Everything about Billy Martin totally explained
» For other people known by this name, see Billy Martin (disambiguation).
Alfred Manuel "Billy" Martin (
May 16 1928 –
December 25 1989) was an
American second baseman and
manager in
Major League Baseball. He is best known as the manager of the
New York Yankees, a position he held five different times. As Yankees manager, he led the team to consecutive
American League pennants in
1976 and
1977; the Yankees were swept in the
1976 World Series by the dynastic
Cincinnati Reds but triumphed over the
Los Angeles Dodgers in six games in the
1977 World Series. He also had notable managerial tenures with several other AL squads, leading four of them to division championships.
As a manager, Martin was known for his ability to win, and for arguing animatedly with
umpires, including a widely parodied routine in which he kicked dust on their feet. However, he was criticized for not getting along with veteran players, burning out young pitchers, and for having a
drinking problem.
Early life
Martin was born to Joan and Alfred Martin in
Berkeley, California. His father was of Portuguese ancestry. Martin was raised by his mother, who doted on her son, frequently calling him "bello," or "beautiful" in
Italian. This was the origin of his nickname "Billy."
Because Martin grew up in such a dangerous area of Berkeley he'd to fight off the many gang members that gave him trouble. This is most likely the source of where Martin's love of fighting came from. He grew up playing baseball at a city park across the street from his home,
James Kenney Park. Baseball pro and fellow Berkeley native
Augie Galan lived nearby and would bring some of his professional friends to James Kenney Park in the off-season to practice. Kids in the neighborhood, including Martin, would come by to watch and learn.
While attending
Berkeley High School, Martin tried out for and began playing for the Oakland Junior Oaks, affiliated with the Pacific Coast League's Oakland Oaks club. After graduation in 1946, he played for Idaho Falls in the Class D Pioneer League, hitting .254 in 32 games. Late in the 1947 season, he was signed to the
Oakland Oaks of the
Pacific Coast League, playing for that team in
1948 and
1949. Martin played for
Casey Stengel, who was the manager of the Oakland Oaks in 1948. Stengel admired his aggressive play. When Stengel became manager in New York, he'd the Yankees obtain Martin.
Playing career
Martin began his major league career in
1950 as a second baseman for the Yankees. As a player, he was known for making clutch plays. In the
1952 World Series, he made a game-saving catch on an infield popup in Game 7.
In the
1953 season, Martin had career highs in home runs (15), RBIs (75), doubles (24), triples (6), and times hit by pitch (6). He was the
MVP of the
1953 World Series, as he batted .500 with a .958 slugging percentage. Martin was an
All-Star in
1956. In
1958, Martin led the league in
sacrifice hits, with 13.
After his
1957 trade to the
Kansas City Athletics (see
Altercations below), Martin's career declined, with several short stints with six different teams over the final 4½ years of his playing career: the Athletics, the
Detroit Tigers, the
Cleveland Indians, the
Cincinnati Reds, the
Milwaukee Braves and the
Minnesota Twins.
Martin retired in
1961 with a career
batting average of .257. He hit .333 in 28
World Series games for the Yankees.
Altercations
Martin was well known for drinking to excess and for rowdy behavior when drinking. In
1957, a group of Yankees met at the famous
Copacabana nightclub to celebrate Martin's 29th birthday; the party ultimately erupted into a much publicized brawl. A month later,
General manager George Weiss—believing Martin's nightlife was a bad influence on teammates
Whitey Ford and
Mickey Mantle—exiled him to the
Kansas City Athletics. Martin felt betrayed by manager Casey Stengel, with whom he'd a strong father-son relationship, for failing to prevent the
trade, and the two didn't speak for years.
On
August 4,
1960, Martin, then playing for the
Cincinnati Reds, charged the mound in the second inning after receiving a
brushback pitch from
Chicago Cubs pitcher
Jim Brewer. Martin threw his bat at Brewer, who picked up the bat and started to hand it to Martin as he approached. Martin punched Brewer in the right eye, breaking his cheekbone. Brewer was hospitalized for two months, and Martin served a five-day suspension. The Cubs sued Martin for
$1 million for the loss of Brewer's services. While the Cubs dropped their case, Brewer pursued his, and in
1969, a judge ordered Martin to pay $10,000 in damages. When informed of the judgment by the press, he asked sarcastically, "How do they want it? Cash or check?"
Martin's fights as a player also included bouts with
Jimmy Piersall,
Clint Courtney (twice),
Matt Batts and
Tommy Lasorda.
Managing career
Martin was the perfect short-term manager as his competitive fire and daring tactics won over fans, management, and players. This love affair was always brief—especially with the players and management—as his disdain for authority as well as players who dared disagree with him or didn't reflect his fiery temperament, were bound to create clubhouse tension and organizational turmoil.
Minnesota Twins
Martin spent eight years (
1962-
69) in the Minnesota organization after his retirement. He was a
scout from
1962-
64, the
third-base coach of the Twins from
1965 through mid-
June 1968, and manager of their AAA affiliate, the
Denver Bears, for the last half of the 1968 campaign. He succeeded
Cal Ermer as Minnesota's big-league manager following the '68 season.
In
1969, Martin's only season as manager of the Twins, he won a division championship. He was fired after the season following an
August 1969 fight in
Detroit with one of his pitchers,
Dave Boswell, in an alley outside the legendary Lindell A.C. bar. Martin spent the
1970 season out of baseball.
Detroit Tigers
Martin managed the
Detroit Tigers from
1971 to
1973. He guided the team to a first place finish in
1972. During the
1972 American League Championship Series,
Oakland Athletics shortstop
Bert Campaneris threw his bat at Detroit pitcher
Lerrin LaGrow after being hit by a pitch. In the ensuing brawl, an infuriated Martin had to be restrained by umpires and teammates to prevent him from going after Campaneris. The Tigers lost the series three games to two.
While posing for a baseball card as the manager for the Detroit Tigers in 1972, Martin gave photographers the
middle finger. The gesture went unnoticed until after the card's release.
Martin also played a key role in the discovery of
Ron LeFlore in a Michigan state prison. Martin was lured to Michigan State Prison by another inmate who knew Martin. The unorthodox Martin witnessed LeFlore's speed and strength. Martin helped LeFlore get permission for day-parole and a try out at
Tiger Stadium. In the summer of 1973, the Tigers signed him to a contract, which enabled LeFlore to meet the conditions for parole. Martin, the man who gave LeFlore his break, was fired in August of that same year for telling Tiger pitchers to throw at opposing hitters. In 1978, Martin played himself in the CBS TV movie "."
Texas Rangers
Martin's next managerial job was with the
Texas Rangers, where he took the club from last place to second place in
1974, but was fired in
1975.
First stint with the Yankees
Martin was hired as Yankees' manager in
1975, and took the Yankees to the
World Series in
1976 and
1977, winning in
1977. He feuded publicly with both Yankee owner
George Steinbrenner and star outfielder
Reggie Jackson. In one especially infamous incident, on
June 18,
1977, in the middle game of what would prove to be a three-game series sweep by the
Boston Red Sox at
Fenway Park, Martin pulled Jackson off the field in mid-inning for failing to hustle on a ball hit to the outfield. The extremely angry and highly animated Martin had to be restrained by his coaches from getting into a fight with Jackson in the dugout during the
the nationally-televised Saturday afternoon game.
After a
1978 incident with Reggie Jackson in which Martin suspended Jackson for bunting against orders, Martin was forced to resign after telling reporters, "They deserve each other. One's a born liar [Jackson], and the other's convicted [Steinbrenner]." (Martin was referring to Steinbrenner's conviction for making illegal donations to
Richard Nixon's
1972 election campaign.) It has been said that Steinbrenner forced Martin out as a result of the remark.
Bob Lemon was named Yankees manager. Soon afterward, at the annual Old-Timers' Game at Yankee Stadium, in a grandstanding gesture, the Yankees had public address announcer
Bob Sheppard introduce an unemployed Martin as the Yankees' next manager for the
1980 season (with Lemon moving to the front office). Steinbrenner and Martin had apparently patched up their differences, but Lemon managed the team for the rest of 1978.
Second stint with the Yankees
In
1979, the Yankees got off to a slow start under Lemon. Injuries to
Reggie Jackson and
Goose Gossage as well as the tragic death of
Thurman Munson mid-season had the Yankees reeling. Steinbrenner fired Lemon and brought back Martin earlier than previously planned. The Yankees failed to improve, however, and their streak of American League East division titles ended at three. After the 1979 season, Martin got into his now-infamous fight with
marshmallow salesman Joseph Cooper at a hotel in Minneapolis. Steinbrenner fired him after that and replaced him with
Dick Howser for the
1980 season.
Oakland Athletics
Martin resurfaced with the
Oakland Athletics, where he perfected a style of play that became known as "Billyball" (characterized as featuring aggressive base running). Martin won the American League West Division title in the split season of
1981, swept the
Royals in the
special division series (due to a
players' strike-action), and then met the Yankees in the
1981 ALCS where his A's were swept by the Yankees. Martin's early success with the A's led to his designation as the club's
general manager—giving him control over the baseball operations of the entire Oakland organization in 1981. Martin was fired from both positions when the
1982 Athletics plummeted to a 68-94 record.
Remaining stints with the Yankees
Martin returned to the
New York Yankees in
1983,
1985, and
1988, but never for more than one full season. During his years as a major league manager,
Art Fowler usually served as his
pitching coach.
During the 1983 season, Martin was involved in one of the most
controversial regular season games, known as the
Pine Tar Incident, where
umpires nullified a game-winning
home run by Yankee nemesis,
Kansas City Royals third baseman George Brett, when Martin protested that there was too much
pine tar on his
bat. Ultimately, American League President
Larry MacPhail ruled in favor of the Royals protest, reinstating the home run, and replaying the game from the point of the nullification.
On
September 22,
1985, Martin fought one of his pitchers,
Ed Whitson, who broke one of Martin's arms.
At the time of his death, Martin was preparing to manage the Yankees a sixth time for the
1990 season, to the point of having assembled a coaching staff.
Other altercations as manager
Martin's sparring opponents as a manager also included two traveling secretaries (Minnesota's Howard Fox and Texas' Burt Hawkins) in a fight outside of Howard Wong's in
Bloomington, Minnesota; Jack Sears, a fan outside
Tiger Stadium; a
Chicago cab driver who preferred
soccer to baseball; sportswriter Ray Hagar, in a
Reno casino; marshmallow salesman Joseph Cooper; two bar patrons, in
Anaheim and in
Baltimore; and two bouncers in an
Arlington topless bar.
Unconventional thinking
During his short stint with the
Minnesota Twins in 1969, he taught
Rod Carew how to steal home plate during spring training resulting in seven of his 19 stolen bases that season being of home plate.
On
August 1st,
1972, he and his
Tigers used stalling tactics with rain on the horizon and Detroit trailing against the
Brewers while the Brewers' manager tried to speed up the game. The game lasted 6 innings with the Brewers winning 9-0.
Sometimes he'd literally draw a lineup out of a hat if the team was struggling to win such as on April 21st, 1977 with the Yankees and August 13th, 1972 with the Tigers in the first game of a doubleheader, in the year before the introduction of the
designated hitter.
On
October 2,
1974 Martin allowed
Fergie Jenkins to help his own cause instead of using the DH. Jenkins broke up
Twins pitcher
Jim Hughes'
no-hitter in the 6th inning with a single and later scored a run. The
Rangers won 2-1.
In the Billy Ball era with the
Oakland Athletics (1980-1982), he'd use
hit-and-run,
squeeze plays, and
base stealing but ironically resulting in leading the
American League in home runs. As a result of Billy Ball,
Rickey Henderson stole 130 bases in 1982, a single-season record unlikely ever to be broken. He was dismissed at the end of the 1982 season because of his overuse of his starting pitchers during his tenure.
On
July 24,
1983, in the
Pine Tar Game, later concluded on
August 18,
1983, Martin moved Mattingly from
first base to
second base while batting seventh; Ron Guidry was inserted into center field and the ninth spot in the batting order. Since AL President Lee MacPhail overturned the umpires' decision about the length of pine tar on
George Brett's bat, the game had to be played to the conclusion. In the bottom of the ninth, the last third of the Yankees lineup was due up with
Don Mattingly,
Roy Smalley, and
Oscar Gamble, pinch hitting for Guidry, all failing to get on base to seal a controversial win for the Royals, 5-4.
On
June 11,
1988 Martin inserted pitcher
Rick Rhoden 7th in the
starting lineup as the
designated hitter because there was a shortage of right-handed batters to face Jeff Ballard, a left-handed pitcher. Rhoden hit a sacrifice fly which resulted in an RBI as well as a walk before being pinch-hit for by Jose Cruz in the 5th inning. The Yankees beat Baltimore 8-6.
Honors and References
Martin was brought in to be a guest celebrity ring announcer at the inaugural
WrestleMania Event held in March of 1985, during his time as the manager of the Yankees, where he was referred to as 'New York's Number One'. (The number was retired the following year.) The crowd gave him a hero's ovation. Martin is the first Baseball-crossover guest celebrity to appear in any of the WWE's Wrestlemania Pay per views. Martin's appearance at the inaugural event was referenced at Wrestlemania X in 1994.
On
August 10,
1986, the Yankees retired Martin's
uniform number 1 and dedicated a plaque in his honor for
Monument Park at
Yankee Stadium. The plaque contains the words,
There has never been a greater competitor than Billy. Martin told the crowd, "I may not have been the greatest Yankee to put on the uniform, but I'm the proudest."
As a tribute, the
Florida Marlins called their
mascot Billy the Marlin. (The name is also derived from the fact that another name for a marlin is a
bill-fish.)
Many of his contemporaries have remarked on Martin's ability to surprise the opposition and his outside-the-box thinking. Commenting on Martin's strategy as a manager,
Dave Winfield has stated that opposing players would often ask each other, "What's Billy doing now?"
George Steinbrenner has stated than when Martin was in his best form, he was a "baseball genius." He has also been cited as an influence to other prominent managers, including
Lou Piniella. (Martin would, eventually, both precede and succeed Piniella as Yankees manager.)
His frequent firings—and threats of being fired—were lampooned in a '70's
Miller Lite beer commercial in which Steinbrenner tells Martin "You're fired!" to which Martin replies "Oh, no, not again!" After Martin's real-life rehiring, the commercial was resurrected, only with Steinbrenner's line redubbed to say "You're
hired!"
In the film
Ocean's Thirteen, a "Billy Martin" is used as a nickname for a second chance, presumably to make amends and do the right thing before being pursued in justified retaliation.
On the TV show, Married with Children, Al Bundy and Jefferson D'Arcy (and others) more than once ended up in an altercation over the answer to the question "Who was in the first light beer commercial?". The answer was purported to be either Billy Martin or Bubba Smith.
On the TV show
Bizarre, the turbulent Yankee manager situation was parodied by having press conferences every 10 minutes hiring or firing a fictitious Yankees manager named "Martin Billy Lemon" (combining the names of Yankee managers Bob Lemon and Billy Martin). Martin also appeared on the show in person as manager of the As, where the fictitious
stunt man Super Dave Osborne (famous for his spectacular failures) did a stunt where he'd to say a bunch of insults at Billy Martin and "deal" with Martin's violent reaction.
On May 24, 1986, on the season finale of
Saturday Night Live, co-host Martin was "fired" by executive producer Lorne Michaels for being "drunk" in a skit, slurring his lines. During the goodnights, Martin "sets fire" to the dressing room in retaliation. (Only three cast members would be re-hired the next season.) In 1988, on Saturday Night Live's "
Weekend Update," comedian
Dennis Miller opened the sports with, "In Calgary tonight,
Katarina Witt won the gold medal in figure skating, prompting Yankees owner George Steinbrenner to fire manager Billy Martin."
In the 1994 movie
The Scout,
Albert Brooks wants a psychiatrist to send a letter to George Steinbrenner, and adds that it might be nice to put "sorry about Billy Martin" in the closing. When the psychiatrist wonders who Billy Martin is, Brooks replies "Oh, just some guy he kept firing until he finally died."
Martin was played by
John Turturro in the
2007 ESPN mini-series
The Bronx is Burning which follows the tumultuous summer of 1977 in New York.
In the
Seinfeld episode ("
The Wink"), after
George Costanza accidentally gets one of his co-workers in the Yankees organization fired, the fictional
George Steinbrenner goes on a long rant to George about the many people he's had to let go over the years. He mentions Billy Martin four times.
Death
Martin was working as a special consultant to Steinbrenner when he was killed in a one-car crash in
Binghamton, New York, on
Christmas Day in
1989. Martin had been drinking heavily with his friend,
William Reedy, who was driving the pick-up at the time of the accident. When Martin was killed, the media reported that he was a passenger in his
pickup truck. However,
Peter Golenbock, in his book, makes the case that Martin was the driver and that his wife and Reedy covered up the truth. According to the
HBO TV series
Autopsy, forensic pathologist Dr.
Michael Baden performed the autopsy on Martin and investigated the accident scene, including the pick-up truck in which Martin died. The autopsy revealed that Martin's impact injuries were all on the right side, and that hair and other DNA found on the right side of the shattered windshield belonged to Martin, who wasn't wearing a seatbelt at the time of the accident. The conclusion of the autopsy study was that Reedy drove the pick-up.
Billy Martin was eulogized by
John Cardinal O'Connor at
St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, before his funeral at
Gate of Heaven Cemetery in Hawthorne, New York. His grave is located about 150 feet from the grave of
Babe Ruth. The following epitaph by Billy Martin himself appears on the headstone:
I may not have been the greatest Yankee to put on the uniform but I was the proudest. Former
President of the United States Richard Nixon attended Martin's funeral.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Billy Martin'.
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