Butch Hobson

Butch Hobson
Third baseman / Manager
Born: (1951-08-17) August 17, 1951
Tuscaloosa, Alabama
Batted: Right Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 7, 1975, for the Boston Red Sox
Last MLB appearance
August 3, 1982, for the New York Yankees
MLB statistics
Batting average .248
Home runs 98
Runs batted in 397
Managerial record 207–232
Winning % .472
Teams

As player

As manager

Clell Lavern "Butch" Hobson, Jr. (born August 17, 1951) is a former third baseman and manager in Major League Baseball. Hobson played for the Boston Red Sox (1975–80), California Angels (1981) and New York Yankees (1982). He batted and threw right-handed.

After retiring, he managed the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Boston Red Sox. He managed the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs in the independent Atlantic League of Professional Baseball in 2008. He won the International League Manager of the Year award in 1991, and led the Nashua Pride to the Atlantic League Championship in 2000 and the Can-Am League Championship in 2007. He currently serves as manager of the Lancaster Barnstormers.

Athlete

Hobson was a backup quarterback for the University of Alabama team under Bear Bryant as well as a baseball standout. Selected by the Red Sox in the 1973 amateur draft, he made his debut in 1975. His most productive season came in 1977, when he set team season records for a third baseman with home runs and 112 RBIs.

In 1978, Hobson hit 17 home runs with 80 RBI. Nevertheless, he posted 43 errors, the most for any American League fielder in that season, and his .899 fielding average also was the first below .900 by a regular player in 60 years. Hobson hit 28 home runs with 93 RBI in 1979, but a year later, an ensuing injury to his right elbow left him inactive for almost two campaigns.

Before the 1981 season, Hobson was sent to the Angels along with Rick Burleson in the same trade that brought Carney Lansford and Mark Clear to Boston. Hobson finished his major league career with the Yankees in 1982. In an eight-year career, Hobson had a .248 batting average with 98 home runs and 397 RBI in 738 games. Hobson holds the record for the fewest career home runs with a 30 home run season.[1]

Manager

Hobson managed Pawtucket for one season and posted a 79-64 record to lead his team to a first-place finish in the International League. After losing the Governors' Cup to Columbus, he was hired to manage the Red Sox parent club and posted a 207-232 record for Boston from 1992 to 1994. In 1996, while managing the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons, then a Triple-A affiliate of the Philadelphia Phillies, he was arrested for possession of cocaine and immediately fired.

He managed the Nashua Pride for the 2000 through 2007 seasons with a record of 508-456. On rare occasions when an umpire ejected Hobson from a game for arguing a baserunning decision, Hobson would remove one of the bases and deliver it to a young fan before leaving the stadium. This signature move was one of the meanings of Stolen Bases, a movie the Pride commissioned in 2000. For example, Hobson "stole" first base on July 27, 2007 when a baserunner for the North Shore Spirit was called out at first base, then ruled safe after a protest by the opposing manager.[2] The base was always retrieved, allowing the game to resume.

On November 19, 2007, Hobson was named the first-ever manager of the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs in the Atlantic League. He won manager of the year for the Atlantic League for the 2008 season.

On October 19, 2010, Hobson was named Manager of the Lancaster Barnstormers for the 2011 season.

Personal life

Hobson's son, K. C. Hobson, was selected by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 6th round, 190th overall in the June 2009 baseball draft and has played for the New Hampshire Fisher Cats of the Eastern League (baseball). K.C. currently plays for the Lancaster Barnstormers of the Atlantic League. Another son Hank Hobson is a linebacker with the University of Arizona Wildcats football team.

Notes

  1. Spatz, Lyle (2007). TheSABR Baseball List & Record Book – Baseball’s Most Fascinating Records and Unusual Statistics. United States: Simon & Schuster. p. 496. ISBN 9781416532453.
  2. The stunt was captured on Video on YouTube.

Sources

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Tucker Ashford
Columbia Mets Manager
1987–1988
Succeeded by
Bill Stein
Preceded by
Dave Holt
New Britain Red Sox Manager
1989–1990
Succeeded by
Gary Allenson
Preceded by
Johnny Pesky
Pawtucket Red Sox Manager
1991
Succeeded by
Rico Petrocelli
Preceded by
Mike Quade
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons Manager
1996
Succeeded by
Ramon Aviles
Preceded by
Bob Geren
Sarasota Red Sox Manager
1999
Succeeded by
Ron Johnson
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