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Bobby Valentine

This article is about the baseball player/manager. For the R&B singer, see Bobby Valentino. This article needs additional citationsfor verification.
Please help improve this articleby adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challengedand removed. (May 2008) Bobby Valentine Outfielder/ ManagerBorn: May 13, 1950(1950-05-13) (age 58)
Stamford, ConnecticutBatted: Right Threw: Right MLB debut September 2, 1969
for the Los Angeles DodgersFinal game September 30, 1979
for the Seattle MarinersCareer statistics Batting average     .260 Hits     441 Runs batted in     157 Teams

As Player

As Manager

Career highlights and awards

Robert John Valentine (born May 13, 1950 in Stamford, Connecticut), nicknamed Bobby V, is a former player and manager in Major League Baseball and the current manager of the Chiba Lotte Marines of Japan's Pacific League.

Contents

Early years

Valentine was widely recruited out of Rippowam High School in Stamford, Connecticut as a star in American football and baseball. He was recruited by the likes of the University of Nebraska, Duke University, the University of Notre Dame and the University of Southern California. He attended USC and Arizona State University. He was then drafted and signed by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1969. He is considered to be among the best high school athletes in Connecticut history.

Playing career

Valentine played from 1969 to 1979 with the Dodgers, California Angels, San Diego Padres, New York Mets and Seattle Mariners.

Valentine was the Pacific Coast League MVP in 1970, a team managed by future Dodger great Tommy Lasorda, and helped the Spokane Indians to the league championship over a legendary Hawaii Islanders powerhouse.

As a player, he was never a home run hitter (he only hit 12 home runs in his major league career), but he had 107 hits as a member of the Dodgers in 1972. Eventually traded to the crosstown Angels, Valentine was a victim of one of the most notable injuries during that era when he broke his leg at Anaheim Stadium in 1974 while crashing into the wall chasing a home run, and was never the same caliber player after that.

Career as a manager

He has managed the Texas Rangers (19851992) and the New York Mets (19962002). Valentine's managing led to the late 1990s and early 2000s resurgence of the Mets, which culminated in 1999 with a wild card berth and a loss to the Atlanta Braves in the National League Championship Series, and a National League pennant in 2000. The Mets lost the 2000 World Series to the crosstown rival New York Yankees, four games to one. Valentine is also infamous for a dubious incident during a 1999 game in which he was discovered to have sneaked back into the team dugout after being ejected, by wearing a disguise consisting of a change of clothes, sunglasses, and a "moustache"

Bobby+valentine.jpg

Bobby Valentine in disguise after being thrown out from the game.

painted on with eye black. In early 2000, Valentine was at the center of what would be called "Whartongate", in which he allegedly mentioned to students at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business somewhat cynical, insider comments regarding a handful of Mets players and the organization as a whole.[1]

Valentine is currently in his second stint as manager of the Japanese Pacific League Chiba Lotte Marines (2003—) for a 3-year $4,500,000 (US) contract. On October 17, 2005, he led the Marines to win the Pacific League pennant after thirty-one years in a close playoff with the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks. On October 26, the team became Japan Series champions with a victory over the Hanshin Tigers, as well as the first Asia Series champions over Samsung Lions in finals. He served as manager for the same team in 1995, when the team surprised most Japanese baseball fans by finishing in second place (69-58-3), a remarkable feat for the Marines which had not won the Japanese Pacific league pennants since 1974. However, he was fired abruptly due to the personal conflict with general manager Tatsuro Hirooka, despite having a two-year contract.

On October 27, 2005, Valentine issued a dare to the World Series champions, prior to the completion of the tournament, on behalf of the Chiba Lotte Marines. Valentine called for a seven-game World Series to be played between the American and Japanese championship teams. Unlike the World Baseball Classic, a competition featuring sixteen national all-star teams, a World Series-styled tournament between the winners of both the American and Japanese championships has never been played.

Outside his baseball career

Outside of his coaching job, Valentine also owns Bobby V's, a decades-old sports bar with locations in Stamford, where he still keeps his residence when not managing in Japan or in Arlington, Texas. He claims to have invented the wrap sandwich. He claims that his restaurant was the first anywhere to serve a sandwich in a tortilla wrap. Valentine made this claim while his restaurant was showcased on the Food Network.[citation needed] Since 2003, Valentine has held an annual "Bobby Valentine Celebrity Wine & Food Experience", a charity fundraising event featuring food from lower Fairfield County, Connecticut restaurants and a selection of wines. Valentine acts as the master of ceremonies and celebrities and sports personalities appear at the event. The January 2008 event, to benefit the Mickey Lione Jr. Fund, included both live and silent auctions and cost $150 to attend, with ticket sales limited to 750.[2]

Valentine's father-in-law is former Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Ralph Branca, who gave up the famous pennant-winning home run to Bobby Thomson in 1951.[citation needed]

Valentine is a member of the Delta Chi fraternity.

Notes

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Advertisement "Sixth Annual Bobby Valentine Celebrity Wine & Food Experience", Weekend section, The Advocate of Stamford, Connecticut, page 8, December 6, 2007

External links

Preceded by
Doug RaderTexas Rangers Manager
1985-1992 Succeeded by
Toby HarrahPreceded by
Dallas GreenNew York Mets Manager
1996-2002 Succeeded by
Art Howe
v • d • eBranch Rickey Award1992: Winfield| 1993: Puckett| 1994: Smith| 1995: Gwynn| 1996: Butler| 1997: Biggio| 1998: Molitor| 1999: Leiter| 2000: Stottlemyre| 2001: Schilling| 2002: Valentine | 2003: Hemond| 2004: Moyer| 2005: Gonzalez| 2006: Lasorda| 2007: Smoltz v • d • eChiba Lotte Marinescurrent roster

0 Tadahiro Ogino | 3 Saburo | 4 José Ortiz | 7 Tsuyoshi Nishioka | 8 Toshiaki Imae | 9 Kazuya Fukuura | 10 Shoitsu Ohmatsu | 12 Yusuke Kawasaki | 14 Satoru Komiyama | 16 Yasutomo Kubo | 17 Yoshihisa Naruse | 18 Naoyuki Shimizu | 19 Yuki Karakawa | 22 Tomoya Satozaki | 23 Akira Ohtsuka | 25 Naotaka Takehara | 29 Shingo Ono | 30 Yoshihiro Itoh | 31 Shunsuke Watanabe | 32 Shunichi Nemoto | 39 Masahiko Tanaka | 41 Hiroyuki Kobayashi | 42 Julio Zuleta | 44 Daisuke Hayakawa | 48 Koji Takagi | 49 Brian Sikorski | 50 Benny | 65 Ryusuke Minami

Coaching: Manager 2 Bobby Valentine

v • d • eCurrent managersin Nippon Professional Baseball

Marty Brown (Hiroshima Toyo Carp) | Daijiro Ohishi (Orix Buffaloes) | Tatsunori Hara (Yomiuri Giants) Masataka Nashida (Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters) | Katsuya Nomura (Tohoku Rakuten Golden Eagles) | Hiromitsu Ochiai (Chunichi Dragons) | Sadaharu Oh (Fukuoka Softbank Hawks) | Akihiko Ohya (Yokohama BayStars) | Akinobu Okada (Hanshin Tigers) | Shigeru Takada (Tokyo Yakult Swallows) | Bobby Valentine (Chiba Lotte Marines) | Hisanobu Watanabe (Saitama Seibu Lions) |

v • d • eTexas Rangers managers

Washington Senators (1961-1971)
VernonYostHodgesLemonWilliams

Texas Rangers (1972-present)
WilliamsHerzogWilberMartinLucchesiStankyRyanHunterCorralesZimmerJohnsonRader • Valentine • HarrahKennedyOatesNarronShowalterWashington

v • d • eNew York Mets managers StengelWestrumParkerHodgesBerraMcMillanFrazierTorreBambergerHowardJohnsonHarrelsonCubbageTorborgGreen• Valentine • HoweRandolph v • d • eTexas RangersFormerly the Washington Senators • Based in Arlington, Texas(Dallas–Ft. Worth) The FranchiseTeam RecordsAwards & League LeadersBroadcastersManagersPlayersRosterRangers CaptainBallparks Griffith StadiumRFK StadiumArlington StadiumRangers Ballpark in ArlingtonImportant Figures Ted WilliamsMike HargroveBilly MartinFerguson Jenkins• Bobby Valentine • George W. BushNolan RyanKenny RogersPudge RodriguezAlex RodriguezJohnny OatesMichael YoungHank BlalockRetired Numbers 263442Key Personnel Owner: Tom Hicks• General Manager: Jon Daniels• Manager: Ron WashingtonMinors Oklahoma RedHawks(AAA) • Frisco RoughRiders(AA) • Bakersfield Blaze(A) • Clinton LumberKings(A) • Spokane Indians(A) • AZL Rangers(Rookie) Division Titles Western: 199619981999• Wild Card: none   Seasons (48) 1960s 1960 • 1961196219631964196519661967196819691970s 19701971197219731974197519761977197819791980s 19801981198219831984198519861987198819891990s 19901991199219931994199519961997199819992000s 200020012002200320042005200620072008 v • d • eBaseball TonightPersonalities Hosts Karl Ravech(Lead Host, 1996-present) · Chris Berman(Host, 1990-present) · Steve Berthiaume(Host, 2003-2005, 2007-present) · Gary Miller(Lead Host, 1990-1995) · Dave Marash(Host, 1990) · Rich Eisen(Host, 1996-2002) · Brian Kenny(Host, 2003) · Chris Myers(1991-1995) · Scott Reiss(Host, 2006) Analysts Orestes Destrade(Analyst, 2005-present) · Orel Hershiser(Analyst, 2006-present) · John Kruk(Lead Analyst, 2004-present) · Eduardo Perez(Analyst, 2007-present) · Steve Phillips(Lead Analyst, 2005-present) · Fernando Viña(Analyst, 2007-present) · Eric Young(Analyst, 2007-present) · Dusty Baker(Analyst, 2007) · Larry Bowa(Analyst, 2005) · Jeff Brantley(Analyst, 2002-2006) · Dave Campbell(Lead Analyst, 1990-2004) · Rob Dibble(Analyst, 1998-2004) · Ray Knight(Analyst, 1998-2003) · Mike Macfarlane(Analyst, 1999) · Tino Martinez(Analyst, 2006) · Brian McRae(Analyst, 2000-2005) · Harold Reynolds(Lead Analyst, 1996-2006) · Bill Robinson(Analyst, 1990-1991) · Buck Showalter(Lead Analyst, 2001-2002, 2008-present) · Rick Sutcliffe(Analyst, 2002-2003) · Bobby Valentine (Lead Analyst, 2003) Reporters Peter Gammons(Lead Reporter, 1990-present) · Tim Kurkjian(Reporter, 1998-present) · Buster Olney(Reporter, 2003-present) · Jayson Stark(2000-present) Correspondents Pedro Gomez(2004-present) · Bob Holtzman(2004-present) See also: Major League Baseball on ESPN Categories: 1950 births | Living people | Baseball managers | New York Mets managers | Texas Rangers managers | Major league infielders | Los Angeles Dodgers players | San Diego Padres players | California Angels players | Seattle Mariners players | New York Mets players | Major league players from Connecticut | Major League Baseball general managers | Managers of Japanese baseball teams | Italian-American sportspeople | People from Stamford, Connecticut | People from ManhattanHidden categories: Articles needing additional references from May 2008 | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since April 2007

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