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Major League Baseball Stats
 
Batting Stats
GamesAt BatsHitsAverageSlugging %
1,6375,3501,3200.2470.320
 
 
Managing Stats
GamesWinsLosesTiesW/L%
3,7392,0081,709220.540
 
Notable Accomplishments
All-Star Game Roster as Player: 3
All-Star Game Roster as Manager: 4
Leo Durocher
(Leo Ernest Durocher)
"Leo the Lip" | "Lippy"
Born: July 27, 1905        Died: October 7, 1991 (86 yrs.)
 
Year of Induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame
1994
 
Induction Position/Capacity
Manager
 
 
 
 
 
Bats
Right
Throws
Right
Seasons1st GameLast Game
17October 2, 1925April 18, 1945
 
Positions Played/Held
Manager
2nd Base
3rd Base
Shortstop
Pinch Hitter
Pinch Runner
 
Teams as Player
New York Yankees (1925-1929)
Cincinnati Reds (1930-1933)
St. Louis Cardinals (1933-1937)
Brooklyn Dodgers (1938-1945)
 
Teams as Manager
Brooklyn Dodgers (1939-1946)
Brooklyn Dodgers (1948)
New York Giants (1948-1955)
Chicago Cubs (1966-1972)
Houston Astros (1972-1973)
 
Known as one of baseball’s fieriest personalities who would do anything to win, Leo Durocher did just that: Win.  
 
Over 24 years as a skipper for the Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros, Durocher won 2,008 total games, three pennants and a World Series.  
 
But it was Durocher’s banter with umpires, executives and players that earned him his eternal reputation as “The Lip.”  
 
Durocher’s life in baseball began as a small, slick-fielding shortstop with the dynastic New York Yankees of the 1920s. While he was not an imposing hitter, Durocher’s scrappy play and maximum effort led Babe Ruth to call him “the All-American out.”  
 
Durocher won the 1928 World Series with the Yankees, then won another Fall Classic as captain of the St. Louis Cardinals’ “Gashouse Gang” in 1934.  
 
In addition to his hustle, Durocher also garnered his famous nickname “The Lip,” or “Lippy,” for his hard-scrabble conversations with umpires from the dugout. His temper was thought to have stemmed from his relationship with another diminutive Hall of Famer: Rabbit Maranville.  
 
“Never back up,” Maranville told Durocher when the latter was a boy in West Springfield, Mass. “The first backward step a little man takes is the one that’s going to kill him.”  
 
In 1939, Durocher was named player-manager for the Dodgers and quickly became known for his dirt-kicking tirades against umpires. He also clashed with Brooklyn’s front office, and claimed that he was fired and rehired by general manager Larry McPhail dozens of times.  
 
Despite his antics, there was no doubt about Durocher’s record. In 1941, Durocher led the Dodgers, who were affectionately named “the Bums” by their own fans, to the franchise’s first pennant in 21 years.  
 
"As long as I've got a chance to beat you, I'm going to take it,” Durocher said simply.  
 
In 1947, Commissioner Happy Chandler suspended Durocher for a year due to his “accumulation of unpleasant incidents” which included his accused association with gamblers. Led by Jackie Robinson, who Durocher staunchly supported when he broke the color barrier, the Dodgers captured the ’47 National League pennant.  
 
In 1948, Durocher shocked the baseball world when he became manager of the Dodgers’ crosstown rival New York Giants – a squad Durocher had famously referred to when he remarked that “nice guys finish last.” It was at the Polo Grounds where Durocher found his greatest success. In 1951, his Giants capped off an incredible 13½ game comeback on the Dodgers with Bobby Thomson’s famous “Shot Heard ’Round the World” homer to win the pennant. Three years later, Durocher and the Giants swept the heavily favored Cleveland Indians in the 1954 World Series.  
 
Durocher left New York after the 1955 season and became a color commentator for NBC’s baseball broadcasts. He returned to the manager’s office with the Cubs in 1966 and served his final nine seasons in Chicago and Houston.  
 
Durocher retired in 1973 as the fifth-winningest manager in history, and second only to Hall of Famer John McGraw in the National League.  Durocher passed away on Oct. 7, 1991. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1994. (Ref: National Baseball Hall of Fame)
 
Cards and Other Memorabilia
Leo Durocher - Estimated Sets: 757 | DB Records: 33 | Images: 10
 
1929 - 1930  Exhibit Supply Company
Four-on-One Vending Machine Cards (W463-1)
Mark Koenig - Geo.H."Babe" Ruth - Leo Durocher - Henry L Gehrig  

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1931 - 1932  Exhibit Supply Company
Four-on-One Vending Machine Cards (W463-2)
Durocher/Walker., Heilmann/Cullop 

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1933  Goudey
Big League Chewing Gum (R319)
Leo Durocher  (#147)

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1933  World Wide Gum
Big League Chewing Gum Cards (V353)
Leo Durocher  (#74)

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1934  Goudey
Big League Chewing Gum (R320)
Leo Durocher  (#7)

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1939  Gum, Inc.
Baseball Players (R334)
Leo Durocher  (#6)

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1950  Bowman
Baseball Picture Cards (R406-4)
Leo Durocher  (#220)

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1951  Bowman
Baseball Stars Full Color Picture Cards (R406-5)
Leo Durocher  (#233)

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1952  Red Man Tobacco
Double-Header for Baseball Fans!
Leo Durocher  (#NL1)

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1952  Topps
Baseball Giant Size Picture Cards
Leo Durocher  (#315)

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