• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Baltimore Sports Today

Baltimore Sports Today

Baltimore Sports News Continuously Updated

  • Football
    • Ravens
    • Redskins
  • Baseball
    • Nationals
    • Orioles
  • Basketball
    • Mystics
    • Wizzards
  • Capitals
  • Soccer
    • Blast
    • D.C. United
    • Spirit
  • Colleges
    • George Mason
    • George Washington University
    • Georgetown
    • Howard
    • Johns Hopkins
    • Morgan State
    • Towson
    • University of Maryland

Classic Card: Billy Hitchcock, 1967

September 3, 2025 by Baltimore Baseball

That’s a grin, isn’t it?

Billy Hitchcock’s smile is so genuine and infectious on his 1967 Topps card that it’s hard to look at the card without breaking into a broad smile yourself.

It’s a card that says everything about the person on it. Hitchcock was a courtly Southern gentleman from Inverness, Alabama, a baseball and football star in the ‘30s at what is now Auburn University. Through his decades-long run in organized baseball as a player, manager, coach, scout and league president, he never changed his kindly approach to being a person in the world.

“Billy was a hell of a man and a hell of a nice guy,” Orioles pitcher Milt Pappas said in his Bird Tapes interview.

It was for that reason that then-Orioles GM Lee MacPhail picked Hitchcock to manage the Orioles in 1962 after Paul Richards suddenly departed to oversee the launch of an expansion team in Houston. Richards was a brilliant and original baseball thinker who’d done as much as anyone to build the Orioles into a contender, but he was an aloof, distant and somewhat stern figure who often communicated with his players through his coaches. The Orioles won 95 games in Richards’ final season in Baltimore in 1961, but MacPhail thought the team would benefit from having a manager who was easier to live with.

Hitchcock was, indeed, easier to live with — too easy, it turned out. MacPhail was dead wrong in thinking the team would benefit, as he admitted in a 1999 interview for my book on Orioles history.

“He seemed like an ideal guy. A wonderful guy. He just didn’t inspire the team,” MacPhail said. “Some managers have that ability. Billy didn’t. He just wasn’t tough enough with them. They didn’t respond.”

(Note from John Eisenberg: I have a recording of my interview with MacPhail, but it took place in a restaurant and there’s so much competing noise that his words aren’t discernible enough to play as a Bird Tape. Sorry. Frustrating.)

I also interviewed Hitchcock in 1999 for my book, and fully on brand, he agreed with MacPhail, taking responsibility for the debacle that unfolded in Baltimore.

“I was sort of easygoing with the players,” Hitchcock told me. “You can’t beat them or whip them. You can fine them, but that’s about it. I guess Lee felt I wasn’t demanding enough. Too easygoing. But that’s the way I managed. When I played, I didn’t need to have a manager be tough on me. I was going to give 100 percent. But my approach to that situation wasn’t exactly right. It didn’t work.”

Coming off the 95-win season in 1961, the 1962 Orioles featured future Hall of Famers Brooks Robinson, Robin Roberts and Hoyt Wilhelm as well as Boog Powell, Jim Gentile, Steve Barber and Pappas — the outline of a contender, for sure. But they regressed badly under the new manager, winning just 77 games.

“The inmates were running the asylum,” outfielder Barry Shetrone pointedly told me in his Bird Tapes interview. “Everyone had been afraid of Richards and Hitchcock was very laidback, didn’t say much, and everyone went wild, like they’d gotten out of prison. It was crazy. A wild time. People playing cards right up to game time. No discipline at all. And quite a bit of drinking was going on. Billy was just put in a difficult situation, coming into an organization where he didn’t know the players, didn’t know what to expect. He was just too nice a guy for the job.”

Hitchcock told me, “Some guys might have taken advantage of me. I could see it. It was happening. But I couldn’t be a Joe McCarthy or a Paul Richards. I had to be me. But in this case, being Billy Hitchcock wasn’t the right thing.”

Overseeing such an immediate collapse can cost a manager his job, but MacPhail gave Hitchcock another chance in 1963 and the Orioles fared better. They were in first place at the end of May and ended up winning 86 games. Still, MacPhail had seen enough. He gave Hitchcock another job in the organization in 1964 and hired a new manager — Hank Bauer, a former Marine who’d earned a handful of World Series rings with the Yankees. The Orioles won a World Series in Bauer’s third year on the job.

By then, Hitchcock had departed Baltimore for a job with the Braves, who’d moved from Milwaukee to Atlanta, near where he lived in Opelika, Alabama. He started out as a scout but took over as the manager of the major league club after the All-Star break in 1966. This time, his easygoing approach worked and the Braves finished strong, convincing the club to keep him on as the manager in 1967.

Thus, we have the pleasure of seeing the card at the top of this post.

After the Braves won 77 games in 1967, Hitchcock announced his retirement. Within a few years, he was the president of the Southern League, a Double-A minor league circuit. In 1997, the baseball stadium at Auburn was renamed Hitchcock Field — a high honor certainly not based on his record as a major league manager, but rather, on the fact that he was a very nice guy.

BaltimoreBaseball.com is delighted to be partnering with John Eisenberg, the author and longtime Baltimore sports columnist, whose latest venture is an Orioles history project called The Bird Tapes. Available via subscription at birdtapes.substack.com/subscribe, the Bird Tapes is built around a set of vintage interviews with Orioles legends that Eisenberg recorded a quarter-century while writing a book about the team. Paid subscribers can hear the interviews, which have been digitized to make them easily consumable. The Bird Tapes also includes new writing on Orioles history from Eisenberg, who is the author of 11 books, including two on the Orioles. BaltimoreBaseball.com will publish Eisenberg’s new writing.

You’ll receive instant access to vintage audio interviews with Orioles legends, including:

Jon Miller
Davey Johnson
Earl Weaver
Fred Lynn
Al Bumbry
Peter Angelos
Rick Dempsey
Elrod Hendricks
Mike Flanagan
Eddie Murray
Ken Singleton
Brooks Robinson
Frank Robinson
Boog Powell
Cal Ripken, Jr.
Paul Blair

And many more to come, added weekly

SUBSCRIBE HERE

Filed Under: Orioles

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Pundit Picks: Majority Sees Ravens Beating Bills in Buffalo
  • Traditional marriage advocates sharpen message as Supreme Court eyes challenge to same-sex marriage
  • What to know about the vendors, tenders and concessions at Commanders games
  • News & Notes: Jaire Alexander Practices Fully, Looks Primed to Make Debut
  • Trump: Zohran Mamdani likely to be New York mayor unless 2 opponents quit race

Categories

  • Baseball
    • Nationals
    • Orioles
  • Basketball
    • Mystics
    • Wizzards
  • Capitals
  • Colleges
    • George Mason
    • George Washington University
    • Georgetown
    • Howard
    • Morgan State
    • Navy
    • Towson
    • University of Maryland
  • Football
    • Ravens
    • Redskins
  • Soccer
    • Blast
    • D.C. United
    • Spirit
  • Uncategorized

Archives

Our Partners

All Sports

  • 247 Sports
  • Bleacher Report
  • CBS Baltimore
  • Forgotten 5
  • NBC Sports Washington
  • Maryland Sports Blog
  • OurSports Central
  • PressBoxOnline.com
  • The Baltimore Sun
  • The Baltimore Wire
  • The Sports Daily
  • The Sports Fan Journal
  • The Spun
  • USA Today
  • Washington Post
  • Washington Times

Baseball

  • MLB.com - Orioles
  • MLB.com - Nationals
  • Baltimore Baseball
  • Birds Watcher
  • Camden Chat
  • District On Deck
  • Federal Baseball
  • Last Word On Baseball - Nationals
  • Last Word On Baseball - Orioles
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Nationals
  • MLB Trade Rumors - Orioles
  • Nationals Arm Race
  • Orioles Hangout

Basketball

  • NBA.com
  • WNBA.com
  • Amico Hoops
  • Bullets Forever
  • High Post Hoops
  • Hoops Hype
  • Hoops Rumors
  • Last Word On Pro Basketball
  • Pro Basketball Talk
  • Real GM
  • Wiz Of Awes

Football

  • Baltimore Ravens
  • Washington Redskins
  • Baltimore Beatdown
  • Baltimore Gridiron Report
  • Ebony Bird
  • Hogs Haven
  • Last Word On Pro Football - Washington Commanders
  • Last Word On Pro Football - Baltimore Ravens
  • NFL Trade Rumors - Ravens
  • NFL Trade Rumors - Redskins
  • Our Turf Football - Ravens
  • Our Turf Football - Redskins
  • Pro Football Rumors - Ravens
  • Pro Football Rumors - Redskins
  • Pro Football Talk - Redskins
  • Pro Football Talk - Ravens
  • Redskins Gab
  • Ravens Wire
  • Redskins Wire
  • Riggos Rag
  • Total Ravens

Hockey

  • Washington Capitals
  • Elite Prospects
  • Japers Rink
  • Last Word On Hockey
  • Pro Hockey Rumors
  • Pro Hockey Talk
  • Stars And Sticks
  • The Hockey Writers

Soccer

  • Baltimore Blast
  • Black And Red United
  • Last Word on Soccer - DC United
  • Last Word on Soccer - Spirit
  • MLS Multiplex

College

  • Big East Coast Bias
  • Busting Brackets
  • Casual Hoya
  • College Football News
  • College Sports Madness
  • Fourth Estate
  • GW Hatchet
  • Saturday Blitz
  • The Diamondback
  • The Hilltop
  • The Hoya
  • Testudo Times
  • Zags Blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in