Larry Shepard

Larry Shepard
Manager
Born: (1919-04-03)April 3, 1919
Lakewood, Ohio
Died: April 5, 2011(2011-04-05) (aged 92)
Lincoln, Nebraska
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB statistics
Games managed 320
Wins-Losses 164–155
Win/Loss % .514
Teams

As Manager

Lawrence William Shepard (April 3, 1919  April 5, 2011) was a manager in Major League Baseball for the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1968 to 1969. During his playing days, Shepard was a right-handed pitcher who played minor league baseball from 1941 through 1956, with time out for military service during World War II. He attended McGill University in Montréal, Québec.[1]

Shepard became a playing manager in the Brooklyn Dodgers farm system in 1948, with Medford of the Class D Far West League. His club finished second, thanks to the 22–3 record of his star pitcher – Shepard himself. He then moved up to the Billings Mustangs of the Class C Pioneer League, where, as a pitcher, he won 21, 22 and 24 games in successive (1949–51) seasons. As a skipper, his 1949 club won the league playoffs.

In 1952 and part of 1953, Shepard took a break from managing, becoming strictly a relief pitcher for the Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast League. Concurrently, he left the Dodger system for the Pirates organization. He resumed his managerial career in the middle of the 1953 season in the Pittsburgh system, winning the 1956 and 1957 Western League championships with the Lincoln Chiefs. From 1958 through 1966, he managed at the Triple-A level for Pittsburgh with the Salt Lake City Bees and Columbus Jets, notching three first-place finishes.

In 1967, Shepard reached the Major League level when he was named pitching coach of the Philadelphia Phillies. After only one season, he was appointed manager of the Pirates. In his two seasons as skipper of the Bucs, he had a combined record of 164–155, finishing sixth in the ten-team National League in 1968 and third in the NL East in 1969. He was a manager of the legendary Roberto Clemente.

After his firing by the Pirates with seven games remaining in the 1969 season, Shepard returned to the coaching ranks. He was the pitching coach of the fabled Cincinnati Reds "Big Red Machine" dynasty under Sparky Anderson from 1970 through 1978, and finished his coaching career with the San Francisco Giants in 1979.

References

  1. The Baseball Register, 1976 Edition. St. Louis: The Sporting News, 1976.

External links

Preceded by
Cal McLish
Philadelphia Phillies Pitching Coach
1967
Succeeded by
Al Widmar
Preceded by
Harvey Haddix
Cincinnati Reds Pitching Coach
1970–1978
Succeeded by
Bill Fischer
Preceded by
Herm Starrette
San Francisco Giants Pitching Coach
1979
Succeeded by
Don McMahon
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