Eddie Popowski

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Edward Joseph Popowski (August 20, 1913 - December 4, 2001) was a coach and interim manager for the Boston Red Sox of American Major League Baseball. Indeed, Popowski spent 65 years in organized baseball - all of them in the Boston organization.

Only 5'4" (162.56 cm) tall, Popowski, a second baseman, began playing in the Red Sox farm system in 1937 after touring with the barnstorming baseball club "The House of David" as the only non-bearded player on the squad. He never played in the big leagues, but began a 21-year minor league managerial career in 1941 with the Bosox' Centreville, Maryland club in the Class D Eastern Shore League. With time out for U.S. Army service during World War II, he would manage and coach with Red Sox farm teams through 1966. He spent many years managing at the Class AA level, working patiently with Boston prospects. In his only AAA managerial role, he was the last skipper in the history of the Minneapolis Millers of the American Association, in 1960.

In 1967, Popowski was promoted to the parent Red Sox as third-base coach under Dick Williams. That season, the Red Sox, who had finished ninth in the ten-team American League in 1966, stunned the baseball world by winning their first pennant since 1946. Popowski was Boston's third-base coach for seven seasons, through 1973, and twice served out a season as acting manager, relieving Williams in 1969 and Eddie Kasko in 1973, the latter for only one game. Popowski won six of the ten big league contests he managed.

He continued as Boston's first-base coach in 1974 and was a special assignment coach in 1975, when the Red Sox once again won the American League flag. In 1976, he began the year as a minor league instructor but once again joined the Boston coaching staff when Don Zimmer was promoted to manager after the firing of Darrell Johnson. Popowski coached in the dugout and at third base that season.

In 1977, he returned to Boston's farm system for good as a roving infield instructor and coordinator of Boston's extended spring training program. Although his responsibilities were gradually reduced as he grew older, he remained active in the Red Sox system through 2001, and his 88th birthday. A field in Boston's training base at Fort Myers, Florida, is named in his honor.

Popowski was a lifelong resident of Sayreville, New Jersey.

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Preceded by
Dick Williams
Boston Red Sox manager
1969
Succeeded by
Eddie Kasko
Preceded by
Eddie Kasko
Boston Red Sox manager
1973
Succeeded by
Darrell Johnson