Lefty Phillips

Lefty Phillips
Manager
Born: (1919-05-16)May 16, 1919
Los Angeles, California
Died: June 10, 1972(1972-06-10) (aged 53)
Fullerton, California
Batted: Left Threw: Left
Teams

Harold Ross "Lefty" Phillips (May 16, 1919 – June 12, 1972) was an American coach, manager, scout and front office executive in Major League Baseball. Phillips was the second manager in Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim franchise history.

A native of Los Angeles, Phillips attended Franklin High School. He was a left-handed pitcher in his playing days but, because of a sore arm, his professional playing career consisted of fewer than five games with the Bisbee Bees of the Class D Arizona–Texas League in 1939. With his playing days behind him, Phillips embarked on his scouting career in his early 20s, working for the St. Louis Browns. After the Second World War, Phillips returned to baseball and became a highly respected scout for the Cincinnati Reds (1948–50) and the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers (1952–64). Among the players he signed for the Dodgers were Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Don Drysdale and 21-year MLB veteran Ron Fairly.[1] He also signed future Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson to his first playing contract in 1953.

In 1965, Phillips reached the Major Leagues when he was named pitching coach of the Dodgers. During his first two seasons in that post, he worked with Hall of Famers Drysdale, Sandy Koufax and Don Sutton, as Los Angeles won back-to-back National League pennants and the 1965 World Series. Although the Dodgers fell back in the standings in 1967–68, after Koufax' retirement, they still boasted one of the strongest pitching staffs in the majors.

Manager of 1969–71 Angels

At the end of the 1968 season, Phillips joined former Dodger executive Dick Walsh in the Angels' front office. Walsh was appointed general manager, while Phillips was named to the high-ranking post of director of player personnel. But when the Angels started only 11–28 in 1969 under their longtime (and original) manager, Bill Rigney, Phillips was asked to return to the field, first as a coach, and then as Rigney's replacement on May 27, despite his never before having managed in the minor leagues or in MLB.

The Angels responded to Phillips, however, improving from sixth (last) place to third in the American League West Division in 1969 and then—led by batting champion Alex Johnson—winning 86 games in 1970 to again finish third. But Johnson was a disciplinary problem. In 1971 he was suspended by Phillips five times for lack of hustle (culminating in a season-long suspension beginning June 26) and the Angels won only 76 games. Walsh and Phillips were fired at the end of the season,[2] and Johnson was traded.[3] Phillips' record in 2½ seasons as Angel manager was 222–225 (.497).

Phillips then resumed his scouting career with the Angels, but in June 1972, he was fatally stricken with an attack of asthma. He died in Fullerton, California, at age 53.[4] He is buried at the Mount Sinai Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles.

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Preceded by
Joe Becker
Los Angeles Dodgers Pitching Coach
1965–1968
Succeeded by
Red Adams
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