College of Coaches

http://dbpedia.org/resource/College_of_Coaches an entity of type: Thing

The College of Coaches was an unorthodox baseball organizational practice employed by the National League's Chicago Cubs in 1961 and 1962. After the Cubs finished 60–94 in 1960, their 14th straight NL second-division finish, Cubs owner P. K. Wrigley announced in December 1960 that the Cubs would no longer have a sole field manager, but would be led by an eight-man committee. The experiment, widely ridiculed in baseball circles, was effectively ended in 1962 before being completely abandoned in 1965. rdf:langString
rdf:langString College of Coaches
rdf:langString College of Coaches
rdf:langString College of Coaches
xsd:integer 5846745
xsd:integer 1093031348
rdf:langString Games managed
xsd:integer 318
xsd:integer 123
rdf:langString MLB
rdf:langString right
rdf:langString Harry Craft and Charlie Metro, two members of the College of Coaches
rdf:langString Charlie Metro Royals.jpg
rdf:langString Harry Craft 1940 Play Ball card.jpeg
xsd:integer 125
rdf:langString * Chicago Cubs
xsd:integer 300
xsd:integer 1961
rdf:langString The College of Coaches was an unorthodox baseball organizational practice employed by the National League's Chicago Cubs in 1961 and 1962. After the Cubs finished 60–94 in 1960, their 14th straight NL second-division finish, Cubs owner P. K. Wrigley announced in December 1960 that the Cubs would no longer have a sole field manager, but would be led by an eight-man committee. The experiment, widely ridiculed in baseball circles, was effectively ended in 1962 before being completely abandoned in 1965.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11931

data from the linked data cloud