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  1. 7 de jun. de 2018 · LOUIS -- Red Schoendienst, a fixture with the Cardinals and one of the organization's most beloved figures, died on Wednesday at the age of 95. Few players across the history of Major League Baseball were as synonymous with a particular franchise as Schoendienst was with the Cardinals. The Hall of Famer spent nearly three-quarters of a century ...

  2. 22 de jan. de 2018 · Schoendienst went from coach to manager of the Cardinals in 1965 and set a since-broken record for longest tenure as Cardinals manager. He led the team to pennants in 1967 and 1968, won the 1967 World Series and had a .522 winning percentage in 14 seasons. He wore a major league uniform as a player, coach, or manager for parts of eight decades.

  3. 7 de jun. de 2018 · He was 95. Albert Fred Schoendienst, born Feb. 2, 1923, was the most famous native of Germantown, Illinois, a village of less than a square mile in southern Illinois. With his curly red hair and freckles, Mr. Schoendienst was soon known only as “Red." He quit school at 16 to build fences in the Civilian Conservation Corps in Greenville, Illinois.

  4. 4 de jan. de 2012 · Albert Fred “Red” Schoendienst was born on February 2, 1923, in Germantown, Illinois, a village of about 800 residents 40 miles east of St. Louis. He grew up in a large Catholic family with five brothers and a sister. Three of his brothers would go on to play in the minor leagues.

  5. 7 de jun. de 2018 · Schoendienst (born February 2, 1923) coached for the Oakland A's in 1977 and 1978. He was married to the late Mary Eileen O'Reilly Schoendienst for 53 years. Mrs. Schoendienst passed away in December of 1999. Cardinals & baseball mourn passing of legend Albert "Red" Schoendienst.

  6. 10 de jun. de 2018 · Schoendienst started again for the N.L. squad in 1955 but finished with a subpar year. After hitting over .300 the previous three seasons, Red slumped to .268 in ’55. Leaving St. Louis. In June 1956, Red Schoendienst was traded away from the St. Louis Cardinals, packaged in an eight-player deal to the New York Giants.

  7. 7 de jun. de 2018 · Baseball Hall of Famer Albert Fred "Red" Schoendienst, who spent over 76 years in baseball -- 67 of them with the St. Louis Cardinals as a player, coach, manager and special assistant -- has died.