American baseball player (born 1954)
Baseball player
Richard Eugene Manning (born September 2, 1954) is an American former center fielder and current broadcaster in Major League Baseball (MLB), who played for the Cleveland Indians (1975–1983) and Milwaukee Brewers (1983–1987), and has been a color commentator for Cleveland Guardians telecasts since 1990.
Major league career
Manning, who was the second overall selection in the 1972 MLB draft ,[ 1] made his major league debut with the Indians during the 1975 season. In 1976, he was recognized for his defensive play by winning the American League Gold Glove Award .[ 2]
Manning had an affair with teammate Dennis Eckersley 's wife, Denise; they eventually married, and then divorced. This may have led to the Indians' front office's decision to trade one of the players; there were other "official" and "unofficial" reasons given.[ 3] Eckersley, a future Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher, was traded with Fred Kendall on March 30, 1978, to the Boston Red Sox for Rick Wise , Mike Paxton , Bo Díaz and Ted Cox .
After playing five more seasons with the Indians, Manning was traded along with Rick Waits to the Milwaukee Brewers for Gorman Thomas , Jamie Easterly and Ernie Camacho on June 6, 1983.[ 4] As a member of the Brewers, he hit a 10th-inning single on August 26, 1987 as the Brewers defeated the Indians 1-0.[ 2] Brewers fans actually booed Manning for driving in the winning run because Paul Molitor was on deck and looking to extend his 39-game hit streak. Manning's walk-off single deprived Molitor of one last chance to reach 40 games as he went 0-for-4 in the contest.
Career highlights
On May 15, 1981, Manning caught Ernie Whitt 's fly ball, the final out of Len Barker's perfect game , in one of the most memorable images in Cleveland sports history; the Indians defeated the Toronto Blue Jays 3-0.[ 5] [ 6]
Broadcasting career
Since 1990, he has served as a color commentator for Indians/Guardians telecasts. Manning has the longest tenure of any television announcer in team history.
Manning can be seen doing Guardians games on Bally Sports Great Lakes (alongside Matt Underwood ). He resides in Chesterland, Ohio during the season, and Scottsdale, Arizona in the offseason.[ 7] He also occasionally provides color commentary on regional broadcasts for Major League Baseball on FOX , mainly when FOX shows a Guardians game.[ 8]
Awards
See also
References
^ "Rick Manning Stats - Baseball-Reference.com" . Baseball-Reference.com .
^ a b "Cleveland Indians at Milwaukee Brewers Box Score, August 26, 1987 - Baseball-Reference.com" . Baseball-Reference.com .
^ "A Closer Who Needed A Save" .
^ "Gorman Thomas dealt to Tribe," The Associated Press (AP), Tuesday, June 7, 1983. Retrieved May 29, 2016.
^ "Doc4dcc6fcdc29d2604024633.JPG (400x493 pixels)" . morningjournal.com . Archived from the original on June 15, 2013. Retrieved February 3, 2022 .
^ [1] [dead link ]
^ "Broadcasters" . Cleveland Indians . Archived from the original on March 10, 2007.
^ "2012 MLB on FOX Schedule" . www.bflo360.com .
^ "MLB American League Gold Glove Award Winners - Baseball-Reference.com" . Baseball-Reference.com .
^ [2] [dead link ]
^ "Manning wins award" . Cleveland Plain Dealer . Retrieved May 2, 2014 .
^ "Rick Manning, Gordon Gund head Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame 2017 inductees (photos)" . Cleveland.com . September 15, 2017.
^ "2018 Emmy winners - Lower Great Lakes Emmy Awards" (PDF) .
External links
1965 : Fosse
1966 : Curtis
1967 : Heidemann
1968 : Weaver
1969 : McGrew
1970 : Dunning
1971 : Sloan
1972 : Manning
1973 : Tufts
1974 : Brennan
1975 : Cerone
1976 : Glass
1977 : Compton
1978 : Lansford
1979 : Bohnet
1980 : Gruber
1981 : Alpert
1982 : M. Snyder
1983 : Clark
1984 : C. Snyder
1985 : Pohel
1986 : Swindell
1987: None
1988 : Lewis , Nagy , Mutis
1989 : Murray
1990 : Costo , Hence
1991 : Ramirez
1992 : Shuey
1993 : Kirkreit
1994 : Wright
1995 : D. Miller
1996 : Peoples
1997 : Drew , Fitzgerald
1998 : Sabathia
1999: None
2000 : Smith , Thompson
2001 : Denham , Horne , Martin , Conroy
2002 : Guthrie , Whitney , Schilling
2003 : Aubrey , B. Snyder , A. Miller
2004 : Sowers
2005 : Crowe , Drennen
2006 : Huff
2007 : Mills
2008 : Chisenhall
2009 : White
2010 : Pomeranz
2011 : Lindor
2012 : Naquin
2013 : Frazier
2014 : Zimmer , Sheffield
2015 : Aiken
2016 : Benson
2017 : None
2018 : Naylor , Hankins
2019 : Espino
2020 : Tucker
2021 : Williams
2022 : DeLauter
2023 : Velazquez
2024 : Bazzana
1957: Kaline , Mays , Miñoso
1958: Kaline , Piersall , Siebern
1959: Jensen , Kaline , Miñoso
1960: Landis , Maris , Miñoso
1961: Kaline , Landis , Piersall
1962: Kaline , Landis , Mantle
1963: Kaline , Landis , Yastrzemski
1964: Davalillo , Kaline , Landis
1965: Kaline , Tresh , Yastrzemski
1966: Agee , Kaline , Oliva
1967: Blair , Kaline , Yastrzemski
1968: Smith , Stanley , Yastrzemski
1969: Blair , Stanley , Yastrzemski
1970: Berry , Blair , Stanley
1971: Blair , Otis , Yastrzemski
1972: Berry , Blair , Murcer
1973: Blair , Otis , Stanley
1974: Blair , Otis , Rudi
1975: Blair , Lynn , Rudi
1976: Evans , Manning , Rudi
1977: Beníquez , Cowens , Yastrzemski
1978: Evans , Lynn , Miller
1979: Evans , Lezcano , Lynn
1980: Lynn , Murphy , Wilson
1981: Evans , Henderson , Murphy
1982: Evans , Murphy , Winfield
1983: Evans , Murphy , Winfield
1984: Evans , Murphy , Winfield
1985: Evans , Murphy , Pettis , Winfield
1986: Barfield , Pettis , Puckett
1987: Barfield , Puckett , Winfield
1988: Pettis , Puckett , White
1989: Pettis , Puckett , White
1990: Burks , Griffey Jr. , Pettis
1991: Griffey Jr. , Puckett , White
1992: Griffey Jr. , Puckett , White
1993: Griffey Jr. , Lofton , White
1994: Griffey Jr. , Lofton , White
1995: Griffey Jr. , Lofton , White
1996: Buhner , Griffey Jr. , Lofton
1997: Edmonds , Griffey Jr. , Williams
1998: Edmonds , Griffey Jr. , Williams
1999: Green , Griffey Jr. , Williams
2000: Dye , Erstad , Williams
2001: Cameron , Hunter , Suzuki
2002: Erstad , Hunter , Suzuki
2003: Cameron , Hunter , Suzuki
2004: Hunter , Suzuki , Wells
2005: Hunter , Suzuki , Wells
2006: Hunter , Suzuki , Wells
2007: Hunter , Suzuki , Sizemore
2008: Hunter , Suzuki , Sizemore
2009: Hunter , Suzuki , Jones
2010: Crawford , Gutiérrez , Suzuki
2011: Ellsbury , Gordon , Markakis
2012: Gordon , Jones , Reddick
2013: Gordon , Jones , Victorino
2014: Gordon , Jones , Markakis
2015: Calhoun , Céspedes , Kiermaier
2016: Betts , Gardner , Kiermaier
2017: Betts , Buxton , Gordon
2018: Betts , Bradley Jr. , Gordon
2019: Betts , Gordon , Kiermaier
2020: Gallo , Gordon , Robert
2021: Benintendi , Gallo , Taylor
2022: Kwan , Straw , Tucker
2023: García , Kiermaier , Kwan
2024: Abreu , Kwan , Varsho
Related programs Related articles National coverage Former FSN regional coverage Fox/MyTV O&O Stations
New York City: WNYW 5 (Yankees, 1999–2001 ), WWOR 9 (N.Y. Giants, 1951–1957 ; Brooklyn Dodgers, 1950–1957 ; Mets, 1962–1998 ; Yankees, 2005–2014 )
Los Angeles: KTTV 11 (Dodgers, 1958–1992 ), KCOP 13 (Dodgers, 2002–2005 ; Angels, 2006–2012 )
Chicago: WFLD 32 (White Sox, 1968–1972 , 1982–1989 )
Philadelphia: WTXF 29 (Phillies, 1983–1989 )
Dallas–Fort Worth: KDFW 4 & KDFI 27 (Texas Rangers, 2001–2009 )
San Francisco–Oakland: KTVU 2 (Giants, 1961–2007 ; Athletics, 1973–1974 ), KICU 36 (Athletics, 1999–2008 )
Boston: WFXT 25 (Red Sox, 2000–2002 )
Washington, D.C.: WTTG 5 (Senators, 1948–1958 ), WDCA 20 (Nationals, 2005–2008 )
Houston: KRIV 26 (Astros, 1979–1982 ), KTXH 20 (Astros, 1983–1997 , 2008–2012 )
Detroit: WJBK 2 (Tigers, 1953–1974 ; 2007 )
Minneapolis–Saint Paul: KMSP 9 (Twins, 1979–1988 , 1998–2002 ), WFTC 29 (Twins, 1990–1992 , 2005–2010 )
TV history by decade
Commentators Play-by-play announcersFormer play-by-play announcers
Color commentators
Guest commentators Field reporters
Studio hosts
Studio analysts
Lore
Regular season Postseason games World Series games
World Series AL Championship Series NL Championship Series AL Division Series NL Division Series All-Star Game World Baseball Classic