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Leo Durocher - Wikipedia He won three National League pennants and one world championship In 25 years as a manager, Durocher had only 4 losing seasons Durocher was posthumously elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1994
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Leo Durocher - Baseball Hall of Fame Over 24 years as a skipper for the Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Giants, Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros, Durocher won 2,008 total games, three pennants and a World Series But it was Durocher’s banter with umpires, executives and players that earned him his eternal reputation as “The Lip ”
Leo Durocher | MLB Hall of Fame, Brooklyn Dodgers, Chicago Cubs . . . Leo Durocher (born July 27, 1905, West Springfield, Massachusetts, U S —died October 7, 1991, Palm Springs, California) was an American professional baseball player and manager Durocher played minor-league baseball for three years before joining the New York Yankees in 1928
Leo Durocher - Biography - IMDb Durocher managed the New York Giants in 1948-55 and led them to two pennants in 1951 and 1954, and a World Series win in the latter year He quit the Giants in 1955 to become a baseball commentator on television but returned as coach of the Dodgers in 1961-64
Leo Durocher - Wikiwand He played in Major League Baseball as an infielder Upon his retirement, he ranked fifth all-time among managers with 2,008 career victories, second only to John McGraw in National League history Durocher still ranks twelfth in career wins by a manager
Durocher, Leo (1905-1991) - Encyclopedia. com Durocher played for two of the most celebrated teams of the early twentieth century: in 1928 he spent his first full season in the major leagues with the legendary New York Yankees, led by Babe Ruth; and in 1934, he captained the St Louis Cardinals, a team better known as the "Gas House Gang "