Chapter 6
The managers, part I (1895-1940)
The managers, part I (1895-1940)
GEORGE REED -- The first to manage Shreveport in multiple years (1899-1901-1902), he was a second baseman/third baseman/outfielder whose career began in 1892. He was in Houston for three seasons (1896 Texas Association, 1897-88 Texas League) before taking over the Shreveport Tigers. Died May 13, 1947, in Albuquerque, N.M., at age 76.
LEE GARVIN -- A catcher, in the middle of his 15-year pro career, he played for the Shreveport Pirates in 1909 (97 games, .226 average) and 1910 (57 games, .166), then returned as the player-manager for part of the 1915 season (20 games, .226). That was his last season, and his third managing job (Oklahoma City, 1911, and Portsmouth, Virginia, 1913).
MIKE O'NEILL -- A left-handed outfielder (also a pitcher at the start of his career), he was 41 and in his last season as a player when he managed the Shreveport Gassers in an abbreviated 1918 season (the Texas League disbanded on July 7). He played in 87 games and hit .243 in 305 at-bats, with 16 doubles, five triples and two home runs. He already had been a player-manager for six years in the New York State League (three years at Utica, three at Syracuse). His pro career began in 1899 in Scranton, Pa. -- where he died 60 years later -- and by 1901 he was in the majors as a pitcher-outfielder with the St. Louis Cardinals. In four Cardinals seasons, he had a 32-44 pitching record and hit .255 in 380 games, with two homers and 41 RBI. He had one more brief MLB stop (1907, Cincinnati), then spent eight seasons in the NYSL and returned to manage two more years there (1928-29). Died Aug. 12, 1959, at age 81.
BILLY "CAP" SMITH -- The last four of his 25 seasons as a minor-league manager were with the Shreveport Gassers, and his 1919 team claimed Shreveport's first Texas League championship, winning the playoffs after a third-place, 81-64 regular season. An outfielder, Smith began playing pro ball in 1889 at age 16, and played 16 seasons. His managing career started in 1895 and included nine seasons in the Southern Association (seven in Atlanta, two in Chattanooga). He was relieved of his Shreveport managing duties 32 games (May 28) into the 1922 season.
BOB TARLETON -- A so-so minor-league first baseman from 1903 (first stop: Monroe, La.) through 1919, he was in the Texas League -- with several teams -- for five seasons (1914-19), winding up as player-manager in Galveston. By 1925, his title was business manager for the Shreveport Sports, thus in charge of finding player personnel. He took over as interim manager for a short time (3-5 record in early June) and began the 1926 season as manager, but left in mid-June on a scouting trip to the Midwest and gave way to a new manager. He managed again in the TL in 1928 for Dallas. Died Feb. 3, 1972, in Ramsey Co., Minn., at age 91.
ART PHELAN -- He took over as Shreveport Sports' manager for the last 90 games of the 1926 season, then managed the next four years, with two good teams -- a second-place finish in the Texas League in 1929 (91-66 record) and third in 1930 (86-65). An infielder (second and third base) for five years in the majors -- Cincinnati (1910, 1912) and the Chicago Cubs (1913-15) -- he hit .236 in 402 games. He came to the TL with Fort Worth in 1920, was the top assistant to manager Jake Atz in the Cats' title dynasty and played six full seasons, plus the first part of '26. After Shreveport, he managed Fort Worth in 1931 and 1933, then came back to Louisiana to manage Alexandria (Evangeline League) in nine seasons (full seasons 1934-39, part seasons in 1947, '48 and '49). He died Dec. 27, 1964, in Fort Worth at age 77.
GEORGE SISLER -- At age 39, the future Baseball Hall of Fame selection was the player-manager of the 1932 Shreveport Sports, whose season was interrupted by a stadium fire, forcing the team to move to Tyler, Texas, in mid-May. The first baseman quit after his team ended the first-half race with a 26-51 record and went home, having batted .287 in 70 games. This was after a brilliant 15-year MLB career in which he hit .340. (Full sketch in chapter 2, Baseball Hall of Famers.)
J. WALTER MORRIS -- In a long baseball career that included a variety of positions -- player, president of the Texas League, team owner, team business manager, he was the field manager of the then-Tyler Sports in the second half of the 1932 season (they were the Shreveport Sports at the start of the year). (See more in a future chapter titled "contributors.")
GUS WHELAN -- Augustus P., "Gus," was a slick fielding first baseman and occasional third baseman for Shreveport, who set a minor-league record in 1931 by handling 838 consecutive chances without an error, and also was proficient at drawing walks (114 times in 1929, 118 in 1930). He was a .270 hitter in 686 Texas League games (1928-32) for the Sports, then in his last year as a player was manager of the 1933 Dixie League team. Its regular-season record was 74-49, good for second place, and it lost the league final playoff series to the Baton Rouge Solons, four games to two with one tie. After one pro season in his hometown of Lynn, Mass. (New England League), he came to Shreveport and stayed. After baseball, he worked for Cities Service Oil Co., and for 25 years was a baseball umpire and football official for area college and high school games. He died Dec. 12, 1966, in Shreveport, at age 65.
JERRY MALLETT -- A pitcher early in his career, he was a 28-year-old outfielder as player-manager for Shreveport in the East Dixie League in 1934. His team finished third in the first-half season with a 33-31 record, then was 12-9 when the club was transferred to Greenwood, Miss., on July 17. He played in 99 games and hit .358 with 125 hits (27 doubles, seven triples, six home runs) and a league-high 75 RBI, earning him a promotion to Beaumont (Texas League) at the end of July. Veteran pitcher Slim Brewer took over as manager for the rest of the season. Mallett, out of high school in Princeton, Ark., spent a year at the U.S. Naval Academy, then joined the Navy and was in the medical corps and also a pitcher. Signed by the Washington Senators, he pitched batting practice for their 1924 World Series champions, then became a minor-league pitcher, going 10-6 for Beaumont (TL) in 1930. There he met Mildred Long, and they married in Shreveport during the '34 season (June 10) at the home of club co-owner Major B.A. Hardey. He wound up his baseball career as manager of Abbeville, La. (Evangeline League) in 1936-37, settled in Beaumont and worked in the petroleum industry; his son was a star athlete in Beaumont, then Baylor and played four games with the 1959 Boston Red Sox.
HOMER PEEL -- Sports manager, 1939 and most of the 1940 season (full sketch in next chapter).
Hub Northen (right), with Murrell Jones, Shreveport Sports, 1940 |
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