Charles O. Finley
Charles Oscar Finley (February 22, 1918 - February 19, 1997), Major League Baseball owner, was the flamboyant owner of the Oakland Athletics.
Related Topics:
February 22 - 1918 - February 19 - 1997 - Major League Baseball - Oakland Athletics
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Finley was a semi-pro baseball player in Indiana who had his career cut short in 1946 by a bout with tuberculosis that nearly killed him. Finley then made his fortune in the life-insurance business.
Related Topics:
Baseball - Indiana - 1946 - Tuberculosis - Life-insurance
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Finley lost a bid for the Athletics, then playing in Kansas City, Missouri, in 1960, then acquired the team within months when the winning bidder died, at a price of $2 million. Finley quickly started to turn the franchise around, refusing to make deals with the New York Yankees and searching for unheralded talent. After being told by manager Ed Lopat about the Yankees' success being attributable to the dimensions of Yankee Stadium, he built the "K.C. Pennant Porch" in right field, which brought the right field fence in Kansas City Municipal Stadium to match Yankee Stadium's dimensions exactly. League officials forced him to move the fences back after two exhibition games. Finley then ordered a white line to be painted on the field at the original "Pennant Porch" distance, and ordered the public address announcer to tell the crowd, "That would have been a home run in Yankee Stadium" whenever a fly ball was hit past that line. The practice was quickly abandoned after the announcer was calling more "would-be" home runs for the opposition than the A's.
Related Topics:
Kansas City, Missouri - 1960 - New York Yankees - Yankee Stadium - Kansas City Municipal Stadium
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He also started micromanaging the team, ordering players to change their style of play and firing any manager or releasing any player who publicly disagreed with him. He introduced a mascot, Charlie O, a mule, and paraded him about the outfield and even into cocktail parties and hotel lobbies, and into the press room after a large feeding to annoy reporters. When third baseman Sal Bando departed the team as a free agent and was asked if it was difficult to leave the Athletics, Bando responded, "Was it hard to leave the Titanic?" The mule died in 1976, at age 20.
Related Topics:
Micromanaging - Mascot - Mule - Cocktail - Sal Bando - ''Titanic'' - 1976
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Finley moved his franchise from Kansas City to Oakland, California in 1968 and quickly turned the team into a dynasty, winning three straight World Series' from 1972 to 1974 and five straight division titles from 1971 to 1975. A major embarrassment for baseball resulted from Finley's actions during the 1973 World Series. Finley forced player Mike Andrews to sign a false affadavit saying he was injured after the reserve infielder committed two consecutive errors in the 12th inning of Oakland 's Game Two loss to the Mets. Other A's and manager Dick Williams rallied to Andrews's defense. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn forced Finley to reinstate the player. Williams resigned after winning the Series, and Finley replaced him with Alvin Dark.
Related Topics:
Oakland, California - 1968 - World Series' - 1972 - 1974 - 1971 - 1975 - Mike Andrews - Dick Williams - Commissioner - Bowie Kuhn - Alvin Dark
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After losing Catfish Hunter to free agency, Finley started dismantling his club, attempting to sell Joe Rudi and Rollie Fingers to the Boston Red Sox and Vida Blue to the Yankees. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn voided the deals, saying they were not in the best interests of baseball. Finley was in the process of rebuilding the team again in 1981 when he sold the team to Walter A. Haas, Jr., president of Levi Strauss & Co..
Related Topics:
Catfish Hunter - Joe Rudi - Rollie Fingers - Boston Red Sox - Vida Blue - Bowie Kuhn - 1981 - Levi Strauss & Co.
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Finley was fond of gimmicks, dressing his players in non-traditional green and gold uniforms and offering his players $300 bonuses to grow moustaches. For star relief pitcher Rollie Fingers, the handlebar moustache he grew for Finley became a trademark. After signing pitchers Jim Hunter and John Odom, he nicknamed them "Catfish" and "Blue Moon", even fabricating boyhood stories about Hunter to give him press appeal. Finley refused to sign then-prospect (and future Hall of Famer) Don Sutton to a contract simply because Sutton didn't have a flashy nickname. He introduced ball girls, and advocated night games for the World Series to increase fan interest. Finley also was an outspoken advocate of the designated hitter rule, which he pushed until it was adopted by the American League. He suggested many other innovations that were tried and rejected for various reasons, including:
Related Topics:
Rollie Fingers - Handlebar moustache - Jim Hunter - Don Sutton - Designated hitter
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- Orange baseballs - Tried in a few exhibition games, hitters found it too hard to pick up the spin.
- A three-ball walk and two-strike strikeout - Tried in spring training one year, he thought it would lead to games with more action. Instead the result was more walks and longer games.
- A mechanical rabbit that would pop up behind home plate and deliver new balls to the umpire - Finley installed one, which he named 'Harvey,' at the A's home ballpark in Kansas City, but the idea never caught on anywhere else.
- A designated runner - This idea was rejected for several reasons by Major League Baseball, but it didn't stop Finley from experimenting on his own in 1974, hiring a college sprinter named Herb Washington exclusively to pinch run and steal bases. Washington stole 29 bases, but was caught stealing 18 times and frequently picked off by opposing pitchers. He was let go after only one season.
Finley also owned teams in the National Hockey League and American Basketball Association.
Related Topics:
National Hockey League - American Basketball Association
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