| Jim Frey | |
|---|---|
Frey in 1980 | |
| Manager | |
| Born:(1931-05-26)May 26, 1931 Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. | |
| Died: April 12, 2020(2020-04-12) (aged 88) Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, U.S. | |
Batted: Left Threw: Left | |
| Career statistics | |
| Managerial record | 323–287–1 |
| Winning % | .530 |
| Managerial record atBaseball Reference | |
| Teams | |
| As manager As coach | |
| Career highlights and awards | |
James Gottfried Frey (May 26, 1931 – April 12, 2020) was an Americanprofessional baseballmanager,coach,general manager, andMinor League Baseball (MiLB)outfielder. In1980, Frey led theKansas City Royals ofMajor League Baseball (MLB) to their firstAmerican League (AL) championship, in his first year with the team.[1] In theWorld Series, they lost to thePhiladelphia Phillies, who won their firstWorld Series championship.
Frey was born inCleveland, Ohio. He was attendedWestern Hills High School inCincinnati, Ohio alongside his lifelong friendDon Zimmer. A left-handed batting-and-throwing outfielder, Frey spent much of his career in thefarm systems of theBoston/Milwaukee Braves andSt. Louis Cardinals. A recurring arm injury prevented him from his best shot at the big leagues, in1958.[2]
Following the end of Frey's playing career in1963, he joined theBaltimore Orioles as ascout and MiLB manager. Frey was promoted to the MLB Orioles' coaching staff underEarl Weaver, in1970, and coached on three AL pennant winners and oneWorld Series champion through1979.Jim Palmer called him "one of the great fielder-mover-arounders of all time."[3]
A week after the end of the1979 World Series on October 24, Frey was named to succeedWhitey Herzog as manager of the Kansas City Royals.[4] He led the Royals to a 97–65 mark and theAmerican League West Division title in 1980; then, in the1980 American League Championship Series, the Royals swept their long-time postseason nemesis, theNew York Yankees, in three straight games to capture the AL title.[5] This served as some sort of revenge for the Yankees having defeated Herzog's Royals for three consecutive seasons (1976–78) in the ALCS. However, the Royals dropped theWorld Series to thePhiladelphia Phillies in six games. Frey's use of seven pitchers for the whole Series led to short runs for their starters that meant they could not pitch efficiently despite batting .290 in the Series.[5]
During thestrike-marred 1981 season, in which the Royals finished the first half with a 20–30 record, Frey was criticized widely for not taking full advantage of a team built for speed and for failing to motivate his players by Kansas City vice president/general managerJoe Burke. Frey was relieved of his duties on August 31, despite the 10–10 ballclub leading the second-halfAmerican League West standings. His replacement wasDick Howser, who had lost his managerial job with the Yankees after the previous year's ALCS. Frey's record in just less than two seasons as Royals manager was 127–105.[6]
Frey then returned to the coaching ranks as the hitting coach for theNew York Mets from 1982 to 1983.[7] Nicknamed “Preacher Man”, Frey was hired by theChicago Cubs as their manager for the 1984 season.[8]Ryne Sandberg (approaching his fourth season in the majors) cited Frey as key to shaping his mindset when it came to driving the baseball and his timing on certain pitches (after Frey noticed Sandberg's approach during spring training games that year), which saw him win the NL MVP (among other awards) that year on the road to a Hall of Fame career.[9] As for the Cubs, they won the division title, earning their first post-season appearance since the1945 World Series. During the clubhouse celebration following the division-clinching inPittsburgh, Frey declared, "The monkey's off our back!"[2][10]
The Cubs won the first two games against theSan Diego Padres in the1984 National League Championship Series atWrigley Field, before they went to San Diego needing to win just one of the next three games.[11] The Cubs were then blown out in Game 3, which was then followed by the decision by Frey to not haveRick Sutcliffe (who had gone 16–1 since being acquired by the Cubs midseason) pitch four days after winning Game 1 in a move apparently decided not long before Game 4 was to begin (with an idea to save Sutcliffe for either the next game of the series or Game 1 of a potential World Series). Instead, Frey went with starterScott Sanderson on the mound, which saw him give up three runs in four innings, but the Cubs had rallied with two runs in the eighth to tie the game. In the bottom of the ninth, closerLee Smith gave up a one-out base hit and then gave up a walk off two-run home run fromSteve Garvey to force a Game 5. WithRick Sutcliffe on the mound (who had gone 16–1 since being acquired by the Cubs midseason), the Cubs led 3–0 after the end of five innings. In the sixth, Sutcliffe gave up two hits along with a walk before two sacrifice flies gave the Padres two runs before the end of the inning. Sutcliffe was sent out to pitch the seventh inning, which spiraled into disaster that saw the Padres score four runs in the inning before Sutcliffe was finally pulled. By the end of the game, the Padres had won 6–3.[11] Many critics blamed Frey for mishandling thepitching staff, although the 1984 Cubs are revered among Cubs fans.[12] Baseball historianBill James called Frey in 1997 the "dumbest manager I had ever met" along with stating that his success with the Royals and Cubs happened as "He was what those teams needed at that time -- not a guy who could play percentages or teach young men to play baseball, but a guy who could keep a veteran team in a positive frame of mind for a few months. All teams are different; all managers are different."[13][14]
The 1985 season would be particularly trying for the team, in which the entire five-manstarting rotation simultaneously spent time on thedisabled list. Cubs media relations director Bob Ibach later related that when it was suggested to Frey to turnDennis Eckersley into a relief pitcher due to his velocity dropping after the fourth inning, he was quoted as saying “There’s no (bleepin’) way he'll ever be a (bleepin’) relief pitcher” (in 1987, traded to Oakland, Eckersley would soon be a star relief closer). After a finish of 77–84 in 1985, the bottom fell out in 1986. Frey was fired two months into the season and replaced byJohn Vukovich.[15] The next year, Frey surfaced as acolor commentator on the Cubs'WGN Radio broadcasts, which Cubs general managerDallas Green later felt was a move made byTribune Company as preparation to replace Green.[16]
On November 11, 1987, Tribune hired Frey to replace his old boss in Green in serving as director of baseball operations.[17][18] Frey hired his lifelong friend, Zimmer, to manage the team, and immediately made his presence felt. Within weeks of his hiring, Frey dealtrelief pitcherLee Smith toBoston for journeymanpitchersAl Nipper andCalvin Schiraldi, the latter of whom was best known for playing a part in the Red Sox'1986 World Series collapse.[19] Frey also traded the popularKeith Moreland to San Diego forcloserGoose Gossage, who had played a big part on the Padres team that eliminated the Cubs, four years earlier.[20] Neither move worked, and the Cubs were without a closer. Before November 1987, Frey informedGordon Goldsberry, the director of player development and scouting (as hired by Green in 1981), that he would not have his contract renewed; the move was stated to have hurt the farm system, as he also let go of a number of scouts.[21][22]
Frey made a bold move in the winter of 1988, trading budding starRafael Palmeiro and young pitcherJamie Moyer to theTexas Rangers for a number of players, includingMitch Williams.[23] The trade appeared to pay off for the Cubs with respect to the 1989 season 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 productive careers. Following the 1989 campaign, Frey was named co-Executive of the Year byUnited Press International (UPI).[2][24]
After a disappointing 1990 season, Frey was active on thefree agent market, acquiring formerToronto Blue Jay and1987 American LeagueMVPGeorge Bell, formerCincinnati Redsstarting pitcherDanny Jackson, and formerHouston Astros closerDave Smith.[25] Jackson and Smith flopped in their roles in 1991, and Zimmer was fired – apparently on orders from Tribune Co.CEODonald Grenesko, in May 1991.Jim Essian, a formerjourneymancatcher andIowa Cubs manager, replaced Zimmer for the remainder of the season. Frey was reassigned within the organization after the 1991 season, and was replaced by formerChicago White Sox general managerLarry Himes.[26] He left baseball in 1992, citing a feeling of being worn out after 43 years in the game.
| Team | Year | Regular season | Postseason | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Games | Won | Lost | Win % | Finish | Won | Lost | Win % | Result | ||
| KC | 1980 | 162 | 97 | 65 | .599 | 1st in AL Central | 5 | 4 | .556 | LostWorld Series (PHI) |
| KC | 1981 | 50 | 20 | 30 | .400 | 5th in AL Central | – | – | – | – |
| 20 | 10 | 10 | .500 | Fired | ||||||
| KC total | 232 | 127 | 105 | .547 | 5 | 4 | .556 | |||
| CHC | 1984 | 161 | 96 | 65 | .596 | 1st in NL East | 2 | 3 | .400 | LostNLCS (SD) |
| CHC | 1985 | 162 | 77 | 84 | .478 | 4th in NL East | – | – | – | – |
| CHC | 1986 | 56 | 23 | 33 | .411 | Fired | – | – | – | – |
| CHC total | 379 | 196 | 182 | .519 | 2 | 3 | .400 | |||
| Total | 611 | 323 | 287 | .530 | 7 | 7 | .500 | |||
Later on, Frey becameVice Chairman of theIndependentSomerset Patriots of theAtlantic League of Professional Baseball, being a key figure in the team's early years.[5][27] He died inPonte Vedra, Florida, on April 12, 2020, at the age of 88, survived by his wife of 68 years and his four children.[28][29]
| Sporting positions | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Baltimore Orioles Hitting Coach 1970–1977 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Baltimore Orioles Bullpen Coach 1970–1975 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Baltimore Orioles First Base Coach 1976–1979 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Chicago Cubs Manager 1984–1986 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Chicago Cubs General Manager 1988–1991 | Succeeded by |