Charlie Fox | |||
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Catcher | |||
Born: New York City |
October 7, 1921|||
Died: February 16, 2004 Stanford, California |
(aged 82)|||
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MLB debut | |||
September 24, 1942, for the New York Giants | |||
Last MLB appearance | |||
September 26, 1942, for the New York Giants | |||
MLB statistics | |||
Batting average | .429 | ||
Home runs | 0 | ||
Runs batted in | 1 | ||
Teams | |||
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Career highlights and awards | |||
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Charles Francis Fox (October 7, 1921 – February 16, 2004) was an American manager, general manager, scout, coach—and, briefly, a catcher—in Major League Baseball. As manager of the National League West Division champion San Francisco Giants in 1971, he was named "Manager of the Year" by The Sporting News.
Born in New York City, Fox appeared in only three games as a Major League player—garnering three hits in seven at bats for a career batting average of .429—with the 1942 New York Giants. But Fox would spend another 33 years in that organization as a minor league catcher and manager and as a manager, scout and coach for the Giants, who relocated to San Francisco in 1958.
Fox spent eight years as manager of the Giants' Class C St. Cloud Rox team in the Northern League, scouted from 1957 to 1963, then managed the Giants' Triple-A Tacoma affiliate of the Pacific Coast League in 1964 before coming to the Major Leagues as a San Francisco coach under Herman Franks in 1965. He returned to the PCL to pilot the Giants' Phoenix affiliate in 1969–70 until he was summoned to San Francisco on May 24, 1970 to replace Clyde King as the manager of the MLB Giants.