Philip Mason Garner (born April 30, 1949) is an American former professional baseball player and manager. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) as an infielder with the Oakland Athletics, Pittsburgh Pirates, Houston Astros, Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants from to . With the Pirates, he won the 1979 World Series over the Baltimore Orioles. He was manager of the Astros from July 14, to August 27, , leading Houston to a World Series appearance in .
Bearden's baseball facility is now named Phil Garner Ballpark, and the school dedicated a bronze bust of Garner in front of the facility in 2003.
He attended the University of Tennessee on a baseball scholarship, playing second and third base on the baseball team from 1968-70. In 1969, he led the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in (12), and twice led his team in runs batted in (RBI). He was selected All-Southeastern Conference twice, and was named an in 1970. Two years after being drafted into professional baseball, in 1973, Garner graduated with a Business Administration degree.
In 2002, he was inducted into the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame. In 2009, the University of Tennessee retired his number 18.
In 1973, he played for the Tucson Toros of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League, with a .289 batting average, 14 home runs, 73 RBI and 87 runs scored. He came up to the A's for nine games at the end of the year, but was back at Tucson for the majority of the following year in 1974. He was even better at Tucson in 1974, batting .330, but again played sparsely when called up to the A's later in the year. The A's won two World Series in 1973 and 1974, but Garner was not on the World Series roster either year. Garner's problem was the A's had an All-Star third baseman in Sal Bando, and there was no place for Garner to play.
During spring training in 1975, the A's released second baseman Dick Green, and converted Garner into a second baseman. He started 159 games at second base for the A's in 1975, and had a .968 fielding percentage. This was the first time since 1972, however, that the A's did not win the World Series. Among other things, the A's lost future Hall of Fame pitcher Catfish Hunter to the New York Yankees in one of the earliest free agency signings in modern baseball. On June 27, 1975, he got the A's 10,000th hit against the Angels, on a double off Andy Hassler in Anaheim. Garner had a breakout year for Oakland in 1976 in which he hit 8 home runs and had 74 RBI's. He was named an All-Star that year, the first of his career. He stole a career high 35 bases that year.
Before the 1977 season, the Athletics traded Garner, Chris Batton, and Tommy Helms to the Pittsburgh Pirates for Tony Armas, Rick Langford, Doug Bair, Dave Giusti, Doc Medich, and Mitchell Page. Garner's best year as a player was in when he hit 17 HR's, had 77 RBI's, stole 32 bases, hit 35 doubles, and scored 99 runs. On September 15, 1978, Garner became one of only seven Major League players to hit a grand slam in consecutive games (including Babe Ruth twice), though as of 2024 the number is near 30.
In , he was a member of the World Series champion Pittsburgh Pirates, batting .417 in the 1979 National League Championship Series and .500 (12 for 24) in the World Series.
Garner was "Scrap-Iron" due to his gritty style of play. After being traded to Pittsburgh, the team's announcer, Milo Hamilton, asked Pirates Hall of Fame outfielder Willie Stargell about Garner. Stargell said the tough and competitive Garner was like an old piece of scrap metal that can be beaten and bent, but not broken. Hamilton then gave Garner the name "Scrap-Iron". His icon at the time was the scrappy, similarly mustachioed cartoon hero, Yosemite Sam. He was named an All-Star again in 1980, batting .259 while hitting 5 home runs, with 58 RBI and stealing 32 bases. He was named an All-Star for a third and final time in his career the next season in 1981, though his stats declined from previous years. He hit just 1 home run while having 26 RBI on the year and had just 10 stolen bases.
On August 31, 1981, Garner was traded from the Pirates to the Houston Astros for second baseman Johnny Ray and pitcher Randy Niemann. In 1986, Garner helped Houston win a National League West Division title and reach the National League Championship Series (NLCS) to face the New York Mets. In Game 6, on October 15, 1986, Garner was the Astros' starting third baseman in a 16-inning loss, going 1-for-3, unil being replaced by a pinch-hitter. The Astros lost the NLCS to the Mets in six games. This was the final postseason appearance of his playing career. He remained with Houston until 1987.
He was traded in 1987 to the Los Angeles Dodgers, who granted him free agency after the season, and then spent a year with San Francisco Giants in 1988. He went through 1989 without signing with anybody and announced his retirement a year later in 1990.
He led the team to a nine-game improvement from the previous year and led the Brewers to second place in the American League East Division, losing out by four games to the eventual world champion Toronto Blue Jays. He finished second in voting for American League Manager of the Year. However, it would be the last time until 2007 that the team would finish above .500. Garner would lead them to more than 80 losses in four of his six full seasons spent with the team, which saw icons such as Paul Molitor and Robin Yount leave (the former in free agency and the latter due to retirement). He was fired in the midst of a 1999 season that saw them at 52-60 (Jim Lefebvre would replace him and go 22-27 to close out the year).
A 1993 game saw Garner refer to Chicago White Sox broadcasters Ken Harrelson and Tom Paciorek as "idiots" for their on-air insinuation that Garner was advising his pitcher to hit Frank Thomas. Garner challenged them to a fight, but they eventually resolved their differences. During a July 22, 1995, game against the Chicago White Sox, Garner was involved in a bench-clearing brawl, exchanging blows with White Sox manager Terry Bevington in a rare skipper-on-skipper fistfight. Garner, along with Bevington, was suspended four games for the fracas.Archived at Ghostarchive and the
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Wayback Machine: With a record of 563-617 as manager, Garner led the Brewers for most wins and losses as a manager. Craig Counsell passed him in wins in 2022.
Undaunted, he led the Astros to a National League Wild Card berth, going 48-26 with Garner at the helm. The Astros won a total of 92 games and clinched a Wild Card berth on the final day of the season. The Astros won the 2004 National League Division Series over the Atlanta Braves after having lost to them in the postseason three times from 1997 to 2001, and it was their first postseason series victory in franchise history. They met the 105-win St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Championship Series. The Astros led the series 3-2 going into St. Louis, but they lost Game 6 and 7 in late innings to lose the series.
The team experienced another slow start in 2005, losing 30 of their first 45 games, but made a run once again late in the season and came back to win another National League Wild Card, bolstered by the pitching talents of Clemens and Pettitte, to go along with 20-game winner Roy Oswalt. This time, Houston would beat the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League Championship Series in six games, with Oswalt the series MVP, and win the pennant only to be swept by the Chicago White Sox in the World Series.
In the 2005 NLDS against the Atlanta Braves, Garner was the Astros' manager in their 18-inning victory on October 9, . Two weeks later in the 2005 World Series, Garner managed the Astros for the longest World Series game in length of time to that point (five hours and forty-one minutes). The Chicago White Sox won the game, 7–5 in the 14th inning. This was later surpassed in both time (seven hours and twenty minutes) and innings (eighteen) by Game 3 of the 2018 World Series, in which the Dodgers prevailed over the Red Sox 3–2.
Under his leadership in the last twelve games of the 2006 season, the Astros won ten of twelve but lost out on a division title by a game and half. Garner's contract was extended through the end of the 2008 season by the Astros, but his coaches were replaced. As manager of a pennant winning team the year before, Garner managed the 2006 National League All-Star Team in Pittsburgh on July 11, . Garner named his former Pirates manager Chuck Tanner as one of the National League All-Star team coaches. Garner cited Tanner as one of his biggest coaching influences.
The Astros went into a tailspin in 2007, owing to the aging talent on their roster (Jeff Bagwell had retired in 2005 while Craig Biggio played his last season in 2007 to go with no Clemens or Pettitte, who each left for New York after 2006). On August 27, , Phil Garner was released by the Astros along with general manager Tim Purpura with the team having a record of 58-73. Cecil Cooper was named interim manager for the remainder of the season. Team owner Drayton McLane stated on the firing, "This was two years in the process. I've observed things, watched things, talked to literally hundreds of people as I go through. I went through the stands yesterday, and every game. I ask people, 'What do you think?' It's amazing what people will tell you. It's the impact others had on me, over a period of time." In 2009, Garner was interviewed as a candidate for the managerial job of the Astros when Cooper was fired, but Brad Mills was hired.
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