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Tim Flannery (baseball)

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Batting average
  
.255

Role
  
Baseball player

Home runs
  
9

Spouse
  
Donna Flannery (m. 1981)

Runs batted in
  
209

Education
  
Name
  
Tim Flannery


Tim Flannery (baseball) UPDATE Tim Flannery explains his decision to leave SF

Children
  
Kelly Flannery, Danny Flannery, Virginia Flannery

Similar People
  
Bruce Bochy, Roberto Kelly, Dave Righetti, Ron Wotus, Mark Gardner

Airstream presents live riveted stories with tim flannery


Timothy Earl Flannery (born September 29, 1957) is a former Major League Baseball player who spent eleven seasons with the San Diego Padres, from 1979 to 1989. He was the 3rd base coach of the San Francisco Giants from 2007–2014. He is also the nephew of former Major League Baseball player Hal Smith.

Contents

Tim Flannery (baseball) Giants coach Tim Flannery raises 96K for beating victim

Bruce bochy on his favorite tim flannery story retirement from baseball


Minors

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Flannery earned all-league honors while playing for Anaheim High School, where he was also elected Homecoming King as a senior. He was drafted in the sixth round of the 1978 Major League Baseball draft by the Padres out of Chapman University in California. Standing at 5'11" tall and weighing 175 lbs., Flannery batted left-handed but threw right-handed.

Tim Flannery (baseball) mmlbcomassetsimages188144467188cutsFlann

In his first season in the minors (1978), Flannery batted .350 for the California League Reno Silver Sox. In 1979, he batted .345 with six home runs and 71 runs batted in to receive a September call-up to the majors. Flannery made his major league debut 26 days before his 22nd birthday, and was the eighth youngest player in the majors in 1979.

Tim Flannery (baseball) Tim Flannery Class of 1975

He batted lead-off and played second base against the San Francisco Giants at Jack Murphy Stadium (now Qualcomm Stadium) in his first game on September 3, 1979. Flannery was one for three and drove in the second run of the Padres' 3-0 victory.

Tim Flannery (baseball) Giants thirdbase coach Tim Flannery announces retirement MLBcom

His minor league success did not translate to major league success as he hit just .154 in 65 big league at bats, with his only extra base hit of the season being a triple. He split 1980 between the Padres and their triple A affiliate, the Hawaii Islanders. With Hawaii, Flannery batted .346, however, he hit only .240 in the majors that year. In 1981, he only appeared in 37 games and batted .254.

On-field performance

Tim Flannery (baseball) Tim Flannery Says Goodbye to Baseball Busch League Sports

Flannery's first full major league season without spending any time in the minors was 1982. It wasn't until his fifth season, 1983, that Flannery hit his first Major League home run—a solo shot off the Chicago Cubs' Chuck Rainey.

Flannery reached the post-season for the only time in his career in 1984. He made three plate appearances in the 1984 National League Championship Series and reached base all three times. Trailing 3-2 in game four of the series, Flannery hit a lead-off single in the fifth inning, and scored the tying run of the Padres' 7-5 victory over the Cubs. In game five, he reached on a ground ball that trickled through the legs of Cubs first baseman Leon Durham to score the tying run. In his only at-bat in the 1984 World Series, Flannery hit an eighth inning pinch hit single off Jack Morris in game four.

Flannery enjoyed his best year the following season. Having been used all over the infield up to this point in his career, he emerged as the Padres' regular second baseman in 1985. He batted .281 with 40 RBIs and 50 runs scored—all career highs. He was used as a bench player for the majority of his career.

He played his final big league game on his 32nd birthday—September 29, 1989. He spent nine seasons with Eric Show—longer than any other teammate.

Fan favorite

Though never a star, Flannery was a fan favorite in San Diego for much of his career. Team organist Danny Topaz would greet Flannery's plate appearances with the imposing strains of Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries. His retirement announcement in 1989 resulted in an outpouring of gifts and attention. In his final game, the sellout crowd greeted his first plate appearance with a standing ovation so prolonged that the umpire had to stop play, and following the game, there was discussion on at least one call-in show of whether Flannery's number should be retired.

Coaching

After a two-year hiatus from baseball, he became manager of the Padres' Northwest League affiliate Spokane Indians in 1993. The following season, he led the California League's Rancho Cucamonga Quakes to a 77–59 record, and in 1995, he was handed the reins to the triple A Las Vegas Stars. In 1996, he became third base coach for the Padres. He remained with manager Bruce Bochy's coaching staff through 2002. When Bochy was named manager of the San Francisco Giants for the 2007 season, Flannery joined him as third base coach for the Giants, where he coached the Giants through three World Series wins in 2010, 2012, and 2014. He announced his retirement on November 25, 2014, saying "I'm going to send myself home safely."

On Saturday, September 27, 2008, Flannery changed his number to 60 for one game because J. T. Snow came back from retirement and wore number 6. Snow was taken out before the first pitch.

Broadcasting

From 2004 to 2006, he was a TV and radio broadcaster for the Padres pre- and post-game shows, as well as a color commentator during selected game broadcasts. After he ended his coaching stint with the Giants, he started working for CSN Bay Area as an analyst on Giants Pregame Live and Giants Postgame Live. He was hired as an MLB Network analyst in 2015.

Personal life

He and his wife Donna have a son and two daughters. He is also a bluegrass musician and has released at least a dozen albums since 1997, both solo and with his group, The Lunatic Fringe. He has sung the National Anthem with Bob Weir and Phil Lesh of the Grateful Dead several times, including during the 2012 and 2014 playoffs.

Flannery has also held benefit concerts in support of injured Giants fan Bryan Stow. Flannery later founded the Love Harder Project to support other victims of violence.

References

Tim Flannery (baseball) Wikipedia