Time on the blog to go and tab the National league Manager of the Decade for the 1970s, as picked by yours truly, and I went with the "Big Red Machine" skipper Sparky Anderson:
Who else was I going to pick?
Arguably
leading the team of the decade, the Cincinnati Reds, Anderson was at
the helm of a team that featured many of the top players of the era.
In 1975 the Reds were arguably one of the
best teams in baseball history, steamrolling to 108 victories before
eventually beating the Boston Red Sox in the World Series.
In 1976, more of the same as the team would win 102 games before sweeping the New York Yankees in the World Series.
Throw
in the fact that they were also in the World Series in both 1970 and
1972, and it really looked like the team, stacked with guys like Johnny
Bench, Pete Rose, Joe Morgan and George Foster, would be keeping our
attention for quite some time.
But alas, according to Sparky,
it was the trading of one of their OTHER stars, Tony Perez, that took
the heart and soul out of the team, and shockingly the "Big Red Machine"
would not bring home another championship, and the franchise would have
to wait until 1990 before experiencing it again.
For Anderson
however, the man would go down as one of the greatest managers in Major
League history, moving on to the Detroit Tigers in 1979, where he would
go on to manage 17 years, giving him a combined 26 years of Big League
managing, even taking home another title with that great 1984 Tiger team
that was in first "wire-to-wire", winning 104 games before beating the
San Diego Padres in the World Series.
All told the man won
2194 games as a manager, finishing with a .545 winning percentage, three
titles, 5 pennants, and of course a Hall of Fame induction in 2000.
Legend, and perpetually looking like an "old man" even when he was in his 30's!