Hall-of-Fame Manager Bobby Cox, who enjoyed two successful tenures with The Atlanta Braves along with an impressive run with the Blue Jays in between, has died at 84. He had been suffering the last five years from congestive heart failure.
Cox won five pennants and one World Series championship as a manager. His sole championship with The Braves was an ongoing source of commentary as the teams he skippered were by any other measure one of the longest running dynasties in baseball history.
Cox had only a brief career as an MLB player, joining the late sixties Yankees as a part-time thirdbaseman for two seasons as they sunsetted out of the longest-running dynasty in American sports history, but parlayed a single year coaching for the World Series-winning 1977 Yankees into one of the most enduring managerial careers in history. His teams were marked by an all-time rotation anchored by long tenures from three Hall-of-Fame starters, stars drafted and developed out of the Georgia region, and a managerial regime defined by relentless umpire baiting. His career record of 162 ejections (a full season!) as manager is a whopping 38.8% more than John McGraw — the next-nearest competition. When you consider that this eclipses that totals of legendary malcontents like Leo Durocher, Earl Weaver, and Billy Martin, you have to tip your cap to him, or possible throw it on the ground, and kick dirt on it.
Along the way he fathered eight kids over two marriages and, well, those were not entirely without incident.
Prior to his COPD diagnosis, Cox also suffered a stroke in 2019. His number 6 is retired in the rafters of whatever stadium the Braves play in.