John Vukovich
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John Christopher Vukovich (July 31 1947 – March 8 2007) was an American third baseman and coach in Major League Baseball best known for his years of service with the Philadelphia Phillies. He played in parts of ten seasons from 1970 to 1981 for the Phillies, Cincinnati Reds, and Milwaukee Brewers. He was mainly used as a utility infielder capable of playing all four positions.
Vukovich was born in Sacramento, California, and was a backup for the 1975 Reds World Series-winning team, although he was traded back to the Phillies before the playoffs began, and also for the 1980 Phillies World Series-winning team. He actually began the 1975 season as the Reds' starting third baseman, but was benched in favor of Pete Rose so that the Reds could get outfielder George Foster's bat into the lineup every day. He batted above .200 only twice in his ten-year career, appearing in 277 games while batting .161 with 6 home runs and 44 runs batted in, and had a .956 fielding percentage. During his second period of playing with the Phillies, he became beloved of the fans even though he seldom appeared in games; he was seen as a blue-collar player and the ordinary fan respected his effort. After his playing career ended, he joined the Chicago Cubs as a coach, and in 1986 he was manager for a day after Jim Frey was fired (he split that day's doubleheader). In 1987, he rejoined the Phillies, and after Lee Elia was fired with nine games to go, he took over as skipper, going 5-4 the rest of the season.
Vukovich stayed with the Phillies as a coach from 1988 to 2004, and was considered for the managing job when Terry Francona was fired in 2000. The job eventually went to Vukovich's childhood friend, Larry Bowa. Vukovich was diagnosed with a brain tumor in 2001 and subsequently had surgery.
He returned to coach and was later named special assistant to the General Manager. In late 2006, he again exhibited symptoms; he died at Thomas Jefferson Hospital in Philadelphia at age 59. The 2007 Phillies honored him by wearing a uniform patch with his nickname, "Vuk", and his number 18.
Vukovich was inducted onto the Phillies Wall of Fame on August 10, 2007. Former Phillies stars including Mike Schmidt and Steve Carlton participated in a pregame ceremony led by legendary broadcaster Harry Kalas.
External links
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball Reference
- BaseballLibrary - profile and career highlights
- Curt Schilling's Tribute to John Vukovich
The Phillies publicly dedicated their 2007 regular baseball season to Vukovich, which turned out to be one of the greatest upsets in baseball history, as the Phillies overcame the New York Mets, who led them in the final 17 games with a 7 game lead.
- 1947 births
- 2007 deaths
- Brain cancer deaths
- Major league third basemen
- Major League Baseball coaches
- Philadelphia Phillies players
- Milwaukee Brewers players
- Cincinnati Reds players
- Major league players from California
- Chicago Cubs managers
- Philadelphia Phillies managers
- People from Sacramento, California
- People from Philadelphia
- Serbian-Americans