was a gathering place for the team during Kuenn's managing days.[50] His son with Dixie, Harvey Kuenn III, played minor league baseball and became a Brewers scout for a number of years.[59]
During the off-seasons, Kuenn worked at a West Allis bank. After he retired as a player in 1967, Kuenn worked as the ten o’clock sports anchor withWVTV in Milwaukee. The expansionMontreal Expos managerGene Mauch offered Kuenn a coaching job in 1969, but his family did not want to move there.[50]
Kuenn died on February 28, 1988, of complications from heart disease and diabetes at his home inPeoria, Arizona, in 1988 at the age of 57.[10][52] The Brewers wore a patch with his initials during the 1988 season to commemorate him.[60] His eulogy was delivered by Bob Uecker.[50]