Dave Bristol

{{short description|American baseball player and manager}}

{{Infobox baseball biography

|name=Dave Bristol

|image=Dave Bristol Braves.jpg

|team=

|number=

|position=Manager

|birth_date={{birth date and age|1933|6|23}}

|birth_place= Macon, Georgia, U.S.

|bats=Right

|throws=Right

|debutleague =

|debutdate=

|debutyear=

|debutteam=

|finalleague =

|finaldate=

|finalyear=

|finalteam=

|statleague =

|stat1label=Games managed

|stat1value=1,424

|stat2label=Win–loss record

|stat2value=657–764

|stat3label=Winning %

|stat3value=.462

|teams=

As manager

As coach

| awards =

}}

James David Bristol (born June 23, 1933) is an American former professional baseball manager and coach in Major League Baseball (MLB).

Success in the minors, and with the Reds

Bristol attended high school at the Baylor School in Chattanooga, Tennessee. He went on to University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Western Carolina University. Bristol worked as an assistant football coach at Murphy High School in Cherokee County, North Carolina.{{cite news |last=Quinones-Belian |first=Anngee |title=Having a ball reuniting in The Ballroom |work=Cherokee Scout |location=Murphy, N.C. |publisher=Community Newspapers, Inc. |date=2023-11-01 |page=8A }} A right-handed hitting and throwing infielder, he never played in the Major Leagues. Bristol became a playing manager in the Cincinnati farm system at the age of 24 with the Hornell Redlegs of the Class D New York–Penn League in 1957. By 1964, he was managing the Reds' top farm team, the San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League, where, at age 31, he won a pennant and playoff title—the fifth league championship of his eight-year career to date. In nine seasons (1957–65) as a minor league pilot, his teams won 652 games and lost 562 (.537).

In 1966, Bristol was named to the Reds' coaching staff, and when the team performed badly under rookie skipper Don Heffner, Bristol took over the club as manager on July 13. Bristol guided the Reds through three winning seasons, but he was dismissed following the {{baseball year|1969}} campaign. Sparky Anderson, who took over, would go into the Baseball Hall of Fame as the leader of the "Big Red Machine".

Cincinnati (298–265, .529) represented the high-water mark of Bristol's managing career. He would never manage another winning club.

Later struggles

Not long after being fired by the Reds, Bristol was hired by the Seattle Pilots as the second manager in their history. He walked into a very difficult situation; the Pilots were on the verge of bankruptcy, and went to spring training not knowing whether they would play in Seattle or Milwaukee in {{Baseball year|1970}}. Just six days before Opening Day, the Pilots got word they would be moving to Milwaukee as the Brewers. The Brewers under Bristol were never able to put together a winning team; he was fired 30 games into the 1972 season.

In 1976, Bristol was hired as manager of the Atlanta Braves. Midway through the {{baseball year|1977}} season, with the Braves mired in a 16-game losing streak, owner Ted Turner sent Bristol on a 10-day "scouting trip" and took over as his own manager. This only lasted for one game (a 2–1 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates) before National League president Chub Feeney ordered Turner to give up the reins, citing major league rules which forbid managers or players from owning stock in a team.{{cite web|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1092438/index.htm|title=Benched from the Bench|publisher=Sports Illustrated|date=May 5, 1977|last=Hannon|first=Kent|access-date=March 29, 2020|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130615165546/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1092438/index.htm|archive-date=June 15, 2013}} After the Braves broke the streak with third-base coach Vern Benson as interim manager, Bristol was brought back to finish out what was at the time the worst season in the Atlanta portion of Braves history. He was fired at the end of the season.{{cite news|title=Atlanta Fires Bristol As Team Starts Rebuilding|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=WS1PAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WgIEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6362,6462266&dq=dave+bristol+atlanta+braves&hl=en|access-date=August 7, 2015|agency=Associated Press (AP)|newspaper=The Blade|date=October 26, 1977|location=Toledo, Ohio|page=46}} He last managed in MLB with the San Francisco Giants late in the {{Baseball year|1979}} season and all of {{Baseball year|1980}} before he was replaced by Frank Robinson. In June 1980, Bristol got into a fight with Giants pitcher John Montefusco after a victory over the rival Los Angeles Dodgers. Montefusco was angry at Bristol for removing him from the game too early.{{Cite news |title=Bristol, Montefusco Come to Blows |newspaper=The Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/sports/1980/06/20/bristol-montefusco-come-to-blows/911861ff-89ff-4dc7-aee0-4623532dff2d/ |access-date=2023-08-07}} Bristol finished with a career managerial record of 657 win and 764 defeats (.462).

In addition to his first MLB season with Cincinnati as a coach, Bristol also served as the third base coach for the Montreal Expos (1973–75) and the San Francisco Giants (1978–79), plus two terms with the Philadelphia Phillies (1982–85; 1988), and two additional stints with the Reds (1989; 1993).

In 2018, he was named to the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame.{{cite web|url=https://www.wcpo.com/sports/baseball/reds/adam-dunn-fred-norman-dave-bristol-earned-spot-in-reds-hall-of-fame|title=Adam Dunn, Fred Norman, Dave Bristol earned spot in Reds Hall of Fame|publisher=WCPO|date=July 23, 2018|last=Wallner|first=Jeff|access-date=March 29, 2020}}

Post-MLB career

After retiring Bristol returned full time to live in his beloved Blue Ridge Mountains in Andrews, North Carolina. Bristol was encouraged to help nearby Young Harris College’s baseball program by Georgia Governor Zell Miller (who was himself a YHC baseball player and alumni of the class of 1951). Bristol began helping the [https://yhcathletics.com/sports/baseball YHC Mountain Lion baseball team] for and continued for 17 years. He has served as an on-field mentor to YHC’s baseball players and coaches and because of his generous efforts and support he was inducted into the [https://yhcathletics.com/honors/hall-of-fame/dave-bristol/44 Young Harris College Athletics Hall of Fame in 20215]

Managerial record

class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%; text-align:center;"
rowspan="2"|Teamrowspan="2"|Yearcolspan="5"|Regular seasoncolspan="4"|Postseason
GamesWonLostWin %FinishWonLostWin %Result
CIN||{{mlby|1966}}

||77||{{WinLossPct|39|38}} || 7th in NL|| – || – || – || –

CIN||{{mlby|1967}}

||162||{{WinLossPct|87|75}}|| 4th in NL|| – || – || – || –

CIN||{{mlby|1968}}

||163||{{WinLossPct|83|79}}|| 4th in NL || – || – || – || –

CIN||{{mlby|1969}}

||163||{{WinLossPct|89|73}} || 3rd in NL West || – || – || – || –

colspan="2"|CIN total || 565 || {{WinLossPct|298|265}} || || – || – || – || –
MIL||{{mlby|1970}}

||163||{{WinLossPct|65|97}} || 5th in AL West || – || – || – || –

MIL||{{mlby|1971}}

||161||{{WinLossPct|69|92}} || 6th in AL West || – || – || – || –

MIL||{{mlby|1972}}

||30||{{WinLossPct|10|20}} || (fired) || – || – || – || –

colspan="2"|MIL total || 354 || {{WinLossPct|144|209}} || || – || – || – || –
ATL||{{mlby|1976}}

||162||{{WinLossPct|70|92}} || 6th in NL West || – || – || – || –

rowspan="2"|ATL||rowspan="2"|{{mlby|1977}}

||29||{{WinLossPct|8|21}} || (vacation) || – || – || – || –

|131{{WinLossPct|52|79}}6th in NL West
colspan="2"|ATL total || 322 || {{WinLossPct|130|192}} || || – || – || – || –
SF||{{mlby|1979}}

||22||{{WinLossPct|10|22}} || 4th in NL West || – || – || – || –

SF||{{mlby|1980}}

||161||{{WinLossPct|75|86}} || 5th in NL West || – || – || – || –

colspan="2"|SF total || 183 || {{WinLossPct|85|98}} || || – || – || – || –
colspan="2"|Total{{cite web|title=Dave Bristol|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/managers/bristda99.shtml|website=Baseball Reference|publisher=Sports Reference|access-date=May 22, 2025}} || 1,424 || {{WinLossPct|657|764}}|| ||–||–||– ||–

References

{{Reflist}}