sport.wikisort.org - AthleteRichard Paul "Red" Smith (May 18, 1904 – March 8, 1978) was an American player and coach in both professional baseball and professional football. A native of Brokaw, Wisconsin, Smith stood 5'9" (175 cm) tall, and weighed 215 pounds (97 kg). A catcher in baseball, he batted and threw right-handed. He played under three of the early 20th century's most famous American sporting coaches—football's Knute Rockne and Curly Lambeau, and baseball's John McGraw.
American baseball player
Not to be confused with Red Smith (American football).
Baseball player
Red Smith |
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Catcher |
Born: (1904-05-18)May 18, 1904 Brokaw, Wisconsin |
Died: March 8, 1978(1978-03-08) (aged 73) Sylvania, Ohio |
Batted: Right Threw: Right |
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May 27, 1927, for the New York Giants |
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May 27, 1927, for the New York Giants |
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Games played | 1 |
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At bats | 0 |
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Total chances | 1 |
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Errors | 0 |
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- Played professional football (1927–1931)
- Coach, Chicago Cubs (1945–1949)
- Member, 1945 National League champions
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After attending Kaukauna High School in Kaukauna, Wisconsin, Smith attended the University of Notre Dame, where he played football for Rockne and captained the Fighting Irish varsity baseball team. In 1927, he turned professional in both sports. He appeared in one game for the New York Giants of baseball's National League, where he recorded one putout and made no errors in the field, but did not record an official at bat. He was then farmed to the Jersey City Skeeters of the AA International League. That turned out to be Smith's only game as a Major League Baseball player, although he played in the minor leagues throughout much of the next decade. In the autumn of 1927, he also turned professional in football with the Green Bay Packers of the National Football League, where he played five games. In the NFL, he also played for the New York football Giants and the New York football Yankees.
Smith continued as a coach in both sports after his playing career ended. He was the head baseball coach at Georgetown University (1930) at Seton Hall University (1931–1932) and an assistant coach for the Packers and Giants from 1936 to 1944.
In baseball, he managed in three Class D minor leagues—the Bi-State League, KITTY League and Wisconsin State League—from 1936 to 1938 and in 1941–42. He also served as a coach for the Milwaukee Brewers of the American Association (1939–40; 1943–44). In 1945 he returned to the majors as a coach for the pennant-winning Chicago Cubs, working under Charlie Grimm, who had been his skipper in Milwaukee. Smith served on the Cub coaching staff through 1949. He then returned to the minor-league Brewers as the team's business manager, briefly filling in as manager in 1952, and moved with the franchise to Toledo, Ohio, when it became the Toledo Sox in 1953. He left baseball in 1955, when the Toledo franchise moved to Wichita, Kansas. He then worked in the brewery industry.
Smith died in a suburb of Toledo in 1978 at age 73. Every January a fund raising banquet named in Smith's honor is held in Appleton, Wisconsin.
References
- Spink, J.G. Taylor, and Rickart, Paul A., eds., The Baseball Register. St. Louis: The Sporting News, 1949.
External links
Georgetown Hoyas head baseball coaches |
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- Unknown (1866)
- No team (1867–1869)
- Unknown (1870)
- No team (1871–1873)
- Unknown (1874–1875)
- No team (1876)
- Unknown (1877–1893)
- Horsey (1894)
- Unknown (1895–1896)
- Joe Kelley (1897)
- Unknown (1898)
- Philip King (1899)
- Jerome Bradley (1900–1901)
- Billy Suter (1902)
- Jerome Bradley (1903)
- Charles Moran (1904)
- Samuel H. Apperious (1905)
- Kid O'Hara (1906–1907)
- Hugh Spalding (1908)
- Unknown (1909–1910)
- James H. Sprigman (1911–1912)
- Dick Harley (1913)
- Dan Coogan (1914)
- John D. O'Reilly (1915–1926)
- Ben Egan (1927)
- Larry Kopf (1928)
- Valen O'Neill (1929)
- Red Smith (1930)
- John T. Colrick (1931)
- Clayton Sheedy (1932–1933)
- Ralph P. McCarthy (1933–1936)
- Joe Judge (1937–1942)
- Joe Gardner (1943)
- No team (1944–1945)
- Mickey Murtagh (1946)
- Joe Judge (1947–1958)
- Tommy Nolan (1959–1978)
- Ken Kelly (1979–1985)
- Larry Geracioti (1986–1993)
- Kirk Mason (1994–1999)
- Pete Wilk (2000–2020)
- Edwin Thompson (2021– )
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Seton Hall Pirates head baseball coaches |
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- Unknown (1863)
- No team (1864)
- Unknown (1865)
- No team (1866–1872)
- Unknown (1873–1874)
- No team (1875–1876)
- Unknown (1877–1878)
- No team (1879)
- Unknown (1880)
- No team (1881)
- Unknown (1882–1889)
- No team (1890)
- Unknown (1891–1892)
- No team (1893–1894)
- Unknown (1895)
- No team (1896–1897)
- Unknown (1898–1902)
- Gannon (1903)
- Unknown (1904–1906)
- Ed Gilroy (1907–1908)
- Unknown (1909)
- J. Varlin (1910)
- No team (1911)
- Jack Clarf (1912)
- Bernie Stafford (1913)
- Dave Driscoll (1914–1916)
- Unknown (1917–1918)
- Marty Kavanaugh (1919–1923)
- Doc Nork (1924–1925)
- Jack Fish (1926–1927)
- Milt Feller (1928–1930)
- Red Smith (1931–1932)
- No team (1933–1934)
- John T. Colrick (1935–1936)
- Al Mamaux (1937–1942)
- No team (1943–1945)
- Bob Davies (1946–1947)
- Ownie Carroll (1948–1972)
- Mike Sheppard (1973–2000)
- Rob Sheppard # (2001)
- Mike Sheppard (2002–2003)
- Rob Sheppard (2004– )
Pound sign (#) denotes interim head coach.
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New York Giants starting quarterbacks |
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- Jack McBride (1925, 1932)
- Hinkey Haines (1926–1928)
- Bruce Caldwell (1928)
- Benny Friedman (1929–1931)
- Hap Moran (1931–1932)
- Red Smith (1931)
- Harry Newman (1933–1934)
- Ed Danowski (1935–1939)
- Tony Sarausky (1936)
- Eddie Miller (1940)
- Tuffy Leemans (1941–1943)
- Emery Nix (1943)
- Arnie Herber (1944–1945)
- Frank Filchock (1946)
- Paul Governali (1947–1948)
- Charlie Conerly (1948–1961)
- Travis Tidwell (1950–1951)
- Tom Landry (1952)
- Arnold Galiffa (1953)
- Bob Clatterbuck (1954)
- Don Heinrich (1955–1959)
- George Shaw (1959–1960)
- Y. A. Tittle (1961–1964)
- Gary Wood (1964, 1966)
- Earl Morrall (1965–1966)
- Tom Kennedy (1966)
- Fran Tarkenton (1967–1971)
- Randy Johnson (1971–1973)
- Norm Snead (1972–1974, 1976)
- Craig Morton (1974–1976)
- Jim Del Gaizo (1974)
- Joe Pisarcik (1977–1979)
- Jerry Golsteyn (1977–1978)
- Randy Dean (1978)
- Phil Simms (1979–1981, 1984–1993)
- Scott Brunner (1980–1983)
- Jeff Rutledge (1983, 1987)
- Mike Busch (1987)
- Jim Crocicchia (1987)
- Jeff Hostetler (1988–1992)
- Kent Graham (1992, 1994, 1998–1999)
- Dave Brown (1994–1997)
- Danny Kanell (1997–1998)
- Kerry Collins (1999–2003)
- Jesse Palmer (2003)
- Kurt Warner (2004)
- Eli Manning (2004–2019)
- Geno Smith (2017)
- Daniel Jones (2019–2021)
- Colt McCoy (2020)
- Mike Glennon (2021)
- Jake Fromm (2021)
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Green Bay Packers 1929 NFL champions |
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- Marion Ashmore
- Bullet Baker
- Jim Bowdoin
- Tiny Cahoon
- Boob Darling
- Lavie Dilweg
- Red Dunn
- Jug Earp
- Jack Evans
- Don Hill
- Cal Hubbard
- Bill Kern
- Eddie Kotal
- Curly Lambeau
- Verne Lewellen
- Cully Lidberg
- Herdis McCrary
- Johnny Blood
- Mike Michalske
- Paul Minick
- Bo Molenda
- Tom Nash
- Dick O'Donnell
- Claude Perry
- Red Smith
- Whitey Woodin
- Billy Young
- Dave Zuidmulder
Head Coach: Curly Lambeau
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