Doug Melvin

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Doug Melvin

Melvin in 2010.
Born (1952-08-08) August 8, 1952
Chatham, Ontario
Nationality Canadian
Occupation General manager of the Milwaukee Brewers
Known for Baseball

Douglas Robert Melvin (born August 8, 1952 [1]) is a Canadian front-office executive in Major League Baseball who currently serves as the general manager of the Milwaukee Brewers of the National League.[2] He has held the position since 26 September 2002.

Baseball career

1972–2002

A former minor-league pitcher who played in the Pittsburgh Pirates and New York Yankees farm systems from 197278, Melvin began his front office career with the Yankees as an assistant scouting director, then spent nearly a decade (198794) as assistant general manager and director of player development of the Baltimore Orioles. In his first general manager posting, with the Texas Rangers from 19942001, the Rangers qualified for the postseason three times — the only times the franchise had done so to that point in its 48-year history. Melvin spent the 2002 season as a consultant for the Boston Red Sox before taking the reins in Milwaukee.

2003–present

On September 26, 2002, Melvin became general manager of the Milwaukee Brewers. In 2007, he ended the franchise's 15-year streak of losing seasons when the Brewers finished above .500, although a late-season slide eliminated them from the NL Central and wild-card races. In 2008, Melvin moved the Brewers into Wild Card and, briefly, NL Central contention with his bold, mid-season pickup of pitcher CC Sabathia, but another late-season losing streak, which left the Brewers out of contention for their division title and tied for the NL Wild Card, caused Melvin and club owner Mark Attanasio to fire manager Ned Yost with 12 games left in the regular season. Melvin and Attanasio named the Brewers' third base coach Dale Sveum the interim manager for the regular season's final 12 games, and the Brewers clinched the National League Wild Card on the last day of the season, giving the team its first playoff berth since 1982.

After the 2010 season, Melvin made three separate transactions that helped the Brewers get to the playoffs in 2011. On December 6, 2010, he acquired starting pitcher, Shaun Marcum. On December 19, Zack Greinke, who won the Cy Young Award previously, was traded with Yuniesky Betancourt who would start as an infielder. On March 27, 2011, Melvin acquired outfielder Nyjer Morgan. In the same offseason, Melvin released three of the team's most ineffective starters in Jeff Suppan, Dave Bush, and Doug Davis. In 2011, the Brewers won the most games ever in franchise history with 96 victories. In so doing, the Brewers continued to do well offensively with stars Prince Fielder and Ryan Braun as well as Nyjer Morgan. Along with starters Yovani Gallardo, Randy Wolf, Chris Narveson,the newly acquired Grieinke and Marcum pitched considerably more victories than the Brewers' starting pitchers the year before. The Brewers bullpen was also stellar, led by closer John Axford, who set two new franchise records with most consecutive converted saves (42) and most saves in a season (46). Furthermore, Melvin added Francisco Rodriguez before the mid-season 2011 trading deadline; Rodriguez would repeatedly pitch in the 8th inning to set up save opportunities for Axford. Along with Francisco Rodriguez, Melvin obtained veteran infielder, Jerry Hairston Jr., who would provide timely hitting to bolster an already-solid Milwaukee Brewer offense. As a result, the Milwaukee Brewers would win their division for only the second time in their history and make their third playoff appearance in 2011. With Nyjer Morgan's game-winning hit against the Arizona Diamondbacks in a dramatic 10th inning, the Brewers won the divisional playoff series on October 7, 2011. In the National League Championship Series, the Brewers would eventually lose to their divisional foe, the St. Louis Cardinals in six games.

Honors and awards

In 1996, Melvin received The Sporting News Executive of the Year Award, as general manager of the Rangers.

In 2011, as general manager of the Brewers, Melvin was named by Baseball America as its Major League Executive of the Year.[3]

In 2012 Melvin was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame [4]

References

Preceded by
Tom Grieve
Texas Rangers General Manager
19942001
Succeeded by
John Hart
Preceded by
Dean Taylor
Milwaukee Brewers General Manager
2002
Succeeded by
incumbent
Preceded by
John Hart
Sporting News Major League Baseball Executive of the Year
1996
Succeeded by
Cam Bonifay
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