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Bob Boone

American baseball player and manager (born 1947)


Summary

American baseball player and manager (born 1947)

FieldValue
nameBob Boone
imageBob Boone 081323.jpg
captionBoone in 2023
positionCatcher / Manager
batsRight
throwsRight
birth_date
birth_placeSan Diego, California, U.S.
debutleagueMLB
debutdateSeptember 10
debutyear1972
debutteamPhiladelphia Phillies
finalleagueMLB
finaldateSeptember 27
finalyear1990
finalteamKansas City Royals
statleagueMLB
stat1labelBatting average
stat1value.254
stat2labelHome runs
stat2value105
stat3labelRuns batted in
stat3value826
stat4labelManagerial record
stat4value371–444
stat5labelWinning %
stat5value.455

the 1970s–1980s catcher

;As player

  • Philadelphia Phillies (–)
  • California Angels (–)
  • Kansas City Royals (–) ;As manager
  • Kansas City Royals (–)
  • Cincinnati Reds (–)
  • 4× All-Star (1976, 1978, 1979, 1983)
  • World Series champion ()
  • 7× Gold Glove Award (1978, 1979, 1982, 1986–1989)
  • Philadelphia Phillies Wall of Fame

Robert Raymond Boone (born November 19, 1947) is an American former catcher and manager in Major League Baseball (MLB) who was a four-time All-Star.

Born in San Diego, California, he is the son of MLB player Ray Boone, and he is the father of two major leaguers: Bret Boone and Aaron Boone. All four family members were named All-Stars during their careers.

Professional career

Philadelphia Phillies

Boone was drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies in the sixth round (126th overall) of the 1969 amateur draft after attending Stanford University where he was admitted to the Zeta Psi fraternity. He was brought to the majors in late 1972. While Boone never had excellent hitting numbers, he was an excellent defensive catcher, committing only eight errors and allowing only three passed balls in the 1977 season. Boone made the National League All-Star team three times in a Phillies uniform and helped the team win the 1980 World Series. In 1981, he batted .211/.279/.295.

In 2005, Boone was inducted into the Philadelphia Baseball Wall of Fame.

California Angels

In 1982, the Phillies decided to trade the veteran catcher to the California Angels following an unproductive year from Boone and also as a possible retaliation for Boone's key role in leading the players in negotiations during the 1981 Major League Baseball strike. Boone rebounded by throwing out 21 of the first 34 steal attempts and helping the Angels to the AL West title. In 1983, he made his fourth and final All-Star appearance.

On September 30, 1984, Boone caught Mike Witt's perfect game.

Kansas City Royals

As a free agent, Boone signed with the Kansas City Royals, but a broken finger in 1990 led to his retirement at age 42 following his shortened season, in which he batted .239/.336/.265.

Boone was a career .254/.315/.346 hitter with 1,838 hits, 105 home runs (HR) and 826 runs batted in (RBI), in 2,264 games. He was selected an All-Star in 1976, 1978–79, and 1983. Boone was one of the top defensive catchers of his era, winning seven Gold Glove awards. He caught 2,225 games in a 19-year big league career, a record that lasted for three years until Carlton Fisk passed him (the record currently is held by Iván Rodríguez, with 2,427). Boone caught 117 shutouts during his career, ranking him tied for 13th all-time in 2010 among major league catchers. He threw out Rickey Henderson 17 out of 33 attempted steels, the highest percentage by any catcher on record.

Managerial career

In 1990, just after Boone retired as a player, a group trying to bring an MLB franchise to Orlando (called the Orlando SunRays) hired him to be its first manager. The job was contingent on Orlando being awarded a National League franchise to begin play in 1993; the NL instead chose Miami and Denver.

Boone returned to the Royals in 1995 as the team's manager but was let go during the 1997 season after a third straight sub-.500 season. In 2001, he was hired to be the skipper of the Cincinnati Reds, replacing Jack McKeon. However, after another two and a half sub-.500 seasons, the Reds replaced Boone with Ray Knight, on July 28, 2003.

Managerial record

TeamYearRegular SeasonPost SeasonWonLostWin %FinishWonLostWin %ResultKC1995KC1996KC1997CIN2001CIN2002CIN2003Total
7074.4862nd in AL Central
7586.4665th in AL Central
3646.4395th in AL Central(fired)
6696.4075th in NL Central
7884.4813rd in NL Central
4658.4425th in NL Central(fired)
371444.455

Personal life

Bob and his family are descendants of American pioneer Daniel Boone. Bob Boone and his wife, Susan Boone, have three sons. Two of his sons, Aaron Boone and Bret Boone, are former Major League Baseball players. Aaron Boone is currently the manager of the New York Yankees. Bret's son Jake Boone is an infielder in the Washington Nationals minor league system.

Bob Boone's extended family have been sportsmen. His mother, Patsy Boone, was a synchronized swimmer who swam with Esther Williams in the movies. His sister Terry Boone was a champion swimmer, and his brother Rod Boone was a college baseball star who played Triple-A ball in the Astros and Royals organizations.

References

References

  1. (2019). "Bob Boone Stats". Sports Reference LLC.
  2. Lee, Nick. (November 22, 2017). "The All-San Diego Area Major League Baseball Team".
  3. Muder, Craig. (August 2, 2023). "Bob Boone, Baseball Lifer".
  4. (September 30, 1984). "Retrosheet Boxscore: California Angels 1, Texas Rangers 0". [[Retrosheet]].
  5. (December 2010). "The Encyclopedia of Catchers – Trivia December 2010 – Career Shutouts Caught". The Encyclopedia of Baseball Catchers.
  6. [https://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/os-xpm-1990-09-14-9009140111-story.html Boone Snags Manager's Job, ''Orlando Sentinel'', September 14, 1990]
  7. (2012). "Answer Man: Aaron Boone talks television jobs, his famous family and cheap wine". [[Yahoo! Sports]].
  8. Grodin, Dana Heiss. (February 6, 2000). "Big-league dads, sons turn game into family business". [[The Seattle Times]].
  9. (2 October 2020). "Washington Nationals' Instructional League roster includes 2020 Draft picks".
  10. (2019). "Rod Boone Minor Leagues Statistics & History". Sports Reference LLC.
  11. (2016). "Home Game: Big-League Stories from My Life in Baseball's First Family". Crown/Archetype.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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