Manager Roll Call in Houston MLB History

 

Houston's first manager, Harry Craft, learned from singer Roger Miller. Harry learned that "you can't go on to winning in a baseball pool."

Houston’s first manager, Harry Craft, learned from singer Roger Miller. Harry learned that “you can’t go on to winning from a baseball pool.”

 

Thanks to the wonderful work of Baseball Almanac.Com, below is a clear and concise chart on where the Houston Colt .45’s/Astros have traveled under all previous regimes.

Since the question “Who should be the next manager of the Astros club that already has been loaded with the expectations of a World Series championship by 2017,” perhaps, it may be helpful to go over the list and recall what has not worked – and what has sort of worked in the past?

Does the new manager need to be an experienced leader with a proven track record in MLB? Or do we want to place the club’s future in the hands of a popular and talented icon like Craig Biggio? How important is it that the club’s next manager thinks about baseball in a way that is compatible with the measurable facts mind philosophy of General Manager Jeff Luhnow? Should the next guy be someone who is able manage with whatever roster is supplied him? – Or does he need to be someone who has some input on roster moves to the big club?

Baseball people talk a lot about “chemistry” when it comes to winning. And what is that thing “chemistry,” anyway, beyond a condition that reveals itself fairly clearly when it’s present (see the 1979 Pirates for further reference) – and also very clearly when it is absent.

Here’s a clue to chemistry, as it applies to the general condition of working chemistry in any human effort:

Better ways to achieve success are seen more prolifically when people of different minds are able to come together as working partners who give each other the right to be different – and compromise and yielding in favor of what’s best for the greater organizational goal is more important than protecting  the individual aggrandizement of any one member among the active working partnership.

Indeed, it is simpler to say than do, but it is the hallmark of victory for those who get it and do it. It is the bird that flies higher, faster, with more agility, and with more deliberate purpose than any other bird in the skies of hope. Whenever “being on the same page” really means “thinking alike” for the sake of job security, there can be little hope for success for anything dynastic that goes out-of-bounds from a narrow point of view on winning and how to get there.

That being said, here are lists of former Colt .45 and Astros manager. Good luck with your own thinking on what kind of leadership the club now needs on the field:

Houston Colt .45s ManagersManagers & Finishes
Year Uniform # Manager Wins Losses WP Finish GB
1962 1

Harry Craft

64 96 .400 8th 36½
1963 1 55 95 .407 9th 33
1964 1 61 88 .409 9th 27
6

Lum Harris

5 8 .385
Houston Colt .45s Managers & Finishes
Houston Astros Managers
1965 – 2014Managers & Finishes
Year Uniform # Manager(s) Wins Losses WP Finish GB Roster
1965 26

Lum Harris

65 97 .401 9th 32

1965

1966 1

Grady Hatton

72 90 .444 8th 23

1966

1967 1

Grady Hatton

69 93 .426 9th 32½

1967

1968 1

Grady Hatton

23 38 .377 10th 25

1968

25

Harry Walker

49 52 .485
1969 25

Harry Walker

81 81 .500 5th 12

1969

1970 25

Harry Walker

79 83 .488 4th 23

1970

1971 25

Harry Walker

79 83 .488 4th 11

1971

1972 25

Harry Walker

67 54 .554 2nd 10½

1972

1

Salty Parker

1 0 1.000
2

Leo Durocher

16 15 .516
1973 2

Leo Durocher

82 80 .506 4th 17

1973

1974 18

Preston Gomez

81 81 .500 4th 21

1974

1975 18

Preston Gomez

47 80 .370 6th 43½

1975

7

Bill Virdon

17 17 .500
1976 7

Bill Virdon

80 82 .494 3rd 22

1976

1977 7

Bill Virdon

81 81 .500 3rd 17

1977

1978 7

Bill Virdon

74 88 .457 5th 21

1978

1979 7

Bill Virdon

89 73 .549 2nd

1979

1980 7

Bill Virdon

93 70 .571 1st +1

1980

1981 7

Bill Virdon

61 49 .555 3rd / 1st 6

1981

1982 7

Bill Virdon

49 62 .441 5th 12

1982

5

Bob Lillis

28 23 .549
1983 5

Bob Lillis

85 77 .525 3rd 6

1983

1984 5

Bob Lillis

80 82 .494 2nd 12

1984

1985 5

Bob Lillis

83 79 .512 3rd 12

1985

1986 22

Hal Lanier

96 66 .593 1st +10

1986

1987 22

Hal Lanier

76 86 .469 3rd 14

1987

1988 22

Hal Lanier

82 80 .506 5th 12½

1988

1989 18

Art Howe

86 76 .531 3rd 6

1989

1990 18

Art Howe

75 87 .463 4th 16

1990

1991 18

Art Howe

65 97 .401 6th 29

1991

1992 18

Art Howe

81 81 .500 4th 17

1992

1993 18

Art Howe

85 77 .525 3rd 19

1993

1994 2

Terry Collins

66 49 .574 2nd ½

1994

1995 2

Terry Collins

76 68 .528 2nd 9

1995

1996 2

Terry Collins

82 80 .506 2nd 6

1996

1997 49

Larry Dierker

84 78 .519 1st +5

1997

1998 49

Larry Dierker

102 60 .630 1st +12½

1998

1999 49

Larry Dierker

97 65 .599 1st +1½

1999

2000 49

Larry Dierker

72 90 .444 4th 23

2000

2001 49

Larry Dierker

93 69 .574 1st +5

2001

2002 22

Jimy Williams

84 78 .519 2nd 13

2002

2003 22

Jimy Williams

87 75 .537 2nd 1

2003

2004 22

Jimy Williams

44 44 .500 2nd 13

2004

uk

Phil Garner

48 26 .649
2005 3

Phil Garner

89 73 .549 2nd 11

2005

2006

3

Phil Garner

82

80

.506

2nd

2006

2007 3

Phil Garner

58 73 .443 4th 12 2007

15

Cecil Cooper

15 16 .484

2008

15

Cecil Cooper

86

75

.534

3rd

11

2008

2009 15 Cecil Cooper 70 79 .470 5th 17 2009
uk Dave Clark 4 9 .308
2010 2 Brad Mills 76 86 .469 4th 15 2010
2011 2 Brad Mills 56 106 .346 6th 40 2011
2012 2 Brad Mills 39 82 .322 6th 42 2012
uk Tony DeFrancesco 16 25 .390
2013 16 Bo Porter 51 111 .315 5th 45 2013
2014 16 Bo Porter 59 79 .428

2014

Tom Lawless (1)

Year Uniform # Manager(s) Wins Losses WP Finish GB Roster
Houston Astros Managers & Finishes | (1) = Interim Manager



______________________________________________________________________

THE PECAN PARK EAGLE DAILY MLB 2014 BATTING CROWN EYE:

CONTENDERS TEAM THRU GAME DATE GAMES LEFT AT BATS 2014 HITS CURRENT BATTING AVERAGE
ALTUVE ASTROS 9/18 9 626 213 .340
MARTINEZ TIGERS 9/17 10 531 177 .333

NOTES, 9/19 AM: Altuve went 0 for 6 in a Thursday night of 9/18’s 2-1 13-inning Astros loss to the Indians at MMP, dropping his BA from .344 to .340.  As a result, Martinez of the Tigers used his off-day to pull within .007 points of the AL & MLB batting championship lead. Tonight, Friday, 9/19, the Astros begin a home weekend series with Seattle as the Tigers move to Kansas City to battle the Royals for 1st place in the ALC. Altuve and Martinez are both expected to play.

The Eagle Eye on Jose Altuve’s pursuit of the 2014 American League and MLB batting average championships will continue daily through the balance of the season. For now, it’s a two-man race between Altuve and Victor Martinez of the Detroit Tigers. Should that change, so will our reporting format. – Bill McCurdy

2 Responses to “Manager Roll Call in Houston MLB History”

  1. Rick B.'s avatar Rick B. Says:

    Well said in regard to what “being on the same page” means. If being on the same page as the GM means being a ‘yes’ man, then good luck with the fortunes of the franchise. A few hours’ drive up I-45, there’s a certain NFL owner who always wants his head coach to be on the same page with him. That franchise has been mired in mediocrity (with an occasional, rare hiccup of a good season) for the better part of two decades now. May it not be so with the Astros!

  2. Mark W.'s avatar Mark W. Says:

    Bill Virdon is the champ. He managed the Astros in all or parts of 8 seasons. The closest to him in managerial longevity, at 5 seasons, is a tie amongst Harry Walker, Art Howe, and Larry Dierker. But Virdon was the first to lead the team out of the wilderness of the second division and into the promised land of the post-season.

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