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Hal McRae
Designated hitter / Outfielder
Born: (1945-07-10) July 10, 1945 (age 67)
Avon Park, Florida
Batted: Right Threw: Right 
MLB debut
July 11, 1968 for the Cincinnati Reds
Last MLB appearance
July 17, 1987 for the Kansas City Royals
Career statistics
Batting average     .290
Home runs     191
Runs batted in     1,097
Teams

As player

As manager

Career highlights and awards

Harold Abraham McRae (/məˈkr/; born July 10, 1945 in Avon Park, Florida) is a former left fielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Cincinnati Reds (1968, 1970–72) and Kansas City Royals (1973–87). Utilized as a designated hitter for most of his career, McRae batted and threw right-handed. He is the father of former major league outfielder Brian McRae.

Contents

Biography [edit]

McRae was selected by the Reds in the 6th round of the 1965 draft with the 117th overall pick. Then in the pre-1969 offseason, playing winter ball in Puerto Rico, McRae suffered a multiple leg fracture sliding on the basepaths. In the words of Bill James in The Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract, "Before the accident, McRae was a burner, a center fielder who could fly...after the accident, his speed was major league average." He was considered a below-average outfielder with the Reds.

In spring training 1969, McRae came to the Reds' camp with his leg still in a cast from the fracture. The same offseason, St. Louis Cardinals announcer Harry Caray had suffered multiple fractures being struck by a car while on foot. During a Reds-Cardinals preseason game where Caray was interviewing ballplayers on the field while still on crutches, Reds Manager Dave Bristol pointed in Caray's direction and said to McRae, "Look at that. There's an old man. Broke two legs. Broke his shoulder. Broke his everything. And here he is walking around doing his job, doing anything he wants. Here you are, all you did was break your leg sliding into second base, and you can't get your leg out of your goddam cast! You ought to be ashamed of yourself."

McRae later mentioned to Caray that it was one "one of the best motivational speeches he'd ever heard. He learned that he had to want to recover before he'd really be able to." Later in his career, Royals teammate Dan Quisenberry recalled, whenever a Royals player took time off because of injury, "McRae gets dressed like a commando, hides in a trash can in the clubhouse, and then jumps out and 'shoots' the guy...McRae believes that if a guy is hurt and can't play, he's dead to the club, so McRae shoots him and kills him."

In 1972, McRae was traded to the Royals along with Wayne Simpson in exchange for Roger Nelson and Richie Scheinblum. McRae developed as a consistent designated hitter in the American League. His playing career spanned 23 years, including 14 seasons with Kansas City. Selected a three-time All-Star, he hit over .300 six times for the Royals and was named Designated Hitter of the Year three times both by The Sporting News and the Associated Press.

In 1976 McRae was on top of the AL batting title race going into the final game of the season, in which his teammate George Brett went 2-for-4 to clinch the title over McRae by a margin of less than .001; McRae finished second. Oddly, the other two of the top four finishers that season, the Minnesota Twins' Rod Carew and Lyman Bostock, played in that same game.

After his recovery from the leg fracture, McRae became known as "the most aggressive baserunner of the 1970s," as quoted by James, "a man who left home plate thinking 'double' every time he hit the ball...he taught the younger players and reminded the veterans to take nothing for granted, and to take no prisoners on the bases." McRae played hard—so hard, in fact, that the rule requiring a runner to slide into second base when breaking up a double play is still referred to as the Hal McRae Rule in honor of the man whose cross-body blocks into second base broke up a lot of double plays and second basemen at the same time.

In a 19-year major league career, McRae posted a .290 batting average (2091-for-7218) with 191 home runs, 1097 RBI, 484 doubles, 65 triples and 109 stolen bases in 2084 games played. He added a .351 on base percentage and a .454 slugging average for a combined .805 OPS.

Following his playing retirement, McRae managed the Royals (1991–94) and Tampa Bay Devil Rays (2001–02). While managing the Royals, McRae was involved in an infamous incident after a game on April 26, 1993 (a 5–3 loss against the Detroit Tigers) in which he lost his temper with reporters and trashed his entire office, throwing things off of his desk including a phone, which cut a reporter on impact, and yelling profanities at reporters. He also served as hitting coach for the Cincinnati Reds, Philadelphia Phillies, and St. Louis Cardinals. McRae, who won a World Series ring playing for Kansas City against the Cardinals in 1985, won a ring as a coach for the Cardinals when they defeated the Detroit Tigers in the 2006 World Series, four games to one.

Managerial records [edit]

Team Year Regular Season Post Season
Won Lost Win % Finish Won Lost Win % Result
KC 1991 66 58 .532 6th in AL West
KC 1992 72 90 .444 5th in AL West
KC 1993 84 78 .519 3rd in AL West
KC 1994 64 51 .557 3rd in AL Central
TB 2001 58 90 .392 5th in AL East
TB 2002 55 106 .342 5th in AL East
Total 399 473 .458

See also [edit]

  • Holy Cow! - Harry Caray with Bob Verdi. Publisher: Villard Books, 1989. Format: Hardcover, 252 pp. Language: English. ISBN 0-394-55103-6
  • The ESPN Baseball Encyclopedia – Gary Gillette, Peter Gammons, Pete Palmer. Publisher: Sterling Publishing, 2005. Format: Paperback, 1824pp. Language: English. ISBN 1-4027-4771-3
  • The New Bill James Historical Baseball Abstract - Bill James. Publisher: Free Press, 2001. Format: Paperback, 1014 pp. Language: English. ISBN 0-7432-2722-0
  • Baseball Confidential - Bruce Nash and Allan Zullo. Publisher: Pocket Books, 1988. Format: Paperback, 224 pp. Language: English. ISBN 0-671-65832-8

External links [edit]

Achievements
Preceded by
Eddie Murray
American League RBI Champion
1982
Succeeded by
Cecil Cooper & Jim Rice
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Bob Schaefer
Kansas City Royals managers
1991–1994
Succeeded by
Bob Boone
Preceded by
Bill Russell
Tampa Bay Devil Rays Bench Coach
2001
Succeeded by
Billy Hatcher
Preceded by
Larry Rothschild
Tampa Bay Devil Rays managers
2001–2002
Succeeded by
Lou Piniella

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hal_McRae — Please support Wikipedia.
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2392 videos foundNext > 

Coach Hal Mcrae Goes Nuts

Possibly the best post game rant by a coach ever. Coach Hal Mcrae of the Kansas City Royals goes nuts during a post game conference in 1993 after being asked...

A Hal McRae Highlight Video

Hal McRae Highlight Video.

HAL MCREA GOES CRAZY!!!

Possibly the best post game rant by a coach ever. Coach Hal Mcrae of the Kansas City Royals goes nuts during a post game conference in 1993 after being asked...

AVGN Asks Hal McRae If any store sells a ghost vacumm

This is a project mentioned from my other account. The Angry Video Game Nerd wants to know if any type of store sells a ghost vacumm. So he asks Hal McRae th...

1977 Royal Crown featuring Hal McRae _ Museum Of Cans

This is a RC Cola can rotating slowly. This can features Hal McRae and was made in 1977.

My own Coach hal mcrae goes nuts story!

This what happens when you ask a mad black dude a question. Check it out!

Lee Elia Tirade - Chicago Cubs - 4/29/83

Good article on the event here: http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/les-grobstein-knows-the-score/Content?oid=894675 Elia clearly regrets his ourburst. "I m...

Coach Hal Demonstrates Speed and Agility Drill

Training with Fury.

mcrae for another eisode

T-Bones "Turn Back the Clock Night" memories with Frank White

T-Bones coach Frank White talks with Matt Fulks about the upcoming "Turn Back the Clock Night," when Fred Patek, Willie Wilson, John Mayberry, Hal McRae and ...

2392 videos foundNext > 

39 news items

 
SI.com
Fri, 26 Apr 2013 10:54:34 -0700

If you're a fan of classic managerial tirades captured for posterity, the last week of April is an opportunity to celebrate the anniversaries of two all-time meltdowns. Friday marks the 20th anniversary of Royals manager Hal McRae's desk rearrangement ...
 
Royals Review
Fri, 26 Apr 2013 11:05:47 -0700

In 1993, I was a senior at KU working toward my degree in broadcast news. I knew I didn't want to go into news (I'm an idiot, not an asshole.) so I naturally gravitated toward sports. I did some play by play of high school football, did some KU ...
 
Pratt Tribune
Fri, 17 May 2013 22:28:27 -0700

Cards manager Whitey Herzog was forced to walk Royals pinch-hitter Hal McRae, loading up the bases. Dane Iorg followed with a pinch-hit single that plated two and KC won game six 2-1. The climactic game seven was actually an anti-climax. With St. Louis ...
 
Dallas Observer (blog)
Wed, 15 May 2013 14:02:09 -0700

Amos Otis, John Mayberry, Paul Splitorf, Brett, Willie Wilson, Hal Mcrae, Frank White, Quis, Sabe's, Charlie Liebrandt; I also loved the 73 +74 A's, the 69 Orioles and ALL Red Sox teams. ScottsMerkin topcommenter 5pts like.author.displayName 2 Like ...

Kansas City Star

Kansas City Star
Tue, 14 May 2013 14:14:32 -0700

“Just the thrill of getting started, doing what was a lifelong dream, the team on the rise, a new stadium being opened, George Brett, Hal McRae and Frank White joining the team that year … “I probably felt I'd died and gone up the first steps to ...
 
Topeka Capital Journal
Wed, 15 May 2013 16:37:39 -0700

Just the thrill of getting started, doing what was a lifelong dream, the team on the rise, a new stadium being opened, George Brett, Hal McRae and Frank White joining the team that year — I probably felt I'd died and gone up the first steps to heaven ...
 
MLB.com
Sat, 11 May 2013 12:33:36 -0700

He lockered next to Hal McRae, and after a September game there was a bottle of champagne on ice in front of Balboni's locker. Why? "He struck out for the 100th time tonight,'' McRae said. "You know how good you have to be to strike out 100 times?
 
McCovey Chronicles
Thu, 09 May 2013 14:32:36 -0700

Which was a lot funnier until I clicked on the link and found out that Andre Dawson, Marquis Grissom, Hal McRae, and Vince Coleman all went to FAMU. Well, now. But before the days of Giantsvision and regional cable channels, you didn't always have a ...
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