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'''William Charles Virdon''' (born June 9, 1931) is a retired [[American]] [[baseball]] player, manager and coach. One of the top defensive [[outfielders]] in the game during his playing days (1955-65) as a center fielder for the [[St. Louis Cardinals]] and [[Pittsburgh Pirates]], Virdon also had a long tenure in [[Major League Baseball]] as a manager, with the Pirates (1972-73), [[New York Yankees]] (1974-75), [[Houston Astros]] (1975-82), and [[Montreal Expos]] (1983-84).
'''William Charles Virdon''' (born June 9, 1931) is a retired [[American]] [[baseball]] player, manager and coach. A premier top defensive [[outfielder]] in the game during his playing days (1955-65) as a center fielder for the [[St. Louis Cardinals]] and [[Pittsburgh Pirates]], Virdon also had a long tenure in [[Major League Baseball]] as a manager, with the Pirates (1972-73), [[New York Yankees]] (1974-75), [[Houston Astros]] (1975-82), and [[Montreal Expos]] (1983-84).


Virdon initially signed with the Yankees, but he never played for them. He was traded to the Cardinals in a multi-player deal in 1954 for veteran outfielder [[Enos Slaughter]], now a member of the [[Baseball Hall of Fame]]. A left-handed batter (who threw righthanded), Virdon's career [[batting average]] was .267 with 91 [[home runs]] during his 1,583-game career in the [[National League]]. He was the starting center fielder on the 1960 world champion Pirates, batting .241 in seven games.
Virdon initially signed with the Yankees, but he never played for them. He was traded to the Cardinals in a multi-player deal in 1954 for veteran outfielder [[Enos Slaughter]], now a member of the [[Baseball Hall of Fame]]. A left-handed batter (who threw righthanded), Virdon's career [[batting average]] was .267 with 91 [[home runs]] during his 1,583-game career in the [[National League]]. He was the starting center fielder on the 1960 world champion Pirates, batting .241 in seven games.

Revision as of 00:11, 16 July 2005

William Charles Virdon (born June 9, 1931) is a retired American baseball player, manager and coach. A premier top defensive outfielder in the game during his playing days (1955-65) as a center fielder for the St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates, Virdon also had a long tenure in Major League Baseball as a manager, with the Pirates (1972-73), New York Yankees (1974-75), Houston Astros (1975-82), and Montreal Expos (1983-84).

Virdon initially signed with the Yankees, but he never played for them. He was traded to the Cardinals in a multi-player deal in 1954 for veteran outfielder Enos Slaughter, now a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame. A left-handed batter (who threw righthanded), Virdon's career batting average was .267 with 91 home runs during his 1,583-game career in the National League. He was the starting center fielder on the 1960 world champion Pirates, batting .241 in seven games.

As a manager, he led the Pirates to the 1972 NL East title, but the Buccos dropped the NLCS to the Cincinnati Reds when Pittsburgh pitcher Bob Moose unleashed a wild pitch in the final inning of Game 5, allowing the winning run to score. His career managerial record, over all or parts of 13 seasons, was 995-921 (.519). He also served three different terms as a Pirates coach.