Title of the Article : Gene Tenace

Fury Gene Tenace (, born Fiore Gino Tennaci on October 10, 1946 in Russellton, Pennsylvania), is a former Italian-American Major League Baseball player who was a catcher and first baseman in the 1970s. He is currently the hitting coach for the Toronto Blue Jays. As a player, he was a key part of the Oakland Athletics powerhouse that won 3 consecutive World Series from 1972 to 1974. He was the World Series Most Valuable Player in 1972, hitting 4 home runs. He was one of the top catchers of his era. He not only caught nearly 900 games, but also played first base over 600 times. Tenace was known for his power, especially versus right-handed pitching. Despite having a low batting average, Tenace had excellent patience at the plate and drew a lot of walks. In 1991, he briefly served as the interim manager of the Toronto Blue Jays while Cito Gaston was sidelined. As a coach, he won 2 more World Series with the Blue Jays in 1992 and 1993, serving as the hitting instructor. After parting ways with the Blue Jays in 1997, he was re-hired as the Blue Jays' hitting coach on June 20, 2008, when Cito Gaston replaced John Gibbons as the team's manager. Tenace was one of two members of Gaston's old coaching staff from his last World Series championship team that was brought back to the team (third base coach Nick Leyva being the other).

[Last contributor : SmackBot , Content under LGPL licence]

Detailed statistics

Number of views for this article Number of quality votes for this article Number of votes 'not clear' for this article Number of votes 'wrong' for this article
daily 1 0 0 0
global 80 2 35 5
This is a quality article
This article is not clear!
This article is wrong

Participate in this top by giving your opinion on the quality of this article short resume and by giving a general rating.
Register in order to improve your reputation and so the weight of your opinion.

Please wait...
Item popularity: 2.1/5 (26 vote cast)

Comments