Johnnie B. "Dusty" Baker, Jr. (born
June 15, 1949 in
Riverside,
California
) is a former outfielder
in Major League Baseball and
the current manager of the
Cincinnati Reds. He
previously led the
San Francisco
Giants and
Chicago Cubs, winning
the
National League pennant with the
Giants.
Biography
Playing career
Drafted by
the Atlanta Braves in the 1967
amateur draft out of Del Campo High School
near Sacramento, California
, Dusty Baker began his professional baseball career as an outfielder for the Braves in . After
spending sixteen full seasons with the
Atlanta Braves,
Los Angeles Dodgers, as well short
tenures with both the
San Francisco
Giants, and
Oakland Athletics,
Baker finished his prosperous career as a player with .278 batting
average, 242
home runs, and 1,013
runs batted in. Furthermore, a few of Baker’s
accomplishments as a player include playing for the
National League All-Star team in and ,
winning three League Championship series in
1977,
1978, and
1981. Baker
ultimately won a
World Series
title in
1981 with the Dodgers.
When hit his 30th homer on the last day of the 1977 season, it
enable the
Los Angeles Dodgers
to become the first team ever to have four 30 home run hitters
(
Reggie Smith,
Ron
Cey, and
Steve Garvey were the
others) in one season. Baker also earned a spot as a footnote in
history. On
April 8, 1974, Baker was on deck
when
Hank Aaron hit home run 715 to pass
Babe Ruth in career home runs. (He said he
hit a double "That nobody saw and nobody cared" in that at-bat.)
Baker played his final season in 1986.
Managerial career
San Francisco Giants
Baker's coaching career, ironically, started with his former Dodger
arch-rival: the San Francisco Giants. Baker began his coaching
career as a first base coach for the
San Francisco Giants in , and then
spent the following four years (1989–1992) as the hitting coach,
and finally became the manager in , replacing the departing
Roger Craig. In his very
first year as Giants manager, he won the N.L. Manager of the Year
award, leading the team to a 103–59 record, which was the
second-best record in baseball that year (behind the 104–58
Atlanta Braves), and 31 games better
than their 72–90 finish the previous year. His Giants went on to
win division titles in 1997 and again in 2000; Baker would win
Manager of the Year honors in both of those years as well. In 2002,
his Giants gained the Wild-Card berth and from there advanced to
the
World Series, where they lost
in seven games to the
Anaheim Angels who were
managed by his former Dodger teammate,
Mike Scioscia. It was during his San Francisco
tenure that the term "Dustiny" was coined by the late former Giants
pitcher
Rod Beck. Despite Baker’s success
in San Francisco, the Giants let him leave to manage the Chicago
Cubs and hired
Felipe Alou to replace
him.
To date, Baker is one of only two
African Americans to manage a World Series
team. The other is
Cito Gaston, who
managed the
Toronto Blue Jays to
the championship in the
1992 and
1993 World Series.
Chicago Cubs
Baker made a major impact with the Cubs in his first season as
manager for the ball club. With the help of an impressive pitching
staff and big gun batters such as
Sammy
Sosa and
Moisés Alou, the
Chicago Cubs were able to claim their first divisional title in
over a
decade. However, the Cubs’ hopes for
winning a
World Series title were cut
short during the
2003 National League
Championship Series against the
Florida Marlins. The Marlins would go on to
claim the
2003 World Series.
Following the 2003 season, Baker and the Cubs failed to see another
playoff berth. In , the team was involved in a heated
wild card chase
with the
Houston Astros, but fell out
of contention near the season’s end. In the subsequent season, the
Cubs lost several of their key players, most notably ace pitchers
Mark Prior and
Kerry Wood, to injuries. The team finished the
season with a 79–83 record, marking the first time in three years
that the Cubs finished with a losing record. The Cubs’ performance
declined in the next season, as they fell to 66-96, and finished
last in the entire
National
League.
While the Cubs’ organization stated that Baker would remain the
team’s manager throughout the 2006 season, they did not renew his
contract. They allowed Baker to address the media in a
press-conference in early October, where he officially announced
his departure. The Cubs turned to
Lou
Piniella to replace Baker for the
2007 Chicago Cubs season. Under
Piniella, the Cubs made it to the National League Division Series,
but fell to the
Arizona
Diamondbacks in a three game sweep.
Cincinnati Reds
On October 13, 2007, Baker was hired as manager of the Cincinnati
Reds, replacing interim manager
Pete
Mackanin. He also is the first
African American manager in Reds history.

Dusty Baker sporting his new Reds
jersey at RedsFest 2007.
Criticism

Dusty Baker during his days with the
Chicago Cubs.
Baker, an old-school baseball traditionalist, was scrutinized for
the Cubs’ declining productivity. To
sabermetricians, many of his methods were
puzzling, such as his tendency to put players with a poor
on-base percentage, such as
Neifi Perez,
Jose
Macias,
Corey Patterson,
Willy Taveras and
Jerry Hairston Jr. at or near the top of
his lineups. Baker rejected (and still rejects) the importance of
on-base percentage, arguing that extra baserunners simply "clog up
the bases" unless they can run well. This flies in the face of
statistically-oriented baseball strategy and has made Baker a
frequent target among the sabermetric community. Additionally, many
fans, commentators, and writers blamed his consistent tendency to
overuse young pitchers for damaging the career of
Kerry Wood and derailing the career of
Mark Prior. Baker was widely known as a "player's
manager," attempting to mollify his athletes rather than focusing
on team output above personal interests, and favoring his favorite
players regardless of their statistical output.
In 2003, Baker was the subject of some controversy when he stated
that "black and Hispanic players are better suited to playing in
the sun and heat than white players." Dusty, defending his beliefs,
later said, "What I meant is that blacks and Latinos take the heat
better than most whites, and whites take the cold better than most
blacks and Latinos. That's it, pure and simple. Nothing deeper than
that."
Broadcasting career
He served as an
ESPN analyst during the 2006
MLB Postseason and served in a similar role during the
2007 season.
Personal life
Baker was a member of the
United States Marine Corps
Reserves from 1969 through 1975. Baker has a wife, Melissa, and
two children named Natosha and Darren. Darren was famously rescued
from being run over at home plate by
J.
T. Snow during
the
2002 World Series.
Managerial records
- Updated on October 4, 2009
| Team |
Year |
Regular Season |
Post Season |
| Games |
Won |
Lost |
Win % |
Finish |
Won |
Lost |
Win % |
Result |
| San Francisco
Giants |
1993 |
162 |
103 |
59 |
.636 |
2nd in NL
West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1994 |
115 |
55 |
60 |
.478 |
2nd in NL West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1995 |
144 |
67 |
77 |
.465 |
4th in NL West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1996 |
162 |
68 |
94 |
.420 |
4th in NL West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1997 |
162 |
90 |
72 |
.556 |
1st in NL West |
0 |
3 |
.000 |
Lost in NLDS |
| 1998 |
163 |
89 |
74 |
.546 |
2nd in NL West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 1999 |
162 |
86 |
76 |
.531 |
2nd in NL West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2000 |
162 |
97 |
65 |
.599 |
1st in NL West |
1 |
3 |
.250 |
Lost in NLDS |
| 2001 |
162 |
90 |
72 |
.556 |
2nd in NL West |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2002 |
161 |
95 |
66 |
.590 |
2nd in NL West |
10 |
6 |
.625 |
Lost in World Series |
| SF Total |
1,555 |
840 |
715 |
.540 |
2 Division Championships
1 Wild Card |
11 |
12 |
.478 |
|
| Chicago Cubs |
2003 |
162 |
88 |
74 |
.543 |
1st in NL
Central |
6 |
6 |
.500 |
Lost in NLCS |
| 2004 |
162 |
89 |
73 |
.549 |
3rd in NL Central |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2005 |
162 |
79 |
83 |
.488 |
4th in NL Central |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| 2006 |
162 |
66 |
96 |
.407 |
6th in NL Central |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| CHC Total |
648 |
322 |
326 |
.497 |
1 Division Championship |
6 |
6 |
.500 |
|
| Cincinnati Reds |
2008 |
162 |
74 |
88 |
.457 |
5th in NL Central |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
| 2009 |
162 |
78 |
84 |
.481 |
4th in NL Central |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| CIN Total |
324 |
152 |
172 |
.457 |
|
0 |
0 |
.000 |
- |
| Total |
2,689 |
1,314 |
1,213 |
.520 |
3 Division Championships
1 Wild Card |
17 |
18 |
.486 |
|
See also
Notes
- Report: Baker to stay with Cubs for remainder of
season - MLB - Yahoo! Sports
- Fire Joe Morgan
- Dusty Baker and Pitch Counts - The Hardball
Times
- USATODAY.com - Baker stands by heat
comments
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http://chicagosports.chicagotribune.com/sports/baseball/cubs/cs-070124dusty,1,476224.story?coll=cs-home-headlines
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External links