Hancock batted .302 in two seasons in the Cleveland organization before being dealt to the Red Sox in exchange for
Jack Baker following the season. After hit a .303 average for the
Pawtucket Red Sox through July , Hancock was called up to Boston. He remained with the club for the rest of the season as a fourth outfielder and
pinch hitter, batting .225 with four
runs batted in and ten
runs scored. Hancock spent all of at Pawtucket and hit .325 to win the
International League batting title. He received his second call up to the majors in June and remained with the Bosox through . His most productive season for Boston came in 1980, when he hit a
slash line of .287/.300/.443 with four
home runs and 19 RBI in 46 games. Hancock then batted .294 with a career-high 21 home runs at Pawtucket in , and was called up to the majors again late in September. In fifteen plate appearances for the Bosox, he had just one
walk to show for it. That winter, he was traded by Boston along with
third baseman Carney Lansford and a minor leaguer to Oakland for
outfielder Tony Armas and
catcher Jeff Newman. Hancock hit .273 with nine homers and 30 RBI in a career-high 101 games for the Athletics in 1983. He hit poorly the following season and was released, then retired from the game. Hancock was a longtime resident of
Valrico, Florida, where he died in 2015 at the age of 61. ==Sources==