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  1. 7 de oct. de 1991 · Leo Durocher. 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)

  2. 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? Where what happened yesterday is being preserved today.

    • Leo Ernest Durocher
    • 07-27-1905 (Leo)
    • West Springfield, Massachusetts
    • The All-American Out, The Lip
  3. 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
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Leo_DurocherLeo Durocher - Wikipedia

    Durocher finished his managerial career with a 2,0081,709 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.

  5. List of Los Angeles Dodgers managers. The Los Angeles Dodgers are a Major League Baseball team that plays in the National League Western Division. The Dodgers began play in 1884 as the Brooklyn Atlantics and have been known by seven nicknames since (including the Grays, Grooms, Superbas, and Robins ), before adopting the Dodgers name ...

  6. During his first season as manager, Durocher's Cubs tied the franchise's 103-game loss record set four years earlier by the "College"; however, he maintained a winning record for the rest of his seven-year tenure. In the 42 seasons after Durocher, the Cubs employed 25 managers.

  7. 3 de may. de 2021 · Over 24 years as a skipper for the Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros, Leo Durocher won 2,008 total games, three National League pennants and a World Series title. A three-time All-Star shortstop who played 17 seasons in the big leagues, Durocher was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1994.