Between
Triple-A managing assignments in 1954 and 1961, Hitchcock served a six-year (1955–60) term as the Tigers' third base coach. He also became a footnote to one of the most bizarre personnel transactions in baseball annals. On August 3, 1960, the Tigers and
Cleveland Indians traded their managers,
Jimmy Dykes for
Joe Gordon. Hitchcock served as Detroit's interim skipper for one game while Gordon was en route from his Cleveland assignment, and the Tigers defeated the
New York Yankees, 12–2, on August 3 at
Yankee Stadium. After leading the
Vancouver Mounties to a second-place finish in his lone campaign with the
Milwaukee Braves minor-league affiliate, Hitchcock succeeded
Paul Richards as manager of the
Baltimore Orioles on 10 October 1961. But in his two seasons at the helm, the ballclub barely broke the .500 mark (163–161). Hitchcock was dismissed on 29 September after the final game of the
1963 campaign in which the fourth-place Orioles finished games behind the Yankees, and moved into Baltimore's
minor league department as field coordinator. Then he became a scout for the Braves, whose
general manager at the time was former Tiger player and executive
John McHale. Hitchcock began the season as a coach under
Bobby Bragan during the Braves' first season in
Atlanta. But when they won only 52 of their first 111 games, Bragan was fired on August 9 and Hitchcock took over. The Braves won 33 of their last 51 games to finish fifth in the
National League, and Hitchcock was invited back for , but he was fired September 28 of that year with the team in seventh place and three games remaining on the schedule. His career managing record was 274 wins, 261 losses (.514). Hitchcock then scouted for McHale and the
Montreal Expos in 1968–71 before taking over as president of the Southern League.
Managerial record ==Southern League presidency==