Chub Feeney
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Charles Stoneham "Chub" Feeney (August 31, 1921 — January 10, 1994) was an American front office executive in Major League Baseball and president of the National League during a 40-plus year career in baseball.
Born in Orange, New Jersey, into a baseball family, Feeney was the grandson of Charles Stoneham, principal owner of the New York Giants until his death in 1936, and the nephew of Horace Stoneham, who owned the team from 1936 through 1976. Feeney began his association with the Giants as a batboy, and after his graduation from Dartmouth College and military service during World War II he joined the team's front office at the age of 24 as vice president in 1946. Although he never held the official title of general manager, Feeney would function as head of the Giants' baseball operations department for almost 24 years.
[edit] Two pennants in Manhattan
The postwar Giants were a second-division team of slow-footed sluggers with poor fielding and mediocre pitching. On July 16, 1948, Stoneham and Feeney made a dramatic change. They replaced manager Mel Ott, a popular, Hall of Fame hitter and lifelong Giant, with the controversial and abrasive Leo Durocher, who had been managing their interborough rivals, the Brooklyn Dodgers. Asked by Stoneham to evaluate his new team, Durocher, no sentimentalist, reportedly replied: "Back up the truck" — meaning wholesale changes were needed. Within 1½ years — and with the decision to follow Brooklyn in breaking the color line — Durocher, Stoneham and Feeney's front office had built the Giants into a hard-playing, balanced team of pitching, hitting, speed and defense.
In 1951, the Giants battled back from a 13½ game deficit on August 11, winning 37 of their last 44 games to force a best-of-three pennant playoff with Brooklyn. After splitting the first two games, the Giants overcame one last hurdle — a 4-1, ninth-inning Brooklyn lead in Game 3 — to beat the Dodgers on Bobby Thomson's three-run home run, baseball's version of the "Shot Heard 'Round the World." It was New York's first National League pennant since 1937, but the Giants dropped the 1951 World Series in six games to the New York Yankees.
Brooklyn dominated the NL for the next two seasons, but, in 1954, Durocher's Giants — led by batting champion Willie Mays and the runner-up, Don Mueller — emerged as champions, winning the pennant by five games. Drawing the Cleveland Indians (who had set an American League record by winning 111 games) as their opponents in the 1954 World Series, the Giants won in four straight games, highlighted by Mays' game-saving catch of Vic Wertz' long drive in Game 1, the clutch hitting of obscure outfielder and pinch hitter Lamar "Dusty" Rhodes, and effective pitching from four different starters.
Unfortunately, the 1954 Fall Classic was the last highlight of the Giants' 70-plus year history in New York. Attendance plunged in the years that immediately followed, and after Durocher's resignation in 1955 to become a "Game of the Week" baseball broadcaster, the team played poorly. By 1957, owner Stoneham had decided to leave for greener pastures, ultimately choosing San Francisco as the team's destination to preserve its historic rivalry with the Dodgers, who simultaneously moved to Los Angeles.
[edit] Contenders, and mainly bridesmaids, in San Francisco
The Giants returned to the first division upon moving to the West Coast, led by players produced by the club's farm system. Feeney and the team's farm director, Carl Hubbell, the Hall of Fame pitcher, had stocked the team with outstanding young talent — especially African-American and Latin-American players, exploiting lingering prejudice by most other major league clubs. The Giants were the first team to sign players from the Dominican Republic, bringing to San Francisco stars such as Juan Marichal, Felipe Alou and Matty Alou. The Giants also were the first MLB team to sign a player from Japan, Masanori Murakami, who debuted in 1964.
In 1962, the Giants and Dodgers engaged in a West Coast-version of the 1951 pennant chase. Los Angeles built an early lead, but began to fall to earth when ace left-hander Sandy Koufax was sidelined for the season by a finger ailment. By season's end, the teams were deadlocked, at 101 wins and 61 defeats. Again, a best-of-three playoff would determine the champion, and — again — the Giants would rally in the ninth inning of Game 3 to beat the Dodgers. But the deciding game was played in Los Angeles, thus the winning run — forced in by a bases-loaded walk — was not a "walk-off" situation and lacked the drama of Thomson's home run. The Giants, as in '51, faced the Yankees in the 1962 World Series and lost, this time in seven games.
Although San Francisco remained a first-division team, and frequent contender, during the rest of the 1960s, it did not win another pennant during the decade. It finished in second place for four successive seasons. By 1969, the team was showing signs of age and decline. Concurrently, Feeney was being considered for prominent positions within Major League Baseball's hierarchy. After his candidacy for Commissioner of Baseball fell short, Feeney succeeded Warren Giles as NL president late in 1969.
[edit] President of the National League
During his 17-year (1969-86) presidency, the National League continued its dominance of the All-Star Game, losing only in 1971, 1983 and 1986 and winning 14 times, although the AL prevailed in the World Series, 9-8, during this period. Feeney rallied NL owners to resist adoption of the designated hitter and presided over a period of stability, as the league neither expanded nor moved a franchise during his term. (Ironically, the NL team that came closest to moving was Stoneham's Giants, which were nearly sold to a Toronto consortium in 1976. The owner who saved the Giants for San Francisco in 1976, Bob Lurie, nearly moved the team to St. Petersburg, Florida in 1992.)
Just before his tenure as NL president ended, he made an appearance on Jeopardy! in the show's second season in 1986.
As he passed his 65th birthday, Feeney was succeeded as NL president by A. Bartlett Giamatti. His baseball career concluded with a 15-month tour as president of the San Diego Padres (1987-88), which ended with his resignation the day after he made an obscene gesture to hecklers on Fan Appreciation Night in San Diego on September 24, 1988.
He died in January 1994 of a heart attack in San Francisco at the age of 72.
Preceded by Warren Giles |
National League president 1969–1986 |
Succeeded by A. Bartlett Giamatti |