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Connie Mack

Read through the most famous quotes from Connie Mack




As one of nine men, DiMaggio is the best player that ever lived.


— Connie Mack


#dimaggio #ever #lived #men #nine

Humanity is the keystone that holds nations and men together. When that collapses, the whole structure crumbles. This is as true of baseball teams as any other pursuit in life.


— Connie Mack


#baseball #collapses #crumbles #holds #humanity

I guess more players lick themselves that are ever licked by an opposing team. The first thing any man has to know is how to handle himself.


— Connie Mack


#ever #first #first thing #guess #handle

No matter what I talk about, I always get back to baseball.


— Connie Mack


#always #back #baseball #get #i

There has been only one manager, and his name is John McGraw.


— Connie Mack


#his #john #manager #name #only

You can't win them all.


— Connie Mack


#win #you

You're born with two strikes against you, so don't take a third one on your own.


— Connie Mack


#born #own #strikes #take #third






About Connie Mack

Connie Mack Quotes




Did you know about Connie Mack?

500 again until 1926. "Mack looked for seven things in a young player: physical ability intelligence courage disposition will power general alertness and personal habits. A faithful Catholic his entire life Mack was also a longtime member of the Knights of Columbus (Santa Maria Council 263 in Flourtown Pennsylvania).

He was the first manager to win the World Series three times and is the only manager to win consecutive Series on separate occasions (1910–11 1929–30); his five Series titles remain the third most by any manager and his nine American League pennants rank second in league history. The longest-serving manager in Major League Baseball history he holds records for wins (3731) losses (3948) and games managed (7755) with his victory total being almost 1000 more than any other manager. Mack managed the Philadelphia Athletics for the club's first 50 seasons of play starting in 1901 before retiring at age 87 following the 1950 season and was at least part-owner from 1901 to 1954.

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