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{{short description|American businessman (1918–1996)}}
{{Other persons|Charles Finley|Charles Finley (disambiguation)}}
{{Other people|Charles Finley|Charles Finley (disambiguation)}}
'''Charles Oscar Finley''' (February 22, 1918–February 19, 1996), nicknamed '''Charlie O''' or '''Charley O''', was an [[United States|American]] businessman who is best remembered for his tenure as the owner of the [[Oakland Athletics]] [[Major League Baseball]] team. Finley purchased the franchise while it was located in [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]], moving it to Oakland in 1968. He is buried in [[Merrillville, Indiana]]'s Calumet Park Cemetery.
{{Redirect|Charlie O.|the baseball mascot named after him|Charlie-O}}
{{more citations needed|date=April 2013}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Charlie Finley
| image = Charlie_Finley.png
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1918|02|22}}
| birth_place = [[Ensley (Birmingham)|Ensley, Alabama]], U.S.
| birth_name = Charles Oscar Finley
| death_date = {{death date and age|1996|02|19|1918|02|22}}
| death_place = [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]], U.S.
| nationality = American
| alma mater =
| education =
| occupation = Baseball franchise owner and executive
| known_for = Owner of the [[Oakland Athletics|Kansas City / Oakland A's]]
| years_active = December 1960–August 1980
| networth =
| spouse =
| parents =
| children =
| family =
| website =
}}
'''Charles Oscar Finley''' (February 22, 1918 – February 19, 1996), nicknamed "'''Charlie O'''" or "'''Charley O'''", was an American businessman who owned [[Major League Baseball]]'s [[Oakland Athletics]]. Finley purchased the franchise while it was located in [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]], moving it to [[Oakland]] in 1968. He is also known as a short-lived owner of the [[National Hockey League]]'s [[California Golden Seals]] and the [[American Basketball Association]]'s [[Memphis Tams]].


==Early life==
==Early life==
Finley was born in [[Ensley, Birmingham, Alabama|Ensley, Alabama]], but was raised in [[Gary, Indiana]], and later lived in [[LaPorte, Indiana|La Porte]], a small town 60 miles east of [[Chicago]]. He played semi-pro [[baseball]] in several Indiana cities but had his career cut short in [[1946 in baseball|1946]] by a bout of [[tuberculosis]] that nearly killed him. After marrying the daughter of an [[insurance]] salesman, Finley then made his fortune in the insurance business, being among the first to write group medical insurance policies for those in the medical profession.
Finley was born in [[Ensley (Birmingham)|Ensley, Birmingham, Alabama]], attended [[Ensley High School]] but was further raised in [[Gary, Indiana]], and later lived in [[La Porte, Indiana|La Porte]], {{convert|60|mi|-2}} east of [[Chicago]]. Finley made his fortune in the insurance business, being among the first to write group [[Health insurance|medical insurance]] policies for those in the medical profession.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Twombly |first1=Wells |title=Let's Hear It For Charlie O. |url=https://people.com/archive/lets-hear-it-for-charlie-o-vol-1-no-8/ |website=People |access-date=November 1, 2018}}</ref>
Even in the early days, Finley showed a penchant for flair and inventive business practices. Sometimes, when wooing prospective customers, Finley would drive the client through the richest section of Gary. Pointing out a large mansion, Finley would declare "That's my place there, but I'm having it remodeled right now." He would then proceed to his own neighborhood and dine at the home his next door neighbor, long-time friend, John Mihelic.
Finley's fortunes grew and he ended up owning a 40 story insurance building in downtown Chicago. Charlie O. Finley never forgot the hospitality of his friend and neighbor. When Finley bought his property in Laporte, he installed John Mihelic as his farm manager.
The property was a working cattle ranch which consisted of an 18th century 11 room colonial manor house and 9 barns and various outbuildings.
Finley had a large mansion built on the property which featured rounded portico's and columns which resembled the White House in Washington D.C.
Mihelic and his family then moved into the original house and lived there as manager and caretakers until the Finley's divorce forced the sale of the property. Soon after Finley took up residence in LaPorte, the farm became less a working ranch and more a showcase for Finley to impress his friends and associates. He built a 2 story pool house next to the mansion and full sized playground equipment on the other side.
Huge St. Bernard dogs greeted visitors and peacocks roamed the property. Several monkeys were kept in zoo like cages and assorted livestock dotted the fields. The upper story of one large barn was converted into an indoor basketball court where the Finley and Mihelic children often played together.


Finley showed a penchant for flair and inventive business practices. Sometimes, when wooing prospective customers, Finley would drive the client through the richest section of Gary. Pointing out a large mansion, Finley would declare "That's my place there, but I'm having it remodeled right now." Finley's fortunes grew and he ended up owning a 40-story insurance building in downtown Chicago. In 1956, Charles Finley purchased a home built in 1942 on Johnson Road just north of Pine Lake in LaPorte, Indiana. He hired John Mihelic as his [[ranch]] caretaker. The property was a working cattle ranch which consisted of an 18th-century, eleven-room colonial manor house and nine [[barn]]s with various outbuildings. Finley had a large mansion built on the property, keeping the colonial house as caretakers quarters. The new house, which featured rounded porticoes and columns, resembled the [[White House]].{{Citation needed|date = October 2016}}
Never a stranger to self promotion, Finley had a large "Home of the Oakland A's" sign installed on the roof of another large barn where it could be viewed by vehicles passing on the Indiana toll road. It was to this place that Finley often brought the whole team and held picnics and pool parties attended by friends, business associates and locals, who mingled with members of the team and took numerous photographs.

When the team was moved to Oakland, Finley hired Mihelic's son, Ron, who moved to California and served various front office functions, 1st as sales manager and later as Director of Group sales and Promotions. Although unknown to the public, Ron Mihelic was instrumental in the creation of some of The A's more famous promotions, such as "Farmer Day" and "Hot-pants Day". Mihelic left the A's organization in 1972 after a falling out with Finley.
Finley had a large "Home of the Oakland A's" sign installed on the roof of another large barn where it could be viewed by vehicles passing on the Indiana toll road. It was to this place that Finley often brought the whole team and held picnics and pool parties attended by friends, business associates, and locals, who mingled with members of the team and took numerous photographs.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Holtzman |first1=Jerome |title=Remembering Charlie O: 37 Years of Memories |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1996-02-21-9602210218-story.html |website=Chicago Tribune |date=21 February 1996 |access-date=November 1, 2018}}</ref>

In 1941, Finley married the former Shirley McCartney. They had eight children before the marriage ended in a bitter divorce, the proceedings of which lasted 6 years. The Finleys separated in 1974, and according to a biographer, Finley was unfaithful during his marriage and frequently estranged both his friends and family. Shirley Finley won a massive divorce settlement. Finley was estranged from most of his children at the time of his death. Finley died three days shy of his 78th birthday. His former wife, who remarried, died in 2010.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cVBjXrHA9GwC&q=shirley|title=Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman|last1=Launius|first1=Roger D.|last2=Green|first2=G. Michael|date=2010-07-11|publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing USA|isbn=9780802778574|language=en}}</ref>


==Owner of the A's==
==Owner of the A's==

===In Kansas City===
===In Kansas City===
Finley entered the ranks of Major League Baseball owners after multiple failed attempts to acquire franchises during the 1950s.
Finley first attempted to buy the Philadelphia Athletics in [[1954 in baseball|1954]], but [[American League]] owners instead approved the sale of the team to [[Arnold Johnson]], who moved the A's to [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]] for the [[1955 in baseball|1955]] season. In the late 1950's, Finley also attempted to purchase the Chicago White Sox and the Detroit Tigers. <ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.31, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0</ref> He later made an unsuccessful bid to buy the expansion [[Los Angeles, California|Los Angeles]] AL franchise in 1960. (The franchise was purchased by [[Gene Autry]] and named the [[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim|Los Angeles Angels]].)


He first attempted to buy the [[Philadelphia Athletics]] in [[1954 in baseball|1954]], but [[American League]] owners instead approved the sale of the team to [[Arnold Johnson (industrialist)|Arnold Johnson]], who moved the club to [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]] for the [[1955 Kansas City Athletics season|1955]] season.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Neumann |first1=Thomas |title=Before Oakland, Vagabond A's led colorful past lives in Philadelphia, Kansas City |url=http://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/16289067/before-oakland-vagabond-franchise-led-colorful-lives-philadelphia-kansas-city |website=ESPN |access-date=November 1, 2018|date=2016-08-26 }}</ref>
On December 19, 1960, Finley purchased a controlling interest in the Kansas City Athletics from Johnson's estate (Johnson having died in March of that year); he then bought out the minority owners a year later. Finley quickly started to turn the franchise around, refusing to make deals with the [[New York Yankees]] (for which the Athletics had been criticized) and searching for unheralded talent. He also made significant investments in the farm system for the first time in the franchise's history.


In 1956, Finley unsuccessfully bid for the [[Detroit Tigers]], who instead were sold to a [[Michigan]]-based group led by broadcasting magnates [[John Fetzer]] and [[Fred Knorr]]. In 1959, when [[Dorothy Comiskey Rigney]] put her majority holdings in the [[Chicago White Sox]] up for sale, Finley lost out to a group headed by [[Bill Veeck]]. Then, one year later, he was among a group of contenders for the [[American League]] [[expansion team|expansion]] franchise earmarked for [[Los Angeles]], but actor, singer and broadcasting tycoon [[Gene Autry]] ended up as the founding principal owner of the [[Los Angeles Angels|Angels]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://sabr.org/bioproj/person/charlie-finley/ |title=Charlie Finley |last=Armour |first=Mark |date=2015 |website=sabr.org |publisher=[[Society for American Baseball Research]] Biography Project |access-date=February 22, 2024 |quote=}}</ref>
====Finley's brief endearment to Kansas City fans====

Finley endeared himself (albeit briefly) to Kansas City fans by replacing the "A" on the team's caps with an interlocking "KC" and adding "Kansas City" to the road uniforms. It was the first time in the franchise's history that it had acknowledged its city on its uniforms (they had never done so during their 55-year stay in Philadelphia). He also promised that he would never move the team. However, almost as soon as he acquired full control of the team, Finley immediately began shopping it to other cities. At various times, Finley considered moving the team to [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Dallas-Fort Worth]], [[Atlanta Braves|Atlanta]], [[Milwaukee Brewers|Milwaukee]], [[Seattle Mariners|Seattle]] and [[San Diego Padres|San Diego]] (all of whom now have major league teams) and even [[Louisville, Kentucky|Louisville]] (see below).
Fate, however, would play a role in Finley's fourth, and ultimately successful, attempt to enter baseball — and it would come from his 1954 target, now the [[Kansas City Athletics]]. On March 3, 1960, owner Arnold Johnson died suddenly and unexpectedly from a [[cerebral hemorrhage]] at the age of 54. The [[first division (baseball)|second-division]] Athletics struggled through a last-place season while being operated by Johnson's estate. Just weeks after Finley lost his bid for the Angels' franchise, on December 19, 1960, he purchased the estate's controlling interest in the [[1961 Kansas City Athletics season|Athletics]];<ref name=cfigok>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=m8MxAAAAIBAJ&sjid=buUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6522%2C6523055 |work=Lawrence Daily Journal-World |location=(Kansas) |agency=Associated Press |title=Charles Finley is given okay |date=December 21, 1960 |page=17}}</ref> he then bought out the minority owners a year later. Finley quickly started to turn the franchise around, refusing to make deals with the [[New York Yankees]] (for which the Athletics had been criticized) and searching for unheralded talent. From [[1961 Kansas City Athletics season|1961]] onward, Finley was effectively his own general manager, though the A's nominally had someone who had the title or duties of general manager until [[1966 Kansas City Athletics season|1966]].

Finley also repeatedly tried to move the team. In January 1964 he reached an agreement with Louisville, Kentucky, to move the team there for the 1964 season, signing a two-year lease on a stadium.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1964/01/07/archives/finley-signs-contract-to-transfer-athletics-to-louisville-league.html|title=Finley Signs Contract to Transfer Athletics to Louisville; LEAGUE SANCTION NEEDED FOR SHIFT; 7 Clubs Must Approve Move — Cronin Calls Meeting Here for Jan. 16|work=The New York Times |date=7 January 1964 |access-date=9 August 2022}}</ref> When that proposed move was blocked by the American League he entertained offers from Denver and San Diego<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/classic/biography/s/Finley_Charles.html|title=Finley entertained and enraged|access-date=9 August 2022}}</ref>


====Charlie-O becomes the Athletics' mascot====
====Charlie-O becomes the Athletics' mascot====
Presumably out of pique for being denied a chance to buy the A's five years earlier, Finley replaced the Athletics' traditional [[elephant]] [[mascot]] with a live [[mule]]. "[[Charlie-O]]" was paraded about the outfield, into [[cocktail]] parties and hotel lobbies, and into the press room after a large feeding to annoy reporters. (The mule died in [[1976 in baseball|1976]], at age 20.)
Finley replaced the Athletics' traditional [[elephant]] [[mascot]] with a live [[mule]]. "[[Charlie-O]]" was paraded about the outfield, into [[cocktail]] parties and hotel lobbies and into the press room after a large feeding to annoy reporters. (The mule died in [[1976 Oakland Athletics season|1976]], at age 20.)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://morganking.com/Athletics/athletics_history.html|title=Athletics History|access-date=28 February 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230213/http://morganking.com/Athletics/athletics_history.html|archive-date=3 March 2016|url-status=dead}}</ref>


====The "K.C. Pennant Porch"====
====The "K.C. Pennant Porch"====
After supposedly being told by manager [[Ed Lopat]] about the Yankees' success being attributable to the dimensions of [[Yankee Stadium (1923)|Yankee Stadium]], he built the "K.C. Pennant Porch" in right field, which brought the right field fence in [[Municipal Stadium (Kansas City)|Kansas City Municipal Stadium]] to match Yankee Stadium's dimensions exactly, just 296 feet from home plate. However, a rule passed in 1958 held that no (new or renovated) major-league fence could be closer than 325 feet, so league officials forced Finley to move the fences back after two exhibition games. The A's owner then ordered a white line to be painted on the field at the original "Pennant Porch" distance, and told the public address announcer to announce "That would have been a home run in Yankee Stadium" whenever a fly ball was hit past that line but short of the fence. The practice was quickly abandoned after the announcer was calling more "would-be" home runs for the opposition than the A's.
After supposedly being told by manager [[Ed Lopat]] about the Yankees' success being attributable to the dimensions of [[Yankee Stadium (1923)|Yankee Stadium]], Finley built the "K.C. Pennant Porch" in right field in April [[1964 Kansas City Athletics season|1964]], which brought the right field fence in [[Municipal Stadium (Kansas City, Missouri)|Municipal Stadium]] to match Yankee Stadium's dimensions exactly, just {{convert|296|ft}} from home plate.<ref name=fpps>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=j6ZAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_OUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6999%2C886925 |work=Lawrence Daily Journal-World |location=(Kansas) |agency=Associated Press |last=Van Valkenburg |first=Jim |title=Finley's Pennant Porch set |date=April 10, 1964 |page=11}}</ref><ref name=ppapk>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=0oBfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZTAMAAAAIBAJ&pg=3123%2C1720317 |work=Lewiston Morning Tribune |location=(Idaho) |agency=Associated Press |title=Finley building Yankee-style 'Pennant Porch' in A's park |date=April 10, 1964 |page=14}}</ref> However, a rule passed in {{mlby|1958}} held that no (new or renovated) major-league fence could be closer than {{convert|325|ft}}, so league officials forced Finley to move the fences back after two exhibition games.<ref name=ykeefen>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=1IBfAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ZTAMAAAAIBAJ&pg=5727%2C1999289 |work=Lewiston Morning Tribune |location=(Idaho) |agency=Associated Press |title=Finley says he'll defy edict to dismantle 'Yankee' fence |date=April 12, 1964 |page=11}}</ref><ref name=hfpor>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=kqZAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_OUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6118%2C1142027 |work=Lawrence Daily Journal-World |location=(Kansas) |agency=Associated Press |last=Van Valkenburg |first=Jim |title=Finley now has Half-Porch and will continue a fight |date=April 14, 1964 |page=11}}</ref><ref name=noanswr>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=maZAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=_OUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6936%2C1839335|work=Lawrence Daily Journal-World |location=(Kansas) |agency=Associated Press |last=Rathet |first=Mike |title=Pennant Porch no answer to Kansas Dity's problem |date=April 22, 1964 |page=15}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Treder |first1=Steve |title=The Pennant Porch Pie-in-the-Face |url=https://www.fangraphs.com/tht/the-pennant-porch-pie-in-the-face/ |website=Fangraphs.com |access-date=October 15, 2018}}</ref>

The A's owner then ordered a white line to be painted on the field at the original "Pennant Porch" distance, and told the public address announcer to announce "That would have been a home run in Yankee Stadium" whenever a fly ball was hit past that line but short of the fence. The practice was quickly abandoned after it turned out that the announcer was calling more "would-be" home runs for the opposition than the A's.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Landers |first1=Chris |title=Seven bizarre ballpark features from baseball history that you'll need to see to believe |url=https://www.mlb.com/cut4/seven-of-baseballs-weirdest-ballpark-features/c-144747404 |website=MLB.com |date=30 September 2015 |publisher=MLB Advanced Media, LP |access-date=October 25, 2018}}</ref>


====Uniform changes====
====Uniform changes====
Finley also made changes to the team's uniforms. In [[1963 in baseball|1963]], Finley changed the team's colors to "Kelly Green, [[Fort Knox]] Gold and Wedding Gown White." In [[1967 in baseball|1967]], he replaced the team's traditional black cleats with white ones. He also started phasing out the team name "Athletics" in favor of "A's." (When [[Mickey Mantle]] saw the A's' green-and-gold uniforms, he jeered, "They should have come out of the dugout on tippy-toes, holding hands and singing," according to ''Baseball Digest'').
In [[1963 Kansas City Athletics season|1963]], Finley changed the team's colors to Kelly Green, Fort Knox Gold, and Wedding Gown White. In [[1967 Kansas City Athletics season|1967]], he replaced the team's traditional black spikes with white. Finley also started phasing out the team name "Athletics" in favor of "A's." (When [[Mickey Mantle]] saw the A's' green-and-gold uniforms, he jeered, "They should have come out of the dugout on tippy-toes, holding hands and singing," according to ''Baseball Digest''.)<ref>{{cite web |last1=Fai |first1=Rob |title=Why do the C's wear white spikes? |url=https://www.milb.com/milb/news/why-do-the-cs-wear-white-spikes/c-8987826 |website=Milb.com |access-date=October 25, 2018}}</ref>

====The Beatles====
When [[the Beatles]] made their August/September 1964 concert tour of the United States, Finley was determined to bring them to Kansas City to perform at Municipal Stadium. Seeing one open date on the tour, Finley offered and paid the Beatles $150,000 (${{formatnum:{{Inflation|US|150|1964|r=1}}}} million+ today) for a concert on September 17, 1964, erasing a scheduled off day for the band in [[New Orleans]]. The tickets read: "CHARLES O. FINLEY/ IS PLEASED TO PRESENT..FOR THE ENJOYMENT/ OF THE BEATLE FANS IN MID-AMERICA/ 'THE BEATLES'/ IN PERSON” on the front, and showed a photograph of Finley wearing a Beatles wig on the back with the quote, "Today's Beatle's (sic) Fans/ Are/ Tomorrow's Baseball Fans."<ref>https://www.icollector.com/The-Beatles-Kansas-City-Concert-Ticket-Stub_i7034833</ref> [[John Lennon]] was quoted later as saying he disliked Finley's attempt to strong-arm the Beatles into playing longer than their then-standard half-hour concert set. The Beatles' $150,000 fee for the concert was considered a show business record for a one-night stand appearance.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://seamheads.com/blog/2014/11/01/john-lennon-on-charlie-finley-i-just-didnt-particularly-like-him/|title=John Lennon on Charlie Finley: "I Just Didn't Particularly Like Him"}}</ref>


Finley visited the group's manager, [[Brian Epstein]], in [[San Francisco, California|San Francisco]] on August 19, 1964, where the Beatles were playing the first date of the tour. He told Epstein that he was disappointed that Kansas City was not among the group's itinerary, and offered first $50,000 and then $100,000 if the Beatles would schedule a concert in the Missouri city. Epstein refused, pointing out that on the only free date available, September 17, the band was scheduled for a day of rest in [[New Orleans]]. Finley encountered Epstein again in [[Los Angeles]] a week later and they agreed on $150,000.<ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.76, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, {{ISBN|978-0-8027-1745-0}}</ref><ref>Mark Lewisohn, ''The Beatles Live!: The Ultimate Reference Book'' (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1986), 168–69.</ref>
====Move to Oakland====
In [[1964 in baseball|1964]], Finley signed a contract to move the A's from Kansas City to Louisville (where he would rename the team the Kentucky Colonels, thus keeping the "KC" logo), to play at Fairgrounds Stadium (now [[Cardinal Stadium]]), but the other American League owners voted down the move. With declining attendance in Kansas City, Finley was eventually given permission to move the franchise to [[Oakland, California]], for the [[1968 in baseball|1968]] season.


===In Oakland===
===In Oakland===
====World Series success====
====World Series success====
The A's (as they were officially known from {{by|1970}}) arrived in California just as the new talent amassed over the years in the minors (such as [[Reggie Jackson]], [[Sal Bando]], [[Joe Rudi]], [[Bert Campaneris]], [[Catfish Hunter]], [[Rollie Fingers]], and [[Vida Blue]]) was starting to gel. During the early 1970s, the once-moribund A's became a powerhouse, winning three straight [[World Series]] from [[1972 World Series|1972]] to [[1974 World Series|1974]] and five straight division titles from [[1971 in baseball|1971]] to [[1975 in baseball|1975]].
The A's (as they were officially known from {{baseball year|1970}}) moved to California in January 1968, just as the new talent amassed over the years in the minors (such as [[Reggie Jackson]], [[Sal Bando]], [[Joe Rudi]], [[Bert Campaneris]], [[Catfish Hunter]], [[Rollie Fingers]], and [[Vida Blue]]) became ready for the Majors. [[Marvin Miller]], the founder of MLB's players union, called him "absolutely the best judge of baseball talent I've ever seen."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/09/the-many-problems-with-moneyball/245769/ | title=The Many Problems with 'Moneyball' | website=[[The Atlantic]] | date=27 September 2011 }}</ref>


During the early 1970s, the once-moribund A's became a "[[Swingin' A's]]" powerhouse, winning three straight [[World Series]] from [[1972 World Series|1972]] to [[1974 World Series|1974]] and five straight division titles from [[1971 in baseball|1971]] to [[1975 in baseball|1975]], in the Oakland Coliseum.<ref>{{cite web |title=Oakland Athletics Team History & Encyclopedia |url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/teams/OAK/index.shtml |website=Baseballreference.com |publisher=Sports Reference, LLC |access-date=October 14, 2018}}</ref> Though he no longer owned the team when the A's won the World Series again in [[1989 World Series|1989]], [[Tony La Russa]], who managed that team, and outfielder [[Rickey Henderson]] were originally scouted by Finley.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Holtzman |first1=Jerome |title=Finley Proves to be a Hall-of-Fame Scout |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1993-01-07-9303151387-story.html |website=Chicago Tribune |date=7 January 1993 |access-date=October 14, 2018}}</ref>
====Animosity between Finley and his players====
A major embarrassment for baseball resulted from Finley's actions during the [[1973 World Series]]. Finley forced player [[Mike Andrews]] to sign a false [[affidavit]] saying he was injured, after the reserve infielder committed two consecutive [[error (baseball)|errors]] in the 12th inning of Oakland's Game 2 loss to the [[New York Mets]]. Other A's, manager [[Dick Williams]] and virtually the entire viewing public rallied to Andrews' defense, and [[Commissioner of Baseball|Commissioner]] [[Bowie Kuhn]] forced Finley to reinstate Andrews. There was nothing that said the A's had to let Andrews play, however. After Andrews grounded out in a pinch-hit appearance in Game 4 (after which he received a standing ovation from the Mets' fans, more a shot at Finley), Finley ordered Andrews benched for the rest of the Series; he never played another major-league game. A fed-up Williams resigned after winning the Series, and Finley replaced him with [[Alvin Dark]]. However, when Williams tried to become manager of the Yankees, Finley refused to let him take the post, saying that he owed the A's the last year of his contract. Finley eventually relented, and Williams became manager of the Angels.


====The beginning of free agency====
Years later, the players said they played so well because they all hated Finley with a passion. For instance, Finley threatened to pack Jackson off to the minors in [[1969 in baseball|1969]] after Jackson hit 47 homers; Kuhn had to intervene in their contract dispute. Kuhn intervened again after Blue won the A.L. [[Cy Young Award]] in [[1971 in baseball|1971]] and Finley threatened to send him to the minors.
In [[1974 Oakland Athletics season|1974]], after winning a third straight World Series championship, Finley lost ace pitcher [[Catfish Hunter|Jim 'Catfish' Hunter]] to free agency as a result of a contract clause violation. The A's still managed to dominate throughout the [[1975 Oakland Athletics season|1975]] regular season without Hunter, but were swept by [[1975 Boston Red Sox season|Boston]] in the [[1975 American League Championship Series|playoffs]]. With free agency looming at the end of the 1976 season, Finley began dismantling the ball club. [[Reggie Jackson]] and [[Ken Holtzman]] were traded to [[1976 Baltimore Orioles season|Baltimore]] a week prior to the start of the [[1976 Oakland Athletics season|1976]] season. Finley attempted to sell Rudi and Fingers to the Red Sox for $1 million each and Blue to the Yankees for $1.5 million, at which Major League Baseball commissioner [[Bowie Kuhn]] decided to invoke the rarely used "best interests of baseball" clause in order to void Finley's sales. Finley, in turn, hired famed sports attorney [[Neil Papiano]] and proceeded to file a $10 million restraint-of-trade lawsuit against Kuhn and Major League Baseball. Papiano and Finley lost the case (see ''Finley v. Kuhn''). The court ruled that the commissioner had the authority to determine what is in the best interests of baseball. This lawsuit is widely recognized as one of the most famous, influential, and precedent-setting sports-related cases in the history of U.S. [[jurisprudence]].{{Citation needed|date = October 2016}}


By the end of the 1976 season, most of the A's stars had left the team as free agents. The few remaining stars from the A's dynasty years were traded away, with the exceptions of Vida Blue and Billy North. There was much bad blood between the ace and his owner. Going back to 1971 when Vida Blue first joined the As, and had a legendary 24-8 rookie season, he earned $14,000. That winter, Blue sought a $92,500 salary, held out, missed much of the 1972 season, before Blue and Finley settled at $63,000. Later, in 1976, after an 18–13 season with a 2.35 ERA, Blue told reporters, "I hope the next breath Charlie Finley takes is his last. I hope he falls flat on his face and dies of [[polio]]."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Iber |first=Jorge |title=Mike Torrez: A Baseball Biography |publisher=McFarland |year=2016 |isbn=978-0-7864-9632-7 |location=Jefferson, NC |page=132}}</ref> Blue's curse seemed to strike home, as in the [[1977 Oakland Athletics season|1977]], only two years after winning a fifth straight division title and three years after winning a third consecutive World Series, the A's finished in last place in their division, with one of the worst records in baseball. After the 1977 season, Finley tried to sell Blue again, this time to the Cincinnati Reds. Kuhn vetoed this trade as well, saying that it amounted to a [[fire sale]]. Kuhn also claimed that the addition of Blue to an already formidable Reds pitching staff would make a mockery of the National League West race.
====Mediocre attendance and frugality====
The A's were a mediocre draw at best during the 20 years of his ownership, both in Kansas City and in Oakland, despite winning five divisional championships and three World Series in the latter venue. Average yearly attendance for Finley-owned teams was just under 743,000; in [[1974 in baseball|1974]], despite being on their way to their third straight world championship, the A's finished next-to-last in the A.L. in attendance. The high-water mark for attendance came in [[1975 in baseball|1975]], when 1,075,518 came through the turnstiles. Four years later, in [[1979 in baseball|1979]], only 306,783 fans bothered to attend as the A's fell to 54–108, by far the worst record in the AL West, and only one game better than the [[Toronto Blue Jays]], who were in their third season after joining the AL in [[1977 in baseball|1977]]. On April 17, [[1979 in baseball|1979]], the A's drew an announced crowd of 653 people. However, A's officials estimated the crowd at only 550, and first baseman [[Dave Revering]] thought the actual figure was closer to 200. Regardless of the actual numbers, it was the smallest crowd in Oakland A's history.<ref name=Mad>[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1094953/index.htm Fimrite, Ron. "They're Just Mad About Charlie," ''Sports Illustrated'', May 21, 1979.]</ref>


====Selling the A's====
Baseball writer [[Rob Neyer]], a native of the Kansas City area, says that this was because Finley thought he could sell a baseball team the same way he sold insurance. This dated back to the A's tenure in Kansas City; not long after buying the team in 1960, he mailed brochures to 600,000 people in the area, and only made $20,000 in ticket sales.
Finley and his "right-hand man," cousin [[Carl A. Finley]] started scouting for new talent in 1977. The Finleys brought in future stars such as [[Rickey Henderson]], [[Tony Armas]], [[Mitchell Page]], [[Mike Norris (baseball)|Mike Norris]], and [[Dwayne Murphy]] to rebuild the team. It was not until 1980 that the A's showed signs of improvement, under manager and Berkeley native [[Billy Martin]]. However, after that season, Finley's wife divorced him and would not accept an interest in the A's as part of a settlement. With most of the Finleys' assets invested in either Charlie O's insurance interests or the A's, the Finleys were forced to sell.


In [[1980 Oakland Athletics season|1980]], Finley agreed in principle to sell to businessman [[Marvin Davis]], who planned to move the Athletics to [[Denver]]. However, just before Finley and Davis were due to sign a contract, the [[National Football League|NFL]]'s [[Oakland Raiders]] announced they were moving to [[Los Angeles]] in [[1982 Los Angeles Raiders season|1982]]. Oakland and Alameda County officials, not wanting to be held responsible for losing Oakland's status as a big-league city in its own right, refused to let the A's out of their lease with the Coliseum. Forced to turn to local buyers, Finley agreed to sell the A's to [[Walter A. Haas, Jr.]], president of [[Levi Strauss & Co.]] in August 1980 for $12.7 million,<ref name=fsoas>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=xpwcAAAAIBAJ&pg=6214%2C4033559 |newspaper=Sarasota Herald-Tribune |agency=Associated Press |title=Finley sells Oakland A's |date=August 24, 1980 |page=1C }}</ref><ref name=finsellupi>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=E1kdAAAAIBAJ&pg=5432%2C3792815 |newspaper=Pittsburgh Press |agency=UPI |title=Finley sells A's to Levi Strauss |date=August 24, 1980 |page=D11 }}</ref><ref name=fthrec>{{cite magazine |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1123739/2/index.htm |magazine=Sports Illustrated |title=For the record: mileposts |last=Johnson |first=Roy S. |date=September 1, 1980 |page=89 }}</ref> with the deal finalized before the {{baseball year|1981}} season. Carl Finley was asked to remain with the new owners as vice president/mentor. Under new management, the A's made the playoffs in [[1981 Oakland Athletics season|1981]].{{Citation needed|date = October 2016}}
When it came to spending, whether it was players' salaries or on the team's day-to-day operations, Finley was tight-fisted and frugal. For example, players were issued a certain number of bats. If a player broke a bat, they wouldn't get any replacements. Finley also rarely ordered new uniforms at the start of a season, instead recycling old ones. Trainers were told to use every bit of a roll of medical tape, with usually heavy reprimand if they didn't. He also never offered [[season ticket]]s. From 1961 onward, Finley was effectively his own general manager, though the A's nominally had someone with that title until 1966.


====Marketing====
The A's rarely had radio or television contracts during Finley's tenure, which made them practically unknown outside of Oakland. For the first month of the [[1978 in baseball|1978 season]], the A's aired their games on [[KALX]], the 10-watt [[college radio|student radio]] station of the [[University of California, Berkeley]].<ref name=Mad/>
The Finley management was very effective at marketing. They changed the team uniforms to green and gold with white shoes and they gave some players colorful nicknames. The Finley organization introduced ball girls (one of whom, the future [[Debbi Fields]], went on to found [[Mrs. Fields|Mrs. Fields' Original Cookies, Inc.]]<ref>{{cite web |last1=Fancher |first1=Lou |title=Book details A's on-field glory, clubhouse drama |url=https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2017/06/13/book-details-as-on-field-glory-clubhouse-drama/ |website=Eastbaytimes.com |publisher=Bay Area News Group, LLC. |access-date=October 12, 2018|date=2017-06-13 }}</ref>), and advocated night games for the World Series to increase the ability for fans to attend. Finley also was an outspoken advocate of the [[designated hitter]] rule, which he advocated until it was adopted by the American League.<ref>{{cite web |title=American League adopts designated hitter rule |url=https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/american-league-adopts-designated-hitter-rule |website=History.com |publisher=A&E Television Networks |access-date=October 12, 2018}}</ref> They were always full of new ideas, including:
*Orange baseballs – Tried in a few exhibition games, but hitters found it too hard to pick up the spin. The week of August 18, 1975, Charlie Finley was on the cover of ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine and his orange baseballs were featured in the article.<ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.229, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, {{ISBN|978-0-8027-1745-0}}</ref>
*A mechanical [[rabbit]] that would pop up behind home plate and deliver new balls to the umpire and was named "[[Harvey (play)|Harvey]]," at the A's home ballparks in Kansas City and Oakland.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Landers |first1=Chris |title=The A's are bringing back Harvey the Rabbit, one of the wackiest ballpark quirks of all-time |url=https://www.mlb.com/cut4/oakland-as-bring-back-harvey-the-rabbit-for-50th-anniversary-season/c-269800210 |website=MLB.com |date=27 March 2018 |publisher=MLB Advanced Media, LLC. |access-date=October 12, 2018}}</ref>
*Hired Stanley Burrell (who would later gain worldwide fame as [[MC Hammer]]) as executive vice president when he was just a teenager to be his "eyes and ears."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Gergen |first1=Joe |title=MC Hammer Has a Baseball Background |url=https://articles.latimes.com/1990-10-07/sports/sp-2869_1_m-c-hammer |website=[[Los Angeles Times]] |access-date=October 12, 2018|date=1990-10-07 }}</ref>
*Offering players $300 bonuses to grow [[moustache]]s during the 1972 baseball season. For star relief pitcher [[Rollie Fingers]], the [[handlebar moustache]] he grew for Finley became a trademark.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Landers |first1=Chris |title=Rollie Fingers chose to retire from baseball rather than shave off that iconic mustache |url=https://www.mlb.com/cut4/this-day-in-baseball-history-rollie-fingers-retires-rather-than-shave-off-mustache/c-266765214 |website=MLB.com |date=21 February 2018 |publisher=MLB Advanced Media, LLC. |access-date=October 12, 2018}}</ref>


Despite his reputation as a master promoter, Finley had less success marketing his team. According to baseball writer [[Rob Neyer]], a Kansas City native, Finley thought he could sell a baseball team like he sold insurance. Soon after buying the A's, he sent out 600,000 brochures to area residents and only netted $20,000 in sales.<ref>{{cite book |last=Neyer |first=Rob |author-link=Rob Neyer |title=Rob Neyer's Big Book of Baseball Blunders |year=2006 |publisher=Fireside |location=New York City |isbn=0-7432-8491-7 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/robneyersbigbook0000neye }}</ref> While in Oakland, the A's rarely had radio and television contracts, and were practically invisible even in the Bay Area. For the first month of the 1978 season, the A's radio flagship was [[KALX]], the 10-watt [[college radio]] station of the [[University of California, Berkeley]]. A year later, the A's didn't sign a radio contract until the day before Opening Day. Largely as a result, the A's never drew well even in their championship years, and were even sued by the city of Oakland and [[Alameda County]] in 1979.<ref name=Mad>{{cite magazine |first=Ron |last=Fimrite |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1094953/index.htm |title=They're Just Mad About Charlie |magazine=[[Sports Illustrated]] |date=May 21, 1979 |page=36}}</ref>
====Finley tries to dismantle his club====
In [[1976 in baseball|1976]], after losing Hunter to free agency, Finley started dismantling his club, attempting to sell Rudi and Fingers to the Red Sox and Blue to the Yankees. Kuhn decided to invoke the rarely-used "best interests of baseball" clause in order to void Finley's sales. Finley, in turn, hired famed sports attorney [[Neil Papiano]] and proceeded to file a [[United States dollar|$]]10 million dollar restraint-of-trade lawsuit against Kuhn and Major League Baseball. Papiano and Finley lost the case ([[Finley v. Kuhn]]). The court ruled that the commissioner had the authority to determine what is in the best interest of baseball. This lawsuit is widely recognized as one of the most famous, influential and precedent-setting sports-related cases in the history of American [[jurisprudence]].


The A's have recently held promotional days with throwback uniforms from the Finley years, and have invited former players and play-by-play announcer [[Monte Moore]] to attend.{{Citation needed|date = October 2016}}
At the end of that season, many of the A's stars left the team due to free agency. The [[1977 in baseball|next year]] – only two years after winning a division title and three years after winning a World Series—the A's finished with the worst record in baseball. After that season, he tried to trade Blue again, this time to the Reds. Kuhn vetoed this trade as well, saying that it amounted to a [[fire sale]]. He also claimed that adding Blue to the Reds' already formidable pitching staff would make the race for the [[National League West]] a joke. (The Reds pitching staff had been decimated by free agency and injuries in the 1976&ndash;77 off-season and as such, the Reds finished a distant second to the Dodgers)

The A's remained one of the worst teams in baseball over the next two years, and their attendance declined even further; there were several occasions during [[1978 in baseball|1978]] and [[1979 in baseball|1979]] that crowds could be counted in the hundreds. Some fans called them "the Triple A's." The Coliseum's upkeep also suffered during this time, leading baseball writers to call it "the Oakland Mausoleum."

====Selling the A's====
Finley tried to move the A's to [[New Orleans]] in 1978 and again in 1979, but the attempted move foundered when the city of Oakland and [[Alameda County]] refused to let Finley out of his lease with the Coliseum. He was in the process of rebuilding the team again in [[1980 in baseball|1980]] when his wife filed for [[divorce]] midway through the season. She would not accept part of a baseball team as part of the settlement. With most of his money tied up in the A's or his insurance interests, Finley was forced to sell the team. He initially agreed to sell it to businessman [[Marvin Davis]], who planned to move the A's to [[Denver]]. However, a few weeks before Davis and Finley reached a definitive agreement, the [[Oakland Raiders]] announced they were moving to Los Angeles. Oakland and Alameda County officials were not about to lose the A's and refused to let them out of their lease. Forced to find a local buyer, Finley finally agreed to sell the A's to [[Walter A. Haas, Jr.]], president of [[Levi Strauss & Co.]] before the {{by|1981}} season.

====Gimmicks====
Finley was fond of gimmicks, dressing his players in non-traditional green and gold uniforms and offering his players $300 bonuses to grow [[moustache]]s. For star relief pitcher [[Rollie Fingers]], the [[handlebar moustache]] he grew for Finley became a trademark. After signing pitcher Jim Hunter, he nicknamed him "Catfish," even fabricating boyhood stories about Hunter to give him press appeal. Finley refused to sign then-prospect [[Don Sutton]] to a contract, simply because Sutton didn't have a flashy nickname. He introduced ball girls (one of whom, the future [[Debbi Fields]], went on to found [[Mrs. Fields|Mrs. Fields' Original Cookies, Inc.]]), and advocated night games for the World Series to increase fan interest. Finley also was an outspoken advocate of the [[designated hitter]] rule, which he pushed until it was adopted by the American League. He suggested many other innovations that were tried and rejected for various reasons, including:
*Orange baseballs - Tried in a few exhibition games, but hitters found it too hard to pick up the spin. The week of August 18, 1975, Charlie Finley was on the cover of [[Time Magazine]] and his orange baseballs were featured in the article. <ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.229, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0</ref> It would be his last major profile in a national publication. <ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.230, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0</ref>
*A three-ball [[base on balls|walk]] and two-strike [[strikeout]] - Tried in spring training one year, he thought it would lead to games with more action. Instead, the result was more walks and longer games. On March 10, 1971, the Athletics walked 16 batters in one such experimental game.
*A mechanical [[rabbit]] that would pop up behind home plate and deliver new balls to the umpire - Finley installed one, which he named "[[Harvey (play)|Harvey]]," at the A's home ballparks in Kansas City and Oakland, but the idea never caught on anywhere else and was dropped by the A's after 1969.
*A designated runner - This idea was rejected for several reasons by Major League Baseball, and Finley was so upset at the rejection of the rule that he voted against his own Designated Hitter rule. However, the rejection didn't stop Finley from experimenting on his own in [[1974 in baseball|1974]], hiring a college sprinter named [[Herb Washington]] exclusively to pinch run and [[stolen base|steal bases]]. Washington stole 29 bases, but was caught stealing 18 times and frequently picked off by opposing pitchers. He was let go shortly into his second season.
*Hired Stanley Burrell (who would later gain worldwide fame as [[MC Hammer]]) as Executive Vice President when he was just a teenager to be his "eyes and ears."


==Other sports ventures==
==Other sports ventures==
Finley purchased the [[Oakland Seals]] of the [[National Hockey League]] in 1970, renaming the team '''California Golden Seals'''. Mimicking the A's, he changed the team colors to green and gold and had the Seals wear white skates instead of the traditional black skates, a move deeply unpopular with both players and fans. The Seals had a miserable season and finished last in the league in Finley's first year of ownership, but after a promising turnaround in [[1971-72 NHL Season|1971-72]], he allowed five of his best players to bolt to the upstart [[World Hockey Association]] when he refused to match the new leagues salary offers. With continuing on-ice and attendance problems, Finley lost interest in the team, but couldn't find a buyer and sold the franchise back to the league in February 1974 (at a profit). Finley's attempt to sell the team to an Indianapolis group who proposed to move the team there was rejected by the league in 1973.
Finley purchased the [[California Golden Seals|Oakland Seals]] of the [[National Hockey League]] in 1970,<ref name=cfbhc>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=7wQhAAAAIBAJ&pg=2298%2C5371302 |newspaper=Norwalk (CT) Hour |agency=UPI |title=Charles Finley buys hockey club |date=June 30, 1970 |page=25 }}</ref> renaming the team California Golden Seals. Mimicking the A's, he changed the team colors to green and gold and had the Seals wear white skates instead of the traditional black skates, a move deeply unpopular with both players and fans.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Currier |first1=Steve |title=Finley's White Skates |url=http://goldensealshockey.com/?page_id=31 |website=goldensealshockey.com |access-date=October 12, 2018|date=2016-06-22 }}</ref>

In 1972, Finley purchased the [[Memphis Pros]] of the [[American Basketball Association]], changing the team's name to the '''[[Memphis Tams]]''', the name being an acronym for '''T'''ennessee, '''A'''rkansas and '''M'''ississippi. As was the case with the A's, he changed the Tams' colors to green and gold. While he hired recently retired [[Kentucky Wildcats basketball]] coach [[Adolph Rupp]] as team president, Finley took almost no interest in the team. He ran it on a shoestring budget, and often went weeks without communicating with his front office in Memphis about team business. Almost as soon as he bought the team, he began talks to move it to [[St. Paul, Minnesota]] while publicly insisting that he would keep it in Memphis. When word of these talks leaked out, Finley lost what goodwill he had with Memphis fans. After the season, he shut down the team office and tried to sell the team to a group in [[Rhode Island]]. When that sale fell through, he didn't bother to tell anyone at the league office that the Tams would play until August—holding up all of the league's television and radio contracts in the process. Even then, he didn't get around to hiring a coach until two days before the first preseason game. Not surprisingly, the Tams finished in the league cellar two years in a row, and Finley turned the team back over to the league in 1974.

In March 1987, Finley proposed a new football league. The league would merge with the [[Canadian Football League]], and be renamed the North American Football League. The American cities would be made up of those that lost out on the [[United States Football League]] folding. The idea never got past the planning stages.

==Indiana legend==
Finley resided primarily in Chicago and LaPorte, even as he owned the Oakland A's. Even though he would make frequent trips to Oakland, he would run the team from the Midwest, earning more derision as an absentee owner. Still, Finley was popular in his hometown of LaPorte, where he remained involved in the community late into his life.

While Finley was building a championship team in Oakland, the LaPorte High School baseball team was becoming a powerhouse under coach [[Ken Schreiber]]. Finley sent the team equipment once, including the white shoes the Oakland A's made famous and that the LaPorte High School team would use until the late 1990s.

Finley would occasionally throw a party whenever the A's would be in Chicago to play the [[Chicago White Sox|White Sox]]. He bused the players to LaPorte ("God, we hated that," Bando told ''[[Sports Illustrated]]'' in 1999) and his local friends would mingle with the likes of Reggie Jackson, Vida Blue and Catfish Hunter.

He died on February 19, 1996 three days short of what would have been his 78th birthday.


In 1970, Finley also purchased the [[Memphis Pros]] of the [[American Basketball Association]], changing the team's name to the [[Memphis Tams]], the name being an acronym for Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi. As was the case with the A's, he changed the Tams' colors to green and gold. He hired recently retired [[Kentucky Wildcats basketball]] coach [[Adolph Rupp]] as team president. Finley ran it on a shoestring budget. After the first season, he sold the teams and returned to baseball.{{Citation needed|date = October 2016}}
==The Kansas City Beatles concert==
When Finley owned the Kansas City Athletics, he promised the people of Kansas City that he would bring [[The Beatles]] to play in Kansas City's Municipal Stadium during the group's first tour of North America in the summer of 1964. Finley visited the group's manager, [[Brian Epstein]], in [[San Francisco, California|San Francisco]] on August 19, 1964, where the Beatles were playing the first date of the tour. He told Epstein that he was disappointed that Kansas City was not among the group's itinerary, and offered first $50,000 and then $100,000 if the Beatles would schedule a concert in the Missouri city. Epstein refused, pointing out that on the only free date available, September 17, the band was scheduled for a day of rest in [[New Orleans]]. Finley left disappointed, but again encountered Epstein in [[Los Angeles]] a week later. Epstein again rejected Finley's offer of $100,000, noting that the band wanted to use their only day off to "explore the traditional home of jazz." Undetered, Finley tore up the $100,000 check and wrote a new one for $150,000. Astonished, Epstein excused himself to talk to the group. [[John Lennon]] speaking for his bandmates replied, "We'll do whatever you want." Satisfied that, in exchange for forfeiting their only day off, the Beatles had earned what at the time was the highest fee ever for a musical concert, a staggering $4,838 per minute, Epstein accepted Finley's check. Although Finley is usually remembered by the people of Kansas City as the man who provided mediocre baseball while attempting to abandon the city for a more promising market, it should also be kept in mind that he did deliver on his promise to bring the Beatles to Kansas City. Finley had a photo of himself in a Beatles wig printed on the back of all concert tickets.<ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.76, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0</ref> It was the only concert on the Beatles tour that did not sell out. <ref>Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.77, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0</ref>


In March 1987, Finley proposed a new football league. The league would merge with the [[Canadian Football League]] and be renamed the North American Football League. The American cities would be made up of those that lost out on the [[United States Football League]] folding, with Finley representing [[Chicago Blitz|Chicago]];<ref name=rejected>[https://scontent-iad3-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.6435-9/204371473_1198137157314752_2958838324693816158_n.png?_nc_cat=103&ccb=1-3&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=cekrvCiTGWwAX8mKMG2&_nc_ht=scontent-iad3-2.xx&oh=acf276d6f59b29141ec93253cd595635&oe=60F54C2E Finley wants to merge CFL with 9 U.S. teams to create league] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210716055207/https://scontent-iad3-2.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.6435-9/204371473_1198137157314752_2958838324693816158_n.png?_nc_cat=103&ccb=1-3&_nc_sid=730e14&_nc_ohc=cekrvCiTGWwAX8mKMG2&_nc_ht=scontent-iad3-2.xx&oh=acf276d6f59b29141ec93253cd595635&oe=60F54C2E |date=2021-07-16 }}. ''The Ledger'' via wire services (March 1987). Retrieved July 16, 2021.</ref> the USFL's [[Arizona Outlaws]] had already come out in support of the idea of playing in the CFL as an American team,<ref>{{citation |url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3811251.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160309194824/https://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-3811251.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2016-03-09 |title=New football league hope slim // CFL 'lukewarm' to merger with the defunct USFL |work=Chicago Sun-Times |date=1987-02-18 |access-date=2012-07-04|via=HighBeam}}</ref> as had certain executives with the [[Memphis Showboats]].<ref name=willtheyplay>[https://www.birminghamprosports.com/otherteamsnafl.html Will Birmingham play in the North American Football League?] via BirminghamProSports.com</ref> The CFL insisted upon a minimum $20 million per year television contract to even consider the idea, and though Finley was optimistic that such a contract could be secured, networks all rejected the plan,<ref name=willtheyplay/> and the CFL Commissioner at the time, [[Douglas Mitchell]], explicitly ruled out adding teams from the United States or changing the CFL's format.<ref name=rejected/>
''Source:'' Mark Lewisohn, ''The Beatles Live!: The Ultimate Reference Book'' (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1986), 168–69.


==Quote==
==Later life==
Finley lived his final years on his farm in LaPorte. He died at age 77 on February 19, 1996, three days before his 78th birthday. He had suffered from heart disease and had been admitted two weeks earlier to [[Northwestern Memorial Hospital]] in Chicago.<ref name=foaodap>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=3hEmAAAAIBAJ&pg=4552%2C2019805 |newspaper=Gettysburg Times |agency=Associated Press |title=Former Oakland A's owner Charles Finley dies at age 77 |date=February 20, 1996 |page=B3}}</ref><ref name=flfidi>{{cite news |url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=SfAbAAAAIBAJ&pg=6323%2C3856571 |newspaper=The Dispatch |location=Lexington, NC |agency=(Los Angeles Daily News) |last=Rosenthal |first=Michael |title=Flamboyant Finley dies |date=February 20, 1996 |page=1B }}</ref>
* "Sweat plus sacrifice equals success."
*S+S=S was engraved in his World Series rings. His players would refer to it as "shit plus shit equals more shit". {{Citation needed|reason=November, 2007|date=November 2007}}


== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist|2}}
<references />


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* Green, G. Michael and Roger Launius ''[http://www.walkerbooks.com/books/catalog.php?key=865 Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman]'', Walker & Co, 2010.
* Green, G. Michael and Roger Launius ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20110726140220/http://www.walkerbooks.com/books/catalog.php?key=865 Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman]'', Walker & Co, 2010.
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120318001129/http://morganking.com/Athletics/athletics_history.html Oakland Athletics History]


==External links==
==External links==
{{Portal|Biography}}
{{Portal|Biography}}
*[http://www.baseballhalloffame.org/news/2007/election/vc/finley.htm Baseball Hall of Fame candidate profile]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20070420070350/http://www.baseballhalloffame.org/news/2007/election/vc/finley.htm Baseball Hall of Fame candidate profile]
*[http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/F/Finley_Charles_O.stm BaseballLibrary] - profile and career highlights
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20060117091455/http://www.baseballlibrary.com/baseballlibrary/ballplayers/F/Finley_Charles_O.stm BaseballLibrary] profile and career highlights
* {{Find a Grave|6819040}}
* {{Find a Grave|6819040}}


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{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->

| NAME = Finley, Charlie
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[[Category:American people of Irish descent]]
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[[Category:California Golden Seals owners]]
[[Category:Kansas City Athletics executives]]
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[[Category:Kansas City Athletics owners]]
[[Category:Major League Baseball general managers]]
[[Category:Major League Baseball owners]]
[[Category:Major League Baseball owners]]
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[[Category:National Hockey League owners]]
[[Category:Oakland Athletics executives]]
[[Category:Oakland Athletics executives]]
[[Category:Oakland Athletics owners]]
[[Category:Oakland Athletics owners]]
[[Category:People from Birmingham, Alabama]]
[[Category:People from Ensley, Alabama]]
[[Category:People from Chicago, Illinois]]
[[Category:People from Gary, Indiana]]
[[Category:People from La Porte, Indiana]]
[[Category:People from La Porte, Indiana]]
[[Category:California Golden Seals]]
[[Category:Major League Baseball general managers]]

[[ja:チャーリー・O・フィンリー]]
[[simple:Charles O. Finley]]

Revision as of 00:23, 15 April 2024

Charlie Finley
Born
Charles Oscar Finley

(1918-02-22)February 22, 1918
DiedFebruary 19, 1996(1996-02-19) (aged 77)
NationalityAmerican
Occupation(s)Baseball franchise owner and executive
Years activeDecember 1960–August 1980
Known forOwner of the Kansas City / Oakland A's

Charles Oscar Finley (February 22, 1918 – February 19, 1996), nicknamed "Charlie O" or "Charley O", was an American businessman who owned Major League Baseball's Oakland Athletics. Finley purchased the franchise while it was located in Kansas City, moving it to Oakland in 1968. He is also known as a short-lived owner of the National Hockey League's California Golden Seals and the American Basketball Association's Memphis Tams.

Early life

Finley was born in Ensley, Birmingham, Alabama, attended Ensley High School but was further raised in Gary, Indiana, and later lived in La Porte, 60 miles (100 km) east of Chicago. Finley made his fortune in the insurance business, being among the first to write group medical insurance policies for those in the medical profession.[1]

Finley showed a penchant for flair and inventive business practices. Sometimes, when wooing prospective customers, Finley would drive the client through the richest section of Gary. Pointing out a large mansion, Finley would declare "That's my place there, but I'm having it remodeled right now." Finley's fortunes grew and he ended up owning a 40-story insurance building in downtown Chicago. In 1956, Charles Finley purchased a home built in 1942 on Johnson Road just north of Pine Lake in LaPorte, Indiana. He hired John Mihelic as his ranch caretaker. The property was a working cattle ranch which consisted of an 18th-century, eleven-room colonial manor house and nine barns with various outbuildings. Finley had a large mansion built on the property, keeping the colonial house as caretakers quarters. The new house, which featured rounded porticoes and columns, resembled the White House.[citation needed]

Finley had a large "Home of the Oakland A's" sign installed on the roof of another large barn where it could be viewed by vehicles passing on the Indiana toll road. It was to this place that Finley often brought the whole team and held picnics and pool parties attended by friends, business associates, and locals, who mingled with members of the team and took numerous photographs.[2]

In 1941, Finley married the former Shirley McCartney. They had eight children before the marriage ended in a bitter divorce, the proceedings of which lasted 6 years. The Finleys separated in 1974, and according to a biographer, Finley was unfaithful during his marriage and frequently estranged both his friends and family. Shirley Finley won a massive divorce settlement. Finley was estranged from most of his children at the time of his death. Finley died three days shy of his 78th birthday. His former wife, who remarried, died in 2010.[3]

Owner of the A's

In Kansas City

Finley entered the ranks of Major League Baseball owners after multiple failed attempts to acquire franchises during the 1950s.

He first attempted to buy the Philadelphia Athletics in 1954, but American League owners instead approved the sale of the team to Arnold Johnson, who moved the club to Kansas City for the 1955 season.[4]

In 1956, Finley unsuccessfully bid for the Detroit Tigers, who instead were sold to a Michigan-based group led by broadcasting magnates John Fetzer and Fred Knorr. In 1959, when Dorothy Comiskey Rigney put her majority holdings in the Chicago White Sox up for sale, Finley lost out to a group headed by Bill Veeck. Then, one year later, he was among a group of contenders for the American League expansion franchise earmarked for Los Angeles, but actor, singer and broadcasting tycoon Gene Autry ended up as the founding principal owner of the Angels.[5]

Fate, however, would play a role in Finley's fourth, and ultimately successful, attempt to enter baseball — and it would come from his 1954 target, now the Kansas City Athletics. On March 3, 1960, owner Arnold Johnson died suddenly and unexpectedly from a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 54. The second-division Athletics struggled through a last-place season while being operated by Johnson's estate. Just weeks after Finley lost his bid for the Angels' franchise, on December 19, 1960, he purchased the estate's controlling interest in the Athletics;[6] he then bought out the minority owners a year later. Finley quickly started to turn the franchise around, refusing to make deals with the New York Yankees (for which the Athletics had been criticized) and searching for unheralded talent. From 1961 onward, Finley was effectively his own general manager, though the A's nominally had someone who had the title or duties of general manager until 1966.

Finley also repeatedly tried to move the team. In January 1964 he reached an agreement with Louisville, Kentucky, to move the team there for the 1964 season, signing a two-year lease on a stadium.[7] When that proposed move was blocked by the American League he entertained offers from Denver and San Diego[8]

Charlie-O becomes the Athletics' mascot

Finley replaced the Athletics' traditional elephant mascot with a live mule. "Charlie-O" was paraded about the outfield, into cocktail parties and hotel lobbies and into the press room after a large feeding to annoy reporters. (The mule died in 1976, at age 20.)[9]

The "K.C. Pennant Porch"

After supposedly being told by manager Ed Lopat about the Yankees' success being attributable to the dimensions of Yankee Stadium, Finley built the "K.C. Pennant Porch" in right field in April 1964, which brought the right field fence in Municipal Stadium to match Yankee Stadium's dimensions exactly, just 296 feet (90 m) from home plate.[10][11] However, a rule passed in 1958 held that no (new or renovated) major-league fence could be closer than 325 feet (99 m), so league officials forced Finley to move the fences back after two exhibition games.[12][13][14][15]

The A's owner then ordered a white line to be painted on the field at the original "Pennant Porch" distance, and told the public address announcer to announce "That would have been a home run in Yankee Stadium" whenever a fly ball was hit past that line but short of the fence. The practice was quickly abandoned after it turned out that the announcer was calling more "would-be" home runs for the opposition than the A's.[16]

Uniform changes

In 1963, Finley changed the team's colors to Kelly Green, Fort Knox Gold, and Wedding Gown White. In 1967, he replaced the team's traditional black spikes with white. Finley also started phasing out the team name "Athletics" in favor of "A's." (When Mickey Mantle saw the A's' green-and-gold uniforms, he jeered, "They should have come out of the dugout on tippy-toes, holding hands and singing," according to Baseball Digest.)[17]

The Beatles

When the Beatles made their August/September 1964 concert tour of the United States, Finley was determined to bring them to Kansas City to perform at Municipal Stadium. Seeing one open date on the tour, Finley offered and paid the Beatles $150,000 ($1,473.6 million+ today) for a concert on September 17, 1964, erasing a scheduled off day for the band in New Orleans. The tickets read: "CHARLES O. FINLEY/ IS PLEASED TO PRESENT..FOR THE ENJOYMENT/ OF THE BEATLE FANS IN MID-AMERICA/ 'THE BEATLES'/ IN PERSON” on the front, and showed a photograph of Finley wearing a Beatles wig on the back with the quote, "Today's Beatle's (sic) Fans/ Are/ Tomorrow's Baseball Fans."[18] John Lennon was quoted later as saying he disliked Finley's attempt to strong-arm the Beatles into playing longer than their then-standard half-hour concert set. The Beatles' $150,000 fee for the concert was considered a show business record for a one-night stand appearance.[19]

Finley visited the group's manager, Brian Epstein, in San Francisco on August 19, 1964, where the Beatles were playing the first date of the tour. He told Epstein that he was disappointed that Kansas City was not among the group's itinerary, and offered first $50,000 and then $100,000 if the Beatles would schedule a concert in the Missouri city. Epstein refused, pointing out that on the only free date available, September 17, the band was scheduled for a day of rest in New Orleans. Finley encountered Epstein again in Los Angeles a week later and they agreed on $150,000.[20][21]

In Oakland

World Series success

The A's (as they were officially known from 1970) moved to California in January 1968, just as the new talent amassed over the years in the minors (such as Reggie Jackson, Sal Bando, Joe Rudi, Bert Campaneris, Catfish Hunter, Rollie Fingers, and Vida Blue) became ready for the Majors. Marvin Miller, the founder of MLB's players union, called him "absolutely the best judge of baseball talent I've ever seen."[22]

During the early 1970s, the once-moribund A's became a "Swingin' A's" powerhouse, winning three straight World Series from 1972 to 1974 and five straight division titles from 1971 to 1975, in the Oakland Coliseum.[23] Though he no longer owned the team when the A's won the World Series again in 1989, Tony La Russa, who managed that team, and outfielder Rickey Henderson were originally scouted by Finley.[24]

The beginning of free agency

In 1974, after winning a third straight World Series championship, Finley lost ace pitcher Jim 'Catfish' Hunter to free agency as a result of a contract clause violation. The A's still managed to dominate throughout the 1975 regular season without Hunter, but were swept by Boston in the playoffs. With free agency looming at the end of the 1976 season, Finley began dismantling the ball club. Reggie Jackson and Ken Holtzman were traded to Baltimore a week prior to the start of the 1976 season. Finley attempted to sell Rudi and Fingers to the Red Sox for $1 million each and Blue to the Yankees for $1.5 million, at which Major League Baseball commissioner Bowie Kuhn decided to invoke the rarely used "best interests of baseball" clause in order to void Finley's sales. Finley, in turn, hired famed sports attorney Neil Papiano and proceeded to file a $10 million restraint-of-trade lawsuit against Kuhn and Major League Baseball. Papiano and Finley lost the case (see Finley v. Kuhn). The court ruled that the commissioner had the authority to determine what is in the best interests of baseball. This lawsuit is widely recognized as one of the most famous, influential, and precedent-setting sports-related cases in the history of U.S. jurisprudence.[citation needed]

By the end of the 1976 season, most of the A's stars had left the team as free agents. The few remaining stars from the A's dynasty years were traded away, with the exceptions of Vida Blue and Billy North. There was much bad blood between the ace and his owner. Going back to 1971 when Vida Blue first joined the As, and had a legendary 24-8 rookie season, he earned $14,000. That winter, Blue sought a $92,500 salary, held out, missed much of the 1972 season, before Blue and Finley settled at $63,000. Later, in 1976, after an 18–13 season with a 2.35 ERA, Blue told reporters, "I hope the next breath Charlie Finley takes is his last. I hope he falls flat on his face and dies of polio."[25] Blue's curse seemed to strike home, as in the 1977, only two years after winning a fifth straight division title and three years after winning a third consecutive World Series, the A's finished in last place in their division, with one of the worst records in baseball. After the 1977 season, Finley tried to sell Blue again, this time to the Cincinnati Reds. Kuhn vetoed this trade as well, saying that it amounted to a fire sale. Kuhn also claimed that the addition of Blue to an already formidable Reds pitching staff would make a mockery of the National League West race.

Selling the A's

Finley and his "right-hand man," cousin Carl A. Finley started scouting for new talent in 1977. The Finleys brought in future stars such as Rickey Henderson, Tony Armas, Mitchell Page, Mike Norris, and Dwayne Murphy to rebuild the team. It was not until 1980 that the A's showed signs of improvement, under manager and Berkeley native Billy Martin. However, after that season, Finley's wife divorced him and would not accept an interest in the A's as part of a settlement. With most of the Finleys' assets invested in either Charlie O's insurance interests or the A's, the Finleys were forced to sell.

In 1980, Finley agreed in principle to sell to businessman Marvin Davis, who planned to move the Athletics to Denver. However, just before Finley and Davis were due to sign a contract, the NFL's Oakland Raiders announced they were moving to Los Angeles in 1982. Oakland and Alameda County officials, not wanting to be held responsible for losing Oakland's status as a big-league city in its own right, refused to let the A's out of their lease with the Coliseum. Forced to turn to local buyers, Finley agreed to sell the A's to Walter A. Haas, Jr., president of Levi Strauss & Co. in August 1980 for $12.7 million,[26][27][28] with the deal finalized before the 1981 season. Carl Finley was asked to remain with the new owners as vice president/mentor. Under new management, the A's made the playoffs in 1981.[citation needed]

Marketing

The Finley management was very effective at marketing. They changed the team uniforms to green and gold with white shoes and they gave some players colorful nicknames. The Finley organization introduced ball girls (one of whom, the future Debbi Fields, went on to found Mrs. Fields' Original Cookies, Inc.[29]), and advocated night games for the World Series to increase the ability for fans to attend. Finley also was an outspoken advocate of the designated hitter rule, which he advocated until it was adopted by the American League.[30] They were always full of new ideas, including:

  • Orange baseballs – Tried in a few exhibition games, but hitters found it too hard to pick up the spin. The week of August 18, 1975, Charlie Finley was on the cover of Time magazine and his orange baseballs were featured in the article.[31]
  • A mechanical rabbit that would pop up behind home plate and deliver new balls to the umpire and was named "Harvey," at the A's home ballparks in Kansas City and Oakland.[32]
  • Hired Stanley Burrell (who would later gain worldwide fame as MC Hammer) as executive vice president when he was just a teenager to be his "eyes and ears."[33]
  • Offering players $300 bonuses to grow moustaches during the 1972 baseball season. For star relief pitcher Rollie Fingers, the handlebar moustache he grew for Finley became a trademark.[34]

Despite his reputation as a master promoter, Finley had less success marketing his team. According to baseball writer Rob Neyer, a Kansas City native, Finley thought he could sell a baseball team like he sold insurance. Soon after buying the A's, he sent out 600,000 brochures to area residents and only netted $20,000 in sales.[35] While in Oakland, the A's rarely had radio and television contracts, and were practically invisible even in the Bay Area. For the first month of the 1978 season, the A's radio flagship was KALX, the 10-watt college radio station of the University of California, Berkeley. A year later, the A's didn't sign a radio contract until the day before Opening Day. Largely as a result, the A's never drew well even in their championship years, and were even sued by the city of Oakland and Alameda County in 1979.[36]

The A's have recently held promotional days with throwback uniforms from the Finley years, and have invited former players and play-by-play announcer Monte Moore to attend.[citation needed]

Other sports ventures

Finley purchased the Oakland Seals of the National Hockey League in 1970,[37] renaming the team California Golden Seals. Mimicking the A's, he changed the team colors to green and gold and had the Seals wear white skates instead of the traditional black skates, a move deeply unpopular with both players and fans.[38]

In 1970, Finley also purchased the Memphis Pros of the American Basketball Association, changing the team's name to the Memphis Tams, the name being an acronym for Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi. As was the case with the A's, he changed the Tams' colors to green and gold. He hired recently retired Kentucky Wildcats basketball coach Adolph Rupp as team president. Finley ran it on a shoestring budget. After the first season, he sold the teams and returned to baseball.[citation needed]

In March 1987, Finley proposed a new football league. The league would merge with the Canadian Football League and be renamed the North American Football League. The American cities would be made up of those that lost out on the United States Football League folding, with Finley representing Chicago;[39] the USFL's Arizona Outlaws had already come out in support of the idea of playing in the CFL as an American team,[40] as had certain executives with the Memphis Showboats.[41] The CFL insisted upon a minimum $20 million per year television contract to even consider the idea, and though Finley was optimistic that such a contract could be secured, networks all rejected the plan,[41] and the CFL Commissioner at the time, Douglas Mitchell, explicitly ruled out adding teams from the United States or changing the CFL's format.[39]

Later life

Finley lived his final years on his farm in LaPorte. He died at age 77 on February 19, 1996, three days before his 78th birthday. He had suffered from heart disease and had been admitted two weeks earlier to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago.[42][43]

References

  1. ^ Twombly, Wells. "Let's Hear It For Charlie O." People. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  2. ^ Holtzman, Jerome (21 February 1996). "Remembering Charlie O: 37 Years of Memories". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  3. ^ Launius, Roger D.; Green, G. Michael (2010-07-11). Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. ISBN 9780802778574.
  4. ^ Neumann, Thomas (2016-08-26). "Before Oakland, Vagabond A's led colorful past lives in Philadelphia, Kansas City". ESPN. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
  5. ^ Armour, Mark (2015). "Charlie Finley". sabr.org. Society for American Baseball Research Biography Project. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  6. ^ "Charles Finley is given okay". Lawrence Daily Journal-World. (Kansas). Associated Press. December 21, 1960. p. 17.
  7. ^ "Finley Signs Contract to Transfer Athletics to Louisville; LEAGUE SANCTION NEEDED FOR SHIFT; 7 Clubs Must Approve Move — Cronin Calls Meeting Here for Jan. 16". The New York Times. 7 January 1964. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  8. ^ "Finley entertained and enraged". Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  9. ^ "Athletics History". Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  10. ^ Van Valkenburg, Jim (April 10, 1964). "Finley's Pennant Porch set". Lawrence Daily Journal-World. (Kansas). Associated Press. p. 11.
  11. ^ "Finley building Yankee-style 'Pennant Porch' in A's park". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. April 10, 1964. p. 14.
  12. ^ "Finley says he'll defy edict to dismantle 'Yankee' fence". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. April 12, 1964. p. 11.
  13. ^ Van Valkenburg, Jim (April 14, 1964). "Finley now has Half-Porch and will continue a fight". Lawrence Daily Journal-World. (Kansas). Associated Press. p. 11.
  14. ^ Rathet, Mike (April 22, 1964). "Pennant Porch no answer to Kansas Dity's problem". Lawrence Daily Journal-World. (Kansas). Associated Press. p. 15.
  15. ^ Treder, Steve. "The Pennant Porch Pie-in-the-Face". Fangraphs.com. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  16. ^ Landers, Chris (30 September 2015). "Seven bizarre ballpark features from baseball history that you'll need to see to believe". MLB.com. MLB Advanced Media, LP. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  17. ^ Fai, Rob. "Why do the C's wear white spikes?". Milb.com. Retrieved October 25, 2018.
  18. ^ https://www.icollector.com/The-Beatles-Kansas-City-Concert-Ticket-Stub_i7034833
  19. ^ "John Lennon on Charlie Finley: "I Just Didn't Particularly Like Him"".
  20. ^ Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.76, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0
  21. ^ Mark Lewisohn, The Beatles Live!: The Ultimate Reference Book (New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1986), 168–69.
  22. ^ "The Many Problems with 'Moneyball'". The Atlantic. 27 September 2011.
  23. ^ "Oakland Athletics Team History & Encyclopedia". Baseballreference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved October 14, 2018.
  24. ^ Holtzman, Jerome (7 January 1993). "Finley Proves to be a Hall-of-Fame Scout". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 14, 2018.
  25. ^ Iber, Jorge (2016). Mike Torrez: A Baseball Biography. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-7864-9632-7.
  26. ^ "Finley sells Oakland A's". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Associated Press. August 24, 1980. p. 1C.
  27. ^ "Finley sells A's to Levi Strauss". Pittsburgh Press. UPI. August 24, 1980. p. D11.
  28. ^ Johnson, Roy S. (September 1, 1980). "For the record: mileposts". Sports Illustrated. p. 89.
  29. ^ Fancher, Lou (2017-06-13). "Book details A's on-field glory, clubhouse drama". Eastbaytimes.com. Bay Area News Group, LLC. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  30. ^ "American League adopts designated hitter rule". History.com. A&E Television Networks. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  31. ^ Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, p.229, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius. Walker Publishing Company, New York, 2010, ISBN 978-0-8027-1745-0
  32. ^ Landers, Chris (27 March 2018). "The A's are bringing back Harvey the Rabbit, one of the wackiest ballpark quirks of all-time". MLB.com. MLB Advanced Media, LLC. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  33. ^ Gergen, Joe (1990-10-07). "MC Hammer Has a Baseball Background". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  34. ^ Landers, Chris (21 February 2018). "Rollie Fingers chose to retire from baseball rather than shave off that iconic mustache". MLB.com. MLB Advanced Media, LLC. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  35. ^ Neyer, Rob (2006). Rob Neyer's Big Book of Baseball Blunders. New York City: Fireside. ISBN 0-7432-8491-7.
  36. ^ Fimrite, Ron (May 21, 1979). "They're Just Mad About Charlie". Sports Illustrated. p. 36.
  37. ^ "Charles Finley buys hockey club". Norwalk (CT) Hour. UPI. June 30, 1970. p. 25.
  38. ^ Currier, Steve (2016-06-22). "Finley's White Skates". goldensealshockey.com. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
  39. ^ a b Finley wants to merge CFL with 9 U.S. teams to create league Archived 2021-07-16 at the Wayback Machine. The Ledger via wire services (March 1987). Retrieved July 16, 2021.
  40. ^ "New football league hope slim // CFL 'lukewarm' to merger with the defunct USFL", Chicago Sun-Times, 1987-02-18, archived from the original on 2016-03-09, retrieved 2012-07-04 – via HighBeam
  41. ^ a b Will Birmingham play in the North American Football League? via BirminghamProSports.com
  42. ^ "Former Oakland A's owner Charles Finley dies at age 77". Gettysburg Times. Associated Press. February 20, 1996. p. B3.
  43. ^ Rosenthal, Michael (February 20, 1996). "Flamboyant Finley dies". The Dispatch. Lexington, NC. (Los Angeles Daily News). p. 1B.

Further reading

External links