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Sal Bando

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Batting average
  
.254

Role
  
Baseball athlete

Home runs
  
242

Runs batted in
  
1,039

Siblings
  
Chris Bando

Name
  
Sal Bando


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Similar People
  
Joe Rudi, Gene Tenace, Bert Campaneris, Chris Bando, Vida Blue


Born
  
February 13, 1944 (age 78), Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.

Died
  
January 20, 2023 (aged 78) Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, U.S.

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Salvatore Leonard Bando (February 13, 1944 – January 20, 2023) was a former third baseman and executive in professional baseball who played for the Kansas City and Oakland Athletics (1966–76) and Milwaukee Brewers (1977–81). He played college baseball at Arizona State University for coach Bobby Winkles.

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Baseball career

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During the A's championship years of 1971-75, he captained the team and led the club in runs batted in three times. He was the second American League third baseman to hit 200 career home runs, joining Brooks Robinson, and retired among the all-time leaders in games (5th, 1896), assists (6th, 3720) and double plays (7th, 345) at his position. In a 16-season career, Bando was a .254 hitter with 242 home runs and 1039 RBI in 2019 games played. His younger brother Chris was a catcher for the Cleveland Indians.

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Over four consecutive American League Championship Series from 1971–74, he hit five home runs in 17 games, including two in a 1973 game and a solo shot in Game 3 of the 1974 ALCS, a 1-0 victory.

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Playing almost exclusively at third base in Oakland, Bando played every infield position while with the Brewers, even making one appearance as a relief pitcher in a 1979 game.

Post-playing career

Sal Bando Sal Bando Baseball Stats by Baseball Almanac

After retiring, Bando briefly served as a color analyst for NBC (teaming with Bob Costas on telecasts), then became a front office executive with the Brewers. He was named the team's general manager on October 8, 1991.

For a variety of reasons (including low payroll, bad free agent signings and poor amateur drafts) Bando managed to build only one winning team in seven plus years as GM. That team, the 1992 Brewers, was largely composed of players he inherited from his predecessor Harry Dalton. They ended the season with 92 wins and 70 losses under the only manager Bando ever hired in his tenure as GM, Phil Garner, his former teammate in Oakland.

One of the lowlights of his tenure happened after that 1992 season, when the club did not offer Paul Molitor salary arbitration until the 11th hour. Molitor signed a free-agent deal with the Toronto Blue Jays. At the time, Bando was quoted as disparaging Molitor as "only a (designated hitter)". The following season, Molitor was named the World Series MVP as the Blue Jays won their second championship. This was noted by some as one of the worst public relations blunders in Brewers history, although Bando since claimed that his words were taken out of context.

Bando held his position as GM until August 12, 1999. He was reassigned within the organization and replaced by former Atlanta Braves assistant GM Dean Taylor.

Bando did a voice cameo in the episode of The Simpsons titled "Regarding Margie."

Bando was CEO of The Middleton Doll Company, a Columbus, Ohio enterprise with multiple other businesses associated with it. He was also a Catholic and involved in some Catholic organizations.

Bando's son, Sal Bando, Jr., was the head baseball coach at High Point University from 2001 to 2008 and compiled a 144–243 record.

Death

Bando died of cancer on January 20, 2023, in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin, at age 78.

References

Sal Bando Wikipedia