
Pat Moran baseball card, 1911
'Patrick Joseph Moran' (
February 7,
1876 –
March 7,
1924) was an
American catcher and
manager in
Major League Baseball. As a manager, he led two teams to their first-ever modern-era
National League championships: the
1915 Philadelphia Phillies and the
1919 Cincinnati Reds. Moran's 1919 Reds also captured their first
World Series championship.
A native of
Fitchburg, Massachusetts, Moran played 819 games over 14 National League seasons for the
Boston Braves (1901-05),
Chicago Cubs (1906-09) and Phillies (1910-14). A righthanded hitter, he
batted .235 with 18
home runs. In
1903 he finished tied for second in the league in home runs with seven. After
1904 he did not appear in more than 100 games in a season. However, as a second-string catcher, Moran became a student of the game and especially of
pitching. In 1913-14, he was a player-
coach and, guided by his support and counsel, Phillies righthander
Grover Cleveland Alexander developed into one of the greatest pitchers of all time.
In 1915 Moran was promoted to manager of the Phillies. The club had finished sixth in
1914 and was plagued by defections (and threatened defections) to the outlaw
Federal League. Moran swung some astute trades and – led by Alexander’s 31 wins and the slugging of
right fielder Gavvy Cravath – the Phils improved by 17 games and won their first NL pennant. In the
1915 World Series, they were defeated four games to one by the
Boston Red Sox.
The Phillies then finished second in successive years, to the
Brooklyn Dodgers in
1916 and the
New York Giants in
1917. With baseball disrupted by
World War I (and after the trade of Alexander to the Cubs) the Quakers sank below .500 in
1918 and Moran was fired.

Pat Moran batting for Chicago Cubs, 1908
Concurrently, there was a job opening in Cincinnati, where manager
Christy Mathewson, the former pitching great, had been stricken with
tuberculosis from exposure to
poison gas during military maneuvers. The Reds had finished third, 15½ games behind, in 1918. Under Moran, they won 96 of 140 games in an abbreviated 1919 schedule to take the flag by nine games.
The
1919 World Series, won by Cincinnati five games to three, should have been Moran’s crowning accomplishment. But when it was charged that eight key members of the
American League champion
Chicago White Sox had conspired with gamblers to "throw" the series – the infamous
Black Sox Scandal – the Reds' achievement was somehow tarnished. (The eight players were acquitted in a controversial 1920 trial but were nonetheless expelled from baseball.) In the wake of the scandal, Moran, his players and many baseball experts would furiously assert that Cincinnati would have won the series under any circumstances.
Moran remained at the helm in Cincinnati during the early 1920s. Apart from a poor 1921 campaign, the Reds fielded contending ballclubs but did not return to the World Series. The club finished second in
1922 and
1923. During the 1923-24 off-season at his Fitchburg home, Moran became ill. He reported to the Reds' training camp in
Orlando, Florida, but his condition worsened and he died there at the age of 48. The cause of death was listed as
Bright's Disease, a
kidney ailment, but some baseball historians ascribe Moran's fatal illness to
alcoholism.
Moran won 748 games and lost 586 (.561) as a major league manager over nine seasons. He won six and lost seven World Series games.
External links
★
Baseball-Reference.com - career managing record and playing statistics
★
The Deadball Era
References
★ ''
The New York Times'', quoted at http//www.thedeadballera.com
★ Biography Project,
Society for American Baseball Research