In
1959, Lipon became a minor league
manager, beginning at the Class D level with the
Selma Cloverleafs of the
Alabama–Florida League in the
Cleveland Indians' organization. Lipon spent 30 of the next 34 years as a manager in the Cleveland, Detroit and
Pittsburgh Pirates farm systems, winning 2,185 games and losing 1,987 (.524). He spent part of the 1961 season as manager of the
Triple-A Toronto Maple Leafs of the
International League, and his success as skipper of the
Portland Beavers of the
Pacific Coast League in the mid-1960s earned him a promotion to the Indians' coaching staff, where he served from 1968 to 1971. Lipon's only chance at a Major League managing job came during the
1971 season, when Cleveland fired
Alvin Dark on July 29 with 59 games left and Lipon was named to finish the season as interim pilot. But the Indians went only 18–41 (.305) under him, good for last place in the
American League East, 43 games behind the
Baltimore Orioles. Lipon returned to managing in the minors the next season with the Triple-A
Toledo Mud Hens, and continued for the next two decades. He retired from managing after the 1992 season. His last club, the
Lakeland Tigers of the
Florida State League, won its division's second-half championship. In 1992 he was presented with the
King of Baseball award given by Minor League Baseball at the yearly Baseball Winter Meetings.
Tommy John played under Lipon in Charleston and Portland. "Lipon was an excellent manager," John recalled. "He treated players like adults. When we'd go to Hawaii, he'd tell us to have fun, enjoy the sights, the ocean, the beaches. He encouraged us to be ourselves. He was an excellent handler of men, and I never understood why he didn't get the chance to manage in the big leagues." Lipon died in
Houston, Texas, at the age of 75.
Managerial record ==References==