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  1. 7 de oct. de 1991 · Leo Durocher Managerial Record | Baseball-Reference.com. Position: Manager. Born: July 27, 1905 in West Springfield, MA. Died: October 7, 1991 in Palm Springs, CA. Hall of Fame: Inducted as Manager in 1994. (Voted by Veteran's Committee) More bio, uniform, draft, salary info. Hall of Fame. 1x World Series. 3x Pennant.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Leo_DurocherLeo Durocher - Wikipedia

    Durocher finished his managerial career with a 2,008–1,709 record for a .540 winning percentage. He posted a winning record with each of the four teams he led, and was the first manager to win 500 games with three different clubs.

  3. Did you know that Leo Durocher was a baseball manager for 25 years, winning 2,052 games, losing 1,761 games, and a career managerial winning percentage of .535? Leo Durocher MLB manager stats; includes wins, losses, teams managed, research by Baseball Almanac.

    • Leo Ernest Durocher
    • 07-27-1905 (Leo)
    • West Springfield, Massachusetts
    • The All-American Out, The Lip
  4. Debut: (Age 20-067d, 6,263rd in major league history) 1 AB, 0 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 SB. Last Game: (Age 39-265d) 1 AB, 0 H, 0 HR, 0 RBI, 0 SB. Hall of Fame: Inducted as Manager in 1994. (Voted by Veteran's Committee) View Leo Durocher's Page at the Baseball Hall of Fame (plaque, photos, videos).

    • July 27, 1905
  5. Leo the Lip Durocher was a three-time All-Star infielder (1936, 1938, 1940), who as a player-manager, finished his career as a skipper ranked fifth all-time amongst managers with 2,009 career victories, second only to John McGraw in National League history.

    • Leo Ernest Durocher
    • 07-27-1905 (Leo)
    • West Springfield, Massachusetts
    • The All-American Out, The Lip
  6. He returned to the manager’s office with the Cubs in 1966 and served his final nine seasons in Chicago and Houston. Durocher retired in 1973 as the fifth-winningest manager in history, and second only to Hall of Famer John McGraw in the National League. Durocher passed away on Oct. 7, 1991. He was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1994.

  7. 4 de ene. de 2012 · Durocher found success in both playing and managing, winning World Series titles while playing shortstop for the 1928 Yankees and 1934 Cardinals, and then as the manager of the 1954 Giants. He won National League pennants, but no world championships, with the 1941 Brooklyn Dodgers and the 1951 Giants.