Clyde Edward King was an
American pitcher,
coach,
manager,
general manager and front office executive in
Major League Baseball. King, whose career in baseball spanned over 60 years, was perhaps best known for his longtime role as a special
baseball advisor to
George Steinbrenner, late owner of the
New York Yankees died he was , 86. During his on-field career he managed the
San Francisco Giants (1969–70),
Atlanta Braves (1974–75) and Yankees (part of 1982), finishing with a career record of 234 wins and 229 defeats (.505).
(May 23, 1924 – November 2, 2010)
Career

King attended the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A right-handed pitcher, he made his debut with the
Brooklyn Dodgers at age 20 in 1944, his first professional season, during the manpower shortage caused by
World War II. Although King would be sent to the
minor leagues for seasoning after the war, he proved to be a solid member of the Brooklyn pitching staff (1944–45, 1947–48, 1951–52), winning 14 games for the 1951 Dodgers. When he finished his major league career with the
Cincinnati Reds in 1953, King had appeared in an even 200 games, winning 32 and losing 25 with an
earned run average of 4.60.
Before becoming a major league manager, he managed several higher-level
minor league clubs, including the
Atlanta Crackers,
Hollywood Stars,
Phoenix Giants and
Rochester Red Wings, and served as a pitching coach for the Reds and
Pittsburgh Pirates. He was inducted in the
Kinston Professional Baseball Hall of Fame in 1999.
King joined the Yankees' front office in 1976 and played a number of key roles for almost 30 years — super scout, pitching coach, general manager and special advisor, in addition to managing them for the final 62 games of 1982. Replacing
Gene Michael, he won 29 games and lost 33 as the defending
American League champions fell to fifth place in the AL East division. The Yankees players believed King was a spy for Steinbrenner.
[1]
Personal
King died in his native
Goldsboro, North Carolina, at the age of 86,
[2] survived by his wife Norma, their three daughters and sons-in-law, eight grandchildren and one great-grandchild.
[3]
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