New York Post

START ME UP

Buck remembers the friend who gave him first MLB managing job

- By KEN DAVIDOFF kdavidoff@nypost.com

BALTIMORE — The news arrived via cell phone from Buck Showalter’s wife, Angela, on Thursday morning.

“You hear things that make you pull off the road,” the Orioles manager said. “That’s one of them.”

This was the sad news Yankees icon Gene Michael, the man who gave Showalter his first big league managing opportunit­y a quartercen­tury ago, had died at age 79. The call rocked Showalter, who grew emotional as he discussed “Stick” with reporters, but didn’t cry. He had cried enough for now, he said.

“Huge loss for me, personally,” Showalter said. “Best baseball evaluator I ever saw.”

In the fall of 1991, Michael, the Yankees general manager, called Showalter, who had been the Yankees’ third-base coach the prior two seasons, with an update: He probably was not going to be hired to fill the Yankees opening at manager, so he was free to pursue employment with other clubs. Michael preferred guys with major league experience like Hal Lanier and Doug Rader.

About 10 days later, Michael called Showalter again: There would be a press conference the next day to introduce him as Yankees manager. Michael had been overruled by ownership; George Steinbrenn­er was suspended from baseball at the time, with a group of limited partners taking over.

“Seven to 10 days into spring training, [Michael] walked into my office and said, ‘OK, this is gonna work. You can do this,’ ” Showalter said. “It gave me a great confidence. ‘ OK, I’ve got one less thing to worry about.’ ”

He added he wasn’t sure whether Michael meant it, but then again, Showalter praised his former boss for being “so blatantly honest and ethical, when it came down to it.” Michael fought for Showalter to get a higher salary in 1992, when some folks upstairs tried to short him. He did what he could to protect him from the mood swings of Steinbrenn­er, whom Major League Baseball allowed to reassume his duties for the 1993 season.

Michael’s gift as an evaluator, Showalter said, came from his ability to project.

“He knew [Danny] Tartabull was going to have a problem [with the Yankees], but that was done without his approval,” Showalter said. “He knew [Derek] Jeter had made 40-something errors (actually 56 in 1993, with Class-A Greensboro). He tells me, ‘This guy’s going to be an All-Star shortstop.’ Really? ‘He’s got a little footwork issue that [instructor Brian] Butterfiel­d and him are working on. … How do you project those things and then stand by them?”

He was, Showalter said, “the right kind of stubborn.”

Michael told Showalter: “The biggest mistake you make as a general manager is you make a mistake and compound it by holding onto it.”

He would make the calls to postpone Yankees home games before the days of sophistica­ted weather systems, and when you wouldn’t wait until 9 o’clock to give up, and he would tell Yankees people, “Don’t call me.” He would live with the consequenc­es of a potentiall­y bad decision.

Showalter made his audience laugh, too, as he talked about him and Michael playing golf during spring training, only to get found out by one of the Boss’ endless network of spies in the Fort Lauderdale area. Or when he recalled: “Anybody who ever has been in a car with Gene driving, it was a roll of the dice. When they started the cell phones, it was not good.”

The two men remained close in the many years since Showalter left the Yankees and proceeded to rack up wins. Nearly every time the Orioles came to The Bronx, Showalter said, Stick would drop by his office to chat, “hair all over the place.”

“Good man,” Showalter said. “I’m going to miss him.”

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 ??  ?? LIFELONG PALS: Buck Showalter was promoted to Yankees manager before the 1992 season, when Gene Michael was the team’s general manager. The two had remained close ever since.
LIFELONG PALS: Buck Showalter was promoted to Yankees manager before the 1992 season, when Gene Michael was the team’s general manager. The two had remained close ever since.

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