Player and
Mickey Mantle. In his 14-season Major League Baseball career, Bauer had a .277
batting average with 164
home runs and 703
RBIs in 1,544
games played. He recorded a career .982
fielding percentage. Bauer played on seven
World Series-winning New York Yankees teams and holds the World Series record for the longest
hitting streak (17 games). Perhaps Bauer's most notable performance came in the sixth and final game of the 1951 World Series, where he hit a three-run triple. He also saved the game with a diving catch of a line drive off the bat of
Sal Yvars for the final out. Bauer recorded a hit in all seven games of the
1956 World Series and
1957 World Series and the first three games of the
1958 World Series for a total of seventeen straight postseason games with a hit. His hitting streak set a major league record that was tied by
Derek Jeter and
Manny Ramirez over four decades later but it was not surpassed until
Ketel Marte did so in 2023 (as for players with consecutive hits in World Series games, no player has surpassed the 17 by Bauer). At the close of the 1959 season, Bauer was dealt by the Yankees to the
Kansas City Athletics in a trade which brought them future home run king
Roger Maris (1961). This deal is often cited among the worst examples of the numerous trades between the Yankees and the Athletics during the late 1950s – trades which were nearly always one-sided in favor of the Yankees. In 1961, Athletics
manager Joe Gordon chose to start
Leo Posada over Bauer in the
Opening Day starting lineup.
Manager On June 19, 1961, the Athletics fired Gordon and Bauer was named the team's playing-manager. Bauer retired as a player one month later. He managed the team through the end of the 1962 season, going 107–157 over 264 games (for a .405 win percentage), and the A's finishing ninth in the ten-team American League both years.
Coach After his firing at the close of the 1962 campaign, Bauer spent the 1963 season as
first-base coach of the Baltimore Orioles.
Manager again He was promoted to the Orioles' manager on November 19, 1963, succeeding
Billy Hitchcock, who had been dismissed at the end of the regular season. Baltimore contended aggressively for the American League pennant in both 1964 and 1965, finishing third each year. Bolstered by the acquisition of future
Hall of Fame outfielder
Frank Robinson - and his
Triple Crown 1966 season — the Orioles won their first AL pennant and the
1966 World Series championship. However, the ballclub, hampered by an injury to Robinson and significant off-years for a number of regulars and pitchers, finished in the second division in 1967. When the Orioles entered the
1968 All-Star break in third place and games behind the eventual
World Series champion
Detroit Tigers, Bauer was dismissed on July 10 in favor of first-base coach
Earl Weaver. Bauer returned to the Athletics, then based in
Oakland, to manage the 1969 campaign. He was fired for the second and final time by Finley after bringing Oakland home second in the new
American League West Division. Overall, his regular-season managerial record was 594–544 (0.522).
Minor leagues Bauer managed the
Tidewater Tides, the AAA affiliate of the
New York Mets, in 1971–72. The team made the finals of IL
Governors' Cup playoffs each season, winning the title in 1972. Bauer then retired and returned home to the Kansas City area, where he scouted with the Yankees and the
Kansas City Royals. ==Managerial record==