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John McNamara, manager of ill-fated ‘86 Red Sox, dead

By Staff | Aug 1, 2020

BOSTON (AP) – John McNamara, who managed the Boston Red Sox to within one strike of a World Series victory in 1986 before an unprecedented collapse on the field extended the team’s championship drought into the new millennium, has died. He was 88.

McNamara died Tuesday at his home in Tennessee, his wife, Ellen, told The Associated Press. The death was unexpected and the cause was not yet known, she said.

A weak-hitting catcher who first signed with the St. Louis Cardinals but never made it past Triple-A, McNamara went on to win – and lose – more than 1,000 games while managing six major league teams. He took over in Boston, his fifth, in 1985 and guided the Red Sox to the AL pennant the next year.

Trying to end a title drought dating to 1918, Boston held a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven World Series against the New York Mets. The Red Sox went ahead 5-3 in the 10th inning of Game 6 at Shea Stadium before a tumultuous series of mistakes allowed the NL champions to tie the score and then win it when Mookie Wilson’s groundball rolled through first baseman Bill Buckner’s legs. The Mets won Game 7, leaving Boston without a championship, until they finally won it all in 2004.

The Boston Globe first reported McNamara’s death on Wednesday – a day the Red Sox were also in New York to play the Mets. Boston won the game 6-5 – the same score by which the Red Sox lost that fateful Game 6.

McNamara stayed with the Red Sox into the 1988 season, when he was fired at the All-Star break with a 43-42 record; third base coach Joe Morgan replaced him and won 19 of his first 20 games – a string known as “Morgan Magic” – to lead the team to an AL East title.

McNamara, who had previously managed the Oakland Athletics, San Diego Padres, Cincinnati Reds and California Angels, went on to take over the Cleveland Indians in 1990, but was fired the next season.

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