Kevin Boles
Kevin Boles | |||
---|---|---|---|
Boston Red Sox | |||
Manager, Pawtucket Red Sox | |||
Born: Chicago, Illinois |
January 16, 1975 |||
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Kevin Patrick Boles (born January 16, 1975, at Chicago, Illinois) is an American professional baseball manager. In 2016 he will spend his third consecutive season as manager of the Pawtucket Red Sox of the International League, Triple-A affiliate of the Boston Red Sox of Major League Baseball.[1][2][3]
He is the son of former Florida Marlins manager and longtime player development executive John Boles.[4]
Brief minor-league playing career
Kevin Boles graduated from Cardinal Mooney High School (Sarasota, Florida)[5] and the University of South Florida, where he received a bachelor's degree in communications. A catcher, he was selected in the 42nd round of the June 1998 amateur draft by the Chicago Cubs and played one season of professional baseball, appearing in 20 games (11 in the field) for the 1998 Williamsport Cubs of the Short Season-A New York-Penn League. Boles collected seven hits in 34 at bats, with one double and three runs batted in, for a batting average of .206. He played errorless ball in the field, but allowed six stolen bases in as many attempts. The 5 foot, 11 inch (1.8 m), 185-pound (84 kg) Boles batted left-handed and threw right-handed.[5]
As a manager
Boles' appointment as manager of the Pawtucket Red Sox represented his first assignment at the highest level of minor league baseball.
He began his managing career in the Marlins' farm system in 2000 in the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League, and, in addition to the Marlins and Red Sox, he has worked in the organizations of the Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins. He has managed at the full-season Class A level with the Beloit Snappers, Quad Cities River Bandits, Fort Myers Miracle, Greenville Drive and Salem Red Sox.
In 2013, Boles spent his third consecutive season as skipper of the Portland Sea Dogs, the Red Sox' Double-A Eastern League affiliate.[6] Each of his Portland teams finished below .500, compiling a composite record of 195–229 (.460), but Boles' Seadogs developed players such as Xander Bogaerts, Jackie Bradley, Jr., Drake Britton, Will Middlebrooks, Junichi Tazawa, Alex Wilson and Brandon Workman, who all contributed materially to the MLB Red Sox' 2013 American League pennant and World Series triumph.
In 2014, Boles led Pawtucket to a 79–65 record, a wild-card playoff berth, and the fourth Governors' Cup championship in club history. The 2014 Pawtucket Red Sox also developed Major League prospects Matt Barnes, Mookie Betts, Garin Cecchini, Rubby De La Rosa, Henry Owens, Anthony Ranaudo, Blake Swihart, Christian Vázquez, Allen Webster, Travis Shaw and others.
Through 2015, Boles' 15-season regular-season managerial record was 935 victories and 936 defeats (.499).[4][7] The PawSox' 2014 International League title is the second of his career; his 2003 AZL Royals Blue team captured the Rookie-level Arizona League championship.
In2016, he also serves as manager of the Perth Heat in the Australian Baseball League.
References
- ↑ Boston Red Sox official website
- ↑ Red Sox announce 2014 minor league managers, coaching staffs
- ↑ milb.com 2015.01.08
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Boston Red Sox 2009 Media Guide, page 538
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Kevin Boles page in Baseball Reference (minors)
- ↑ Boston Red Sox official site
- ↑ milb.com
External links
Preceded by | Greenville Drive manager 2008–2009 |
Succeeded by Billy McMillon |
Preceded by | Salem Red Sox manager 2010 |
Succeeded by Bruce Crabbe |
Preceded by | Portland Sea Dogs manager 2011–2013 |
Succeeded by Billy McMillon |
Preceded by | Pawtucket Red Sox manager 2014– |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
- Articles which use infobox templates with no data rows
- 1975 births
- Living people
- Baseball catchers
- Baseball players from Illinois
- Minor league baseball managers
- Pawtucket Red Sox managers
- Sportspeople from Sarasota, Florida
- Portland Sea Dogs
- South Florida Bulls baseball players
- Sportspeople from Chicago, Illinois
- Williamsport Cubs players
- Minor league baseball players