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Bio
Carroll Christopher Chambliss (born December 26, 1948) is
a former Major League Baseball player who played from 1971 to 1988
for the Cleveland Indians, New York Yankees and Atlanta Braves. On
November 4, 2010, Chambliss was hired as the hitting coach of the
Seattle Mariners.
In 1976, he received his only selection to the All-Star
team.
In the 1976 American League Championship Series, his
first-pitch, walk off home run off Mark Littell of the Kansas City
Royals gave the Yankees their first trip to the World Series since
1964.
Chambliss played three more seasons with the Yankees, winning
a Gold Glove for fielding prowess in 1978. He then moved on to
Atlanta from 1980-1986. He had one at-bat with the Yankees in 1988
and struck out. After his playing days ended, Chambliss became a
hitting instructor for several teams and was talked about as a
possible managerial candidate.
In 1989, Chambliss became the manager for the Double-A London
Tigers of the Eastern League, an affiliate of the Detroit Tigers.
The London Tigers won the Eastern League title in 1990, playing out
of Labatt Park. That same year Chambliss was named Minor League
Manager of the Year by The Sporting News.
Chambliss was also a hitting coach with the Yankees, and has
the distinction of being one of two men who wore a Yankees uniform
(player or coach) during each of the Yankees' last six World Series
Championship seasons prior to 2009 (1977, 1978, 1996, 1998, 1999,
and 2000) -- the other is former New York Mets manager Willie
Randolph. Chambliss was also the hitting coach for the St. Louis
Cardinals, New York Mets and Cincinnati Reds.
Most recently, Chambliss was the manager of the Triple A
Charlotte Knights prior to joining the Seattle Mariners in
November, 2010 as hitting coach.