Charles S. 'Chub' Feeney
Birthday:
August 31, 1921 in Orange, New Jersey, USA
Birth Name:
Charles Stoneham Feeney
Charles Stoneham "Chub" Feeney, the grandson of Charles Stoneham, the owner of the National League New York Giants, was born on August 31, 1921 in Orange, New Jersey. Young Chub served as bat boy for the beloved "Gi'nts" of Coogan's Bluff before being shipped off to Dartmouth for his higher education. Feeney served in ...
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Charles Stoneham "Chub" Feeney, the grandson of Charles Stoneham, the owner of the National League New York Giants, was born on August 31, 1921 in Orange, New Jersey. Young Chub served as bat boy for the beloved "Gi'nts" of Coogan's Bluff before being shipped off to Dartmouth for his higher education. Feeney served in the Navy during World War II, and after he returned to civilian life in 1946, his uncle Horace Stoneham, now in control of the team, gave him a relatively unimportant job in the front office.While working part-time for the family franchise, Chub Feeney matriculated at Fordham Law School in the cross-river borough The Bronx, home of the Gi'nts hated inter-league rivals, the New York Yankees. In 1950, Horace Stoneham promoted his nephew to Vice President, which made him the club's de facto general manager. With Chub as G.M., the Gi'nts won the National League pennant in 1951 (losing to the hated Yankees) and won the World's Championship in 1954.Horace Stoneham and Brooklyn Dodgers owner Walter O'Malley shocked New York City's National League fans when they announced they were relocating their teams to the West Coast, the Giants to San Francisco and the Dodgers to Los Angeles. Although reluctant to move West, Chub immediately fell in love with Baghdad by the Bay after the team moved for the 1958 season. As G.M., his San Francisco Giants won the NL Pennant in 1962, once again losing to the hated Yankees in the World Series.Although Horace Stoneham eventually won a reputation as an erratic owner, threatening to move the Giants to Toronto at one point in the early 1970s, Chub Feeney was a highly respected baseball executive. In fact, such was his reputation, Feeney might have been named Major League Baseball Commissioner in 1969 had not some American Leaguers owners objected. A compromise candidate, M.L.B. counsel Bowie Kuhn, was chosen instead. The following year, Nation League owners unanimously elected Chub president of the senior circuit, a position he filled for 17 years.A traditionalist, Feeney resisted the incorporation of the Designated Hitter into the NL, even though it provided a major boost to American League attendance, making the junior circuit the more popular league for the first time since Babe Ruth revolutionized hitting with his powerful uppercut. Chub regarded his defeat of the DH as his greatest achievement in office. While Chub was president, the more racially-diverse National League continued its dominance of the American League in the All-Star Game, losing just twice during Feeney's tenure.Chub took the job as president of the San Diego Padres after retiring as NL President. However, he lasted only 15 months on the job, retiring again after an embarrassing incident in which he made an obscene gesture to hecklers on Fan Appreciation Night. He returned to San Francisco, where he died on January 10, 1994 at the age of 72. Show less «