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  Johnny Pesky
Category : Sports, Baseball
   
In brief :
John Michael Pesky (born John Michael Paveskovich, September 27, 1919 in Portland, Oregon), nicknamed "The Needle," is a former Major League Baseball shortstop/third baseman who played in the American League from 1942 to 1954. He missed all of the 1943, 1944, and 1945 seasons while serving in World War II.
   
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Johnny Pesky's biography is Mr. Red Sox by Bill Nowlin, published by Rounder Books. Pesky has been associated with the Boston Red Sox for 55 of his 67 years in baseball – from 1940 through June 1952, 1961 through 1964, and continuously since 1969. He was their manager in 1963-1964, and in September 1980.

Pesky played seven and a half seasons for the Red Sox before being traded to the Detroit Tigers in the middle of the 1952 season. He finished his career with the Washington Senators in 1954. He was selected to the All-Star game in 1946. An unselfish player, he moved to third base in 1948 to make room for slugging shortstop Vern Stephens, acquired from the St. Louis Browns. He was Boston's regular at the hot corner until 1952.

A lefthanded hitter who threw righthanded, Pesky was a tough man for pitchers to strike out. As a hitter he specialized in getting on base, leading the American League in base hits three times - his first three seasons in the majors, in which he collected over 200 hits each year - and was among the top ten in on base percentage six times. He was an excellent bunter who lead the league in sacrifice hits in 1942. He batted .307 in 1,270 games over ten seasons (1942; 1946-54).

Pesky was a teammate and close friend of Ted Williams, Bobby Doerr and Dom DiMaggio. Their friendship was chronicled in David Halberstam's book The Teammates.

Pesky also has a piece of Fenway Park (the home of the Red Sox) named after him. The nickname of the foul pole in right field is Pesky's Pole, named in his honor for being known to hit short home runs down the right field line, often hitting the pole. It should be noted, however, that Pesky hit only 17 homers in 4,745 at bats in the major leagues.

Although he is an icon as "Mr. Red Sox," Pesky actually began his coaching career in the New York Yankees' organization, with the 1955 Denver Bears of the AAA American Association - working under manager Ralph Houk. The following season, Pesky became a manager in the Detroit farm system, reaching the AA level. He then rejoined the Red Sox in 1961 as manager of their AAA farm club, the Seattle Rainiers of the Pacific Coast League.

Pesky enjoyed two winning seasons in Seattle. At the close of the 1962 campaign, Boston owner Tom Yawkey elevated manager Pinky Higgins to the club's vacant post of general manager. Yawkey then personally appointed Pesky as Higgins's replacement. Although the selection of Pesky was a popular choice, the Red Sox were a second division team and notorious as a "country club" - a group of unmotivated players who did what they wanted, when they wanted. In addition, Higgins and Pesky were not particularly close, and the general manager would be accused of undermining Yawkey's hand-picked skipper.

A major off-season trade added slugging first baseman Dick Stuart to Pesky's maiden roster, and while Stuart would lead the AL with 118 runs batted in in '63, he was an atrocious fielder (nicknamed "Dr. Strangeglove") who would constantly defy Pesky's authority and make it difficult for him to control his players. Pesky's '63 club started quickly and briefly had pennant hopes, but lack of pitching soon doomed it to a second-division finish - 76-85, bad enough for seventh place. The 1964 Sox also languished deep in the nether regions of the AL, winning only 70 of the 160 games Pesky managed. With two games left in the season, he was replaced as manager by Billy Herman, the club's third-base coach and a friend of Higgins's.

Pesky then left the Red Sox for four seasons, and joined the Pittsburgh Pirates' organization. From 1965-67, he served as first-base coach for Pirate manager Harry Walker. There was rich irony in the fact that it was Walker who hit the double that scored Enos Slaughter with the winning run in the eighth inning of Game 7 of the 1946 World Series - the play on which Pesky was accused (wrongly, in many eyes) of "holding the ball" on a relay from the outfield, hesitating as Slaughter raced home from first base. After Walker's firing in 1967, Pesky managed the Bucs' AAA farm club, the Columbus Jets of the International League, to a second-place finish in 1968.

In 1969, he returned to the Red Sox organization, although he was miscast as a color commentator on the Sox' radio and television announcing crew. He worked with Ken Coleman and Ned Martin on Boston's WHDH Radio and TV from 1969-71, then strictly on television with Coleman on WBZ-TV from 1972-74.

In 1975, Pesky finally returned to uniform as a fulltime coach under manager Darrell Johnson. As in Pittsburgh, he worked at first base and, in his first season back on the field, the Sox won the 1975 AL pennant, swept three-time world champion Oakland in the ALCS, and battled the Cincinnati Reds in a thrilling, seven-game World Series. Pesky remained first-base coach under Johnson and his successor, Don Zimmer, before moving to a bench and batting coach role for Zimmer in 1980. The Red Sox had been contenders for most of the late 1970s, but in 1980 they stumbled to fourth place in the AL East, resulting in Zimmer's dismissal with five games left in the season. Pesky took command as interim pilot, and Boston lost four of five, to finish Pesky's career managing record at 147-179 (.451).

The following season, his old friend Houk became Boston's manager, and Pesky resumed his role as the club's batting and bench coach. He was especially valued by Sox slugger Jim Rice, with whom Pesky worked tirelessly. Pesky missed the entire 1983 season with a serious allergy that caused severe weight loss, but once the source of the illness was discovered, he was able to return for a final season as a fulltime coach in 1984. In 1990, nearing age 71, he served as interim manager of Boston's top farm club, the Pawtucket Red Sox, when the team's skipper, Ed Nottle, was fired in June. But since 1985 he has been a player development consultant and assistant to the general manager, suiting up before games to work with players. For a time, he was allowed to sit on the Red Sox bench during games, but twice has been prevented from the task - once by his own general manager, Dan Duquette, and a second time when the Baltimore Orioles complained to MLB.

Pesky attended the 2004 World Series and, after the Game 4 triumph, was embraced by current Boston players such as Tim Wakefield and Curt Schilling as a living representative of star Red Sox players of the past whose teams fell short of winning the Fall Classic. He played a poignant and prominent role in the ceremony in which the World Series Championship Rings were handed out (April 11, 2005). With the help of Carl Yastrzemski, he raised the 2004 World Series Championship banner up the Fenway Park center field flagpole.

On March 18, 2006 Pesky attended a Division 3 game between Denison University and Suffolk University. A line drive hit Pesky in the shin, sending him to the hospital.

Pesky, a longtime resident of Boston's North Shore, is a visible member of the community, making personal appearances for the Red Sox. For years, he was a commercial spokesman on television and radio for a local supplier of doors and windows. The commercials were deliberately and humorously corny, with Pesky and the company's owner calling themselves "the Window Boys."

 
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