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John Edward Farrell (born August 4, 1962) is an American former baseball pitcher, coach, and manager in Major League Baseball (MLB). During his eight-season playing career, Farrell was a member of the Cleveland Indians , California Angels , and Detroit Tigers .
Alex Cora (waving) is the most recent manager to lead the Red Sox to a World Series championship. The Boston Red Sox are a professional baseball team based in Boston, Massachusetts. The Red Sox are members of the American League (AL) East Division in Major League Baseball (MLB). They have competed since 1901, initially as the Boston Americans ...
Connie Mack in 1916. Connie Mack is the all-time leader in career wins and losses by a manager. This article contains a list of all Major League Baseball managers with at least 1,000 career regular season wins, a list of managers who have regular season win percentages of at least .540 in at least 400 games (2.5 full seasons), and a list of all-time World Series win-loss records. [1]
Lajoie was the first manager in team history to finish his career with a winning record. [131] Lou Boudreau and Tris Speaker are the only managers to win a championship with Cleveland: Speaker in 1920 and Boudreau in 1948, [ 132 ] [ 133 ] which was the last championship for the franchise. [ 134 ]
John Farrell may refer to: in sports. John Farrell (manager) (born 1962), American Major League Baseball manager; John Farrell (second baseman) (1876–1921), American Major League Baseball infielder; John Farrell (speed skater) (1906–1994), American Olympic skater and coach; John Farrell (hurler) (born 1961), Irish hurler
John Farrell (baseball manager) This page is a redirect. The following categories are used to track and monitor this redirect: From a page move: This is a redirect ...
b The manager's number in the order of Cardinals managerial succession. All managers with multiple terms have their totals tallied on a single line. c This line is the official total considered as St. Louis' all-time Major League record. Their Major League won-loss total only counts the regular season, as postseason play is considered separately.
Born in Leapwood, an unincorporated community of McNairy County, Tennessee, Farrell played college baseball at Freed-Hardeman College for two years. In his playing days (1932–52), he was a first baseman and veteran minor-leaguer who appeared in two full MLB seasons during the World War II manpower shortage, with the 1943 Boston Braves and the 1945 Chicago White Sox, batting.262 with 177 hits ...