Born in Westerly, Rhode Island, Sawyer was a minor leagueoutfielder in his playing days who batted and threw right-handed; he was listed as 6 feet (1.8 m) tall and 210 pounds (95 kg). A rarity among baseball people of his era, Sawyer held an advanced degree from an Ivy League university: a master's degree in biology and physiology from Cornell.[1] He had earned an undergraduate degree from Ithaca College, where he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa and later taught biology in the off-season.[2]
In 1949, the Phillies enjoyed their first winning season since 1932, winning 81 games and finishing third.[7] Following the final game of the season Sawyer told his team: “We are going to win it all in 1950. Come back next year ready to win.”[8] On opening day 1950, the Phillies debuted the red pinstripe uniform the team still wears today. Sawyer had designed it after concluding that “the old uniforms were terrible looking.”[9] The NL pennant was up for grabs that season. The 1949 champion Brooklyn Dodgers suffered from pitching troubles and the outbreak of the Korean War had disrupted Major League rosters. The Phillies charged into the league lead and, despite a late-September tailspin, partially caused by the loss of Simmons to military service, they held off Brooklyn in the season's final game as Sisler's tenth-inning home run sealed a 4–1 victory.[10] With 91 victories against 63 losses, the Phillies had won their first pennant since 1915.[11] However, in the 1950 World Series they were no match for the Yankees, who swept them in four low-scoring games.[12] After the season, Sawyer was named "manager of the year" in the Associated Press' poll of sports writers and sports broadcasters.[13]
The 1950 season would be Sawyer's last winning season as a manager. The 1951 Phillies lost 18 games from their previous year's standard and fell to fifth.[14] In 1952, with the team in sixth place and seven games below .500, Sawyer was replaced as skipper on June 27 by Steve O'Neill.[15]
An unsuccessful encore
He was out of baseball until the middle of the 1958 season. On July 22, with the team in seventh place, the Phillies fired Mayo Smith and brought Sawyer back to manage.[16] The gamble fizzled, as the 1958 Phils dropped 40 of 70 games under Sawyer to finish last, and then placed last again in 1959.[17] The second baseman on the 1959 Phillies roster was Sparky Anderson, in his only season in the Majors as a player before he went on to be a Hall of Fame skipper.
After managing the Phillies for the opening game of the 1960 season, a 9–4 loss to the Cincinnati Reds on April 12,[18] Sawyer resigned his position, famously saying: "I'm 49 years old and I want to live to be 50."[2] He was ultimately replaced by Gene Mauch.[19] Sawyer would remain in the game as a scout, however, for the Phils and the Kansas City Royals.[20]
His lifetime major league managerial record was 390–423 (.480).[21] This unremarkable winning percentage may be deceptive. Richie Ashburn called Sawyer "the best manager I ever played for."[22] Robin Roberts stated that “Eddie was a great manager to play for. I wish I could have played for him all 18 years.” [23] Sawyer was elected a member of the Pennsylvania Sports and Ithaca College Sports halls of fame.[24] He died at age 87 in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania.[2]
References
^Roberts, Robin, and C. Paul Rogers III (1996). The Whiz Kids and the 1950 Pennant. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. p. 122. ISBN1-56639-466-X
^ abcSilary, Ted (September 23, 1997). "Manager of Whiz Kids Dies at 87". Philadelphia Daily News.
^Honig, Daniel (1990). The Man in the Dugout: Fifteen Big League Managers Speak Their Minds. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 59. ISBN0-8032-7270-7
^Pietrusza, David (1990). Baseball’s Canadian-American League: History of Its Inception, Franchises, Participants, Locales, Statistics, Demise, and Legacy, 1936-1951. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 54. ISBN0-7864-2529-6
^Webster, Gary (2014). When in Doubt, Fire the Skipper: Midseason Managerial Changes in Major League Baseball. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 89. ISBN0-7864-7892-6
^Rossi, John P. (2005). The 1964 Phillies: The Story of Baseball's Most Memorable Collapse. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers. p. 23. ISBN0-7864-2117-7