Rac Slider
Rac Slider | |||
---|---|---|---|
Coach | |||
Born: Simms, Texas | December 23, 1933|||
| |||
Teams | |||
|
Rachel Wayne "Rac" Slider (born December 23, 1933, at Simms, Texas) is a retired infielder and manager in American minor league baseball who also spent four seasons (1987–90) as a Major League Baseball coach with the Boston Red Sox. In his playing days, Slider stood 5 feet 8 inches (1.73 m) tall, weighed 160 pounds (73 kg), batted left-handed and threw right-handed.
Slider graduated from James Bowie High School in Simms in 1951, and signed his first professional baseball contract in 1954. During an 11-year playing career (1954–56; 1958–64; 1966) he never reached the Major League level, although he spent four seasons in the Triple A Pacific Coast League. In his finest year in the PCL, with the 1961 Hawaii Islanders, Slider batted .300, with 154 hits, 75 runs scored, and a career-high seven home runs. In 1962, the Kansas City Athletics sold Slider's contract to the Red Sox, and he spent the remainder of his career in the Boston organization.
He managed Bosox farm clubs for 21 consecutive seasons, 1965–85, beginning in the Rookie-level Appalachian League. His next assignment, in 1967–68 as skipper of the Class A Waterloo Hawks, saw the professional debut of eventual Hall of Fame catcher Carlton Fisk in 1968. Slider spent nine seasons as skipper of the Red Sox' Winter Haven affiliate in the Class A Florida State League. He won pennants in 1970 (in the Class A Western Carolinas League) and 1979 (in the Florida State League). In 1983, his New Britain Red Sox won the Double-A Eastern League playoffs behind first-year pitcher Roger Clemens.
In all, Slider spent three seasons in Double-A and reached the highest minor league level as the pilot of the 1985 Pawtucket Red Sox of the Triple-A International League. Overall, his managerial record was 1,275–1,405 (.476) in 2,680 games.
Slider served under John McNamara as Boston's bullpen coach, and under Joe Morgan as the Red Sox' third-base coach, in 1987–90. He was a minor league infield instructor with the Red Sox in 1986 and in 1991–94.
References
- Boston Red Sox Media Guides, 1992-94 inclusive.
- Howe News Bureau, Boston Red Sox 1983 Organization Book.
External links
Preceded by Franchise established |
Bristol Red Sox manager 1973 |
Succeeded by Stan Williams |
Preceded by Franchise established |
New Britain Red Sox manager 1983–1984 |
Succeeded by Ed Nottle |
Preceded by Tony Torchia |
Pawtucket Red Sox manager 1985 |
Succeeded by Ed Nottle |
Preceded by Joe Morgan |
Boston Red Sox bullpen coach 1987–1988 |
Succeeded by Jerry McNertney |
Preceded by Joe Morgan |
Boston Red Sox third-base coach 1988–1990 |
Succeeded by Dick Berardino |