Joey Amalfitano

Joey Amalfitano

Infobox MLB retired
bgcolor2=#181818
bgcolor1=#F9461C
textcolor1=white
textcolor2=white
name=Joey Amalfitano


position=Second Baseman
bats=Right
throws=Right
birthdate=birth date and age|1934|1|23
deathdate=
debutdate=May 3
debutyear=1954
debutteam=New York Giants
finaldate=June 27
finalyear=1967
finalteam=Chicago Cubs
stat1label=AVG
stat1value=.244
stat2label=Hits
stat2value=418
stat3label=Runs
stat3value=248
teams= As Player
*New York/San Francisco Giants (by|1954-by|1955, by|1960-by|1961, by|1963)
*Houston Colt .45's (by|1962)
*Chicago Cubs (by|1964-by|1967)As Manager
*Chicago Cubs (by|1979-by|1981)
highlights=

John Joseph Amalfitano (born January 23, 1934 in San Pedro, California) is a special advisor for player development in the farm system of the San Francisco Giants of American Major League Baseball and a former utility infielder, manager and longtime coach at the Major League level.

Amalfitano attended Loyola University of Los Angeles and the University of Southern California. Because he signed a "bonus contract" when he became a professional player in by|1954, Amalfitano spent the first two years of his pro career sitting on the bench of the New York Giants under the terms of the rule then in force. But after four years in the minor leagues, he returned to the National League in by|1960 and played through the middle of by|1967 for the Giants, Houston Colt .45s and Chicago Cubs. Amalfitano, a right-handed hitter and thrower, batted .244 in 1,715 at bats with nine home runs.

After playing his final game on June 27, 1967, Amalfitano became a coach for the Cubs, serving under his first-ever manager, Leo Durocher. He moved back to the Giants as a coach in by|1972, then to the San Diego Padres from by|1976-by|1977 before rejoining the Cubs as a member of Herman Franks' staff in by|1978 and by|1979.

Amalfitano served as Chicago's interim manager after Franks' resignation in September 1979, compiling a record of 2-5 to finish the season. That autumn, the Cubs appointed Preston Gómez manager, with Amalfitano retained as a coach. But when Chicago started the by|1980 campaign poorly under Gómez, winning only 38 of 90 games, he was fired in July and Amalfitano was named his permanent successor. The Cubs won only 26 games, losing 46, to remain in the basement of the National League East Division, but Amalfitano was allowed to return for by|1981. During that strike-shortened, split-season campaign, his team won a total of 38 games, losing 65, finishing last and next-to-last with the worst overall record in the division. At season's end, he was fired during a general housecleaning of the Chicago front office. Amalfitano's career record as a manager, over all or parts of three seasons with the Cubs, was 66-116 (.363).

However, he remained active in baseball, returning to coaching with the Cincinnati Reds (by|1982) and then spending 16 seasons as the third base coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers (by|1983-by|1998). He then worked with minor league infielders in his original organization, the Giants, before assuming his current position with them.

ources

* [http://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/A/Pamalj101.htm Retrosheet]


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