About: Frank Verdi   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

A 1944 graduate of Brooklyn's Boys High School, Verdi attended New York University. He served in the United States Navy during World War II. Verdi only appeared in one game as a defensive replacement to Phil Rizzuto at shortstop on May 10, 1953. He did not have a plate appearance in the game, nor did he handle a chance in the field, before being replaced in the lineup. As a minor league player, Verdi was famous for his abiity to execute the hidden ball trick. In 1949, as a second baseman for the Binghamton Triplets in the Class A Eastern League, he pulled off the trick seven times in 95 games.

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  • Frank Verdi
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  • A 1944 graduate of Brooklyn's Boys High School, Verdi attended New York University. He served in the United States Navy during World War II. Verdi only appeared in one game as a defensive replacement to Phil Rizzuto at shortstop on May 10, 1953. He did not have a plate appearance in the game, nor did he handle a chance in the field, before being replaced in the lineup. As a minor league player, Verdi was famous for his abiity to execute the hidden ball trick. In 1949, as a second baseman for the Binghamton Triplets in the Class A Eastern League, he pulled off the trick seven times in 95 games.
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  • A 1944 graduate of Brooklyn's Boys High School, Verdi attended New York University. He served in the United States Navy during World War II. Verdi only appeared in one game as a defensive replacement to Phil Rizzuto at shortstop on May 10, 1953. He did not have a plate appearance in the game, nor did he handle a chance in the field, before being replaced in the lineup. As a minor league player, Verdi was famous for his abiity to execute the hidden ball trick. In 1949, as a second baseman for the Binghamton Triplets in the Class A Eastern League, he pulled off the trick seven times in 95 games. Verdi made a much larger mark as a minor league manager for 21 seasons (1961-70; 1972; 1974; 1977-85) at the affiliated level. He spent much of that period in the Yankees' farm system, winning Triple-A International League championships in 1969-70 (with the Syracuse Chiefs) and in 1981 (with the Columbus Clippers). He also managed the New York Mets' Tidewater Tides for four seasons (1977-80) and the Baltimore Orioles' Rochester Red Wings farm club from 1984 through June 16, 1985, and spent brief managing stints in the Houston Astros, Minnesota Twins and Washington Senators organizations. His record as a manager was 1,351 wins, 1,332 losses (.504). Verdi also survived a nearly tragic accident on July 25, 1959, when, as a player for the Rochester Red Wings, he was struck in the head by a stray bullet in Havana during a game against the Havana Sugar Kings. Verdi was standing in as the team's third base coach after the ejection of Rochester manager Cot Deal when shooting broke out in the stands. Verdi was still wearing the plastic lining in his baseball cap in lieu of a batting helmet and the lining deflected the bullet, which eventually caused a minor shoulder wound. After that, Verdi managed in independent leagues during the 1990s and for the Indios de Mayagüez of the Puerto Rico Baseball League from 1984 to 1985. His son, Mike Verdi, also was a minor league manager. Verdi died in New Port Richey, Florida, at the age of 84.
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