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Major League Baseball Stats
 
Batting Stats
GamesAt BatsHitsAverageSlugging %
1,0232,9597680.2600.392
 
 
Managing Stats
GamesWinsLosesTiesW/L%
3,0231,5711,45110.520
 
Dick Williams
(Richard  Hirschfeld  Williams)
Born: May 7, 1929        Died: July 7, 2011 (82 yrs.)
 
Year of Induction into the Baseball Hall of Fame
2008
 
Induction Position/Capacity
Manager
 
 
 
 
 
Bats
Right
Throws
Right
Seasons1st GameLast Game
13June 10, 1951September 22, 1964
 
Positions Played/Held
Manager
1st Base
2nd Base
3rd Base
Left Field
Center Field
Right Field
Pinch Hitter
Pinch Runner
 
Teams as Player
Brooklyn Dodgers (1951-1956)
Baltimore Orioles (1956)
Cleveland Indians (1957)
Baltimore Orioles (1957-1958)
Kansas City Athletics (1959-1960)
Baltimore Orioles (1961-1962)
Boston Red Sox (1963-1964)
 
Teams as Manager
Boston Red Sox (1967-1969)
Oakland Athletics (1971-1973)
California Angels (1974-1976)
Montreal Expos (1977-1981)
San Diego Padres (1982-1985)
Seattle Mariners (1986-1988)
 
Richard Hirschfield “Dick” Williams had a nice career on the field for a variety of Major League ball clubs, at a number of spots all across the diamond during his 13 year playing career. However it was in the dugout, using his mind as a baseball manager, that he would earn his spot among baseball’s immortals.
 
Dick Williams proved to be one of baseball’s best managers at turning a team’s fortunes around. It all started when he inherited the Boston Red Sox in 1967, a team that had finished next to last the previous season. Not much was expected of the Sox, but Williams surprised the baseball world and led them to an “impossible dream”-- coming within one win of a World Series championship. "We didn't know how to study the game," explained Red Sox first baseman George Scott, "Dick Showed us how to do it. He pressed the right buttons for everyone on that team".
 
Williams took over the Oakland Athletics after their second place finish in 1970 and led them to the American League pennant. He followed that up with two straight World Series championships, which prompted eccentric A’s owner Charlie Finley to proclaim “Dick Williams is the best manager I've ever had. I ought to know. I've fired enough of them”.
 
Finley wasn’t the only owner enamored with Williams. Yankee owner George Steinbrenner thought so much of Williams, he tried to hire him twice, unsuccessfully—once after he had a falling out with Charlie Finley and Finley wouldn’t let him out of his contract, and once again after the tragic death of Billy Martin in 1989, at which point Williams declared himself “too old to manage again”.
 
Dick Williams had a captious personality that didn’t sit well with everyone, “I don’t want to mellow,” Williams explained, “I’d rather be known as a winner and a poor loser.” As time went on however, he did seem to mellow. In his final season as skipper of the Seattle Mariners, outfielder Mike Kingery explained “He's been great to me and other players. Very positive. When we do something well, he tells us. And when we do something wrong, he encourages us".
 
Upon his retirement from the game it took Williams 20 years to earn election to the Hall of Fame, an honor that fellow Class of 2008 inductee Goose Gossage felt was long overdue “I was elated to see Dick got in, he deserved it. He's one of the best managers of all-time, in my opinion, and he's the best manager I've ever played for. And that's taking in some great managers."  (Ref: National Baseball Hall of Fame)
 
Cards and Other Memorabilia
Dick Williams - Estimated Sets: 310 | DB Records: 25 | Images: 4
 
1950 - 1951  Mejoral
Cuban Winter League Booklet Sheets
Dick Williams (C. field) 


1952  Topps
Baseball Giant Size Picture Cards
Dick Williams  (#396)

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1957  Topps
Baseball Bubble Gum
Dick Williams  (#59)

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1984  San Diego Padres
Smokey the Bear Safety Cards
Dick Williams 

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