Charlie Metro (born
Charles Moreskonich);was an outfielder for the
Detroit Tigers and the
Philadelphia Athletics, as well as a manager for the
Chicago Cubs and the
Kansas City Royals died from mesothelioma he was , 91.. He adopted the name "Metro" from his father, Metro Moreskonich, a Ukrainian immigrant. At age 18, he attended a tryout camp for the
St. Louis Browns, and he bounced around in the minor leagues. In 1940, he joined the Texarkana Liners, then an independent baseball team but which became affiliated with the
Detroit Tigers. Due to his light hitting ability, he was never able to become a full-time starter, although he did make the Tigers club out of
spring training in
1943. He was released by the Tigers in
1944, partly because of his attempts to organize a players union.
(April 28, 1919 – March 18, 2011)

The
Philadelphia Athletics picked him up, and, under
Connie Mack, Metro won 'a shot' at starting center fielder; but his inability to hit consistently cost him this job. At the end of 1944 he joined the
Oakland Oaks of the
Pacific Coast League, where he played under another manager,
Casey Stengel. In
1947, he was hired as a manager within the
New York Yankees organization, and soon he moved up the ranks to AAA. Eventually, he got his first big-league managing job with the
Chicago Cubs in their "
College of Coaches." He was fired after the
1962 season; then he joined the crosstown
Chicago White Sox as a scout, but soon returned to managing in the PCL.
In 1968, Metro joined the front office of the expansion
Kansas City Royals, where he had an active hand in the expansion draft. He took over as manager when
Joe Gordon resigned after only one season at the helm.
[2] But there his stint as manager was shorter than his Cubs tenure, lasting only 54 games (19 wins-35 losses). He was replaced by
Bob Lemon. Metro went back to scouting for the Tigers and the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Then followed coaching stints with the
Oakland Athletics, and in 1984 he returned to the Dodgers as a scout. After being dismissed by Los Angeles, Metro retired to his
Denver ranch. He died in
Buckingham, Virginia on March 18, 2011 from
mesothelioma.
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