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  • Sal Bando

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    Salvatore Leonard Bando was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1944. An outstanding athlete in multiple sports in high school, Sal Bando attended Arizona State University. There, the right-handed hitting third baseman was a member of the 1965 College World Series championship team - and voted the series’ outstanding player.

    The Kansas City Athletics selected Bando in the 6th round of the 1965 draft. As an advanced position player, Bando moved quickly through the Athletics system - getting a cup of coffee just a year later. 

    Bando showed a good all-around skill set - including a quality glove and a powerful arm. And while his hit tool wasn’t great, he made up for it by taking a lot of walks. By 1968, he was entrenched at the hot corner in Oakland (the franchise having moved from Kansas City) - a position he wouldn’t relinquish for nine years.

    In his time in Oakland, Bando was named to four All-Star teams, finished in the top three in MVP voting three times, and was part of three consecutive World Series teams (1972-74).

    But the 1970s introduced a new element into baseball's economic landscape: free agency. And after the 1976 season, the soon-to-be 33-year-old Bando hit the open market - signing the first big free agent contract in Brewer history - a 5-year deal worth $1.5 million. 

    While modest by today’s standards, the signing was a milestone for the Brewers - a sign they could attract the game’s top talent. And within a year, the team was winning 90+ games.

    Bando had two fine seasons with Milwaukee - hitting 17 home runs in 1977 and 1978 and playing good defense. He brought gravitas and leadership to a young Brewers team.

    However, the 1979 season signaled the end was near for the aging Bando. He failed to hit double-digit home runs for the first time since his rookie season, and his batting average fell to .246. 

    For the next two years, Bando wore the moniker of player-coach - moving to a part-time role in the field. The results weren't good as he hit a paltry .197. Bando finished his career in 1981, playing 32 games and hitting .200.

    Sal Bando hit a solid but unspectacular career batting average (.254). But Bando’s power, on-base skills, and fielding made him special. He had seven seasons where he had a bWAR of five or higher and four more higher than three. For his career, he produced an impressive 61.5 bWAR. 

    There are some impressive numbers in Bando’s stat line, including 30+ HRs in a season and 100+ RBI (twice). But two things jump out at you. The first was his durability. Bando averaged 156 games played over 11 consecutive seasons. That’s almost unheard of in today’s game. The second stat that jumps out is Bando’s walks. He walked more times in his career than he struck out (1031 BB vs. 923 Ks) - including 118 free passes in 1970. So while Bando’s batting average was never great, he more than made up for it with his keen eye at the plate.

    In Bando’s five years in Milwaukee, he did well his first couple of seasons before age began to take its toll. Still, he was an important part of the first great Brewer teams in the late 70s. 

    Now, if that were it for Sal Bando and the Brewers, it would be a good story. But there’s more - lots more.

    After retiring, Bando got into announcing and became a special assistant to Brewer GM Harry Dalton as he remained in Milwaukee and set down roots in the community. 

    In 1991, Bando was named the Brewers' General Manager - a position he held until August 1999. It was - in all honesty - nearly a decade of despair for the Crew. Baseball salaries went crazy - and Milwaukee couldn’t (or wouldn’t) keep up. The Brewers farm system didn’t produce and the team fell into a long run of mediocre - or bad - baseball. In Bando’s tenure as GM, the team had only one winning season. 

    As a fan, it was a bad time - perhaps the worst in franchise history. There were a lot of bad drafts (Antone Williamson fourth overall!), bad signings (three years of Franklin Stubbs!), and other blunders (see you later, Paul Molitor). Bando never seemed to move the franchise into a new era - and the result was a weak organization that didn't recover until after he was gone.

    I argue that Bando was the worst GM in team history. In some ways, he had the unenviable task of running an aging club when he took over. But instead of embracing a philosophy (such as selling off assets and rebuilding), it appeared to be a quest for mediocrity year after year. 

    Bando was finished as GM in 1999 and moved on from the game. He had invested his baseball earnings well since his days as a player and managed those business interests successfully for many years afterward. And while Bando never got back into baseball, he stayed in Wisconsin. He was living in Oconomowoc when he died on Jan. 21, 2023, after a battle with cancer. He was 78. 

    Bando was inducted into the College Baseball Hall of Fame in 2013 and was an inaugural member of the Milwaukee Brewers Wall of Honor in 2014. He was also inducted into the Oakland Athletics Hall of Fame in 2022.

    Bando’s brother, Chris, was a catcher in the big leagues for eight years, most of them with Cleveland. 

    One last tidbit about Sal Bando: in 2006, he had a voice cameo in a Simpsons episode. 

    Sal Bando Statistics

    Standard Batting Table
    Season Age Team Lg WAR G PA AB R H 2B 3B HR RBI SB CS BB SO BA OBP SLG OPS OPS+ rOBA Rbat+ TB GIDP HBP SH SF IBB Pos Awards
    1966 22 KCA AL 0.4 11 26 24 1 7 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 .292 .320 .417 .737 113 .399 161 10 0 0 1 0 0 /5H  
    1967 23 KCA AL 1.2 47 152 130 11 25 3 2 0 6 1 0 16 24 .192 .295 .246 .541 63 .294 81 32 0 3 3 0 0 5/H  
    1968 24 OAK AL 3.3 162 674 605 67 152 25 5 9 67 13 4 51 78 .251 .314 .354 .668 108 .323 111 214 12 7 6 5 6 *5/7  
    1969 25 OAK AL 8.3 162 734 609 106 171 25 3 31 113 1 4 111 82 .281 .400 .484 .885 153 .419 166 295 12 11 2 1 5 *5 AS,MVP-16
    1970 26 OAK AL 6.2 155 636 502 93 132 20 2 20 75 6 10 118 88 .263 .407 .430 .837 135 .390 144 216 12 6 7 3 5 *5/H MVP-27
    1971 27 OAK AL 6.4 153 643 538 75 146 23 1 24 94 3 7 86 55 .271 .377 .452 .828 137 .385 145 243 14 8 6 5 11 *5 MVP-2
    1972 28 OAK AL 5.6 152 631 535 64 126 20 3 15 77 3 1 78 55 .236 .341 .368 .709 116 .337 118 197 13 9 6 3 17 *5/4H AS,MVP-30
    1973 29 OAK AL 6.5 162 690 592 97 170 32 3 29 98 4 2 82 84 .287 .375 .498 .873 150 .406 154 295 13 4 6 5 5 *5/D AS,MVP-4
    1974 30 OAK AL 4.9 146 603 498 84 121 21 2 22 103 2 3 86 79 .243 .352 .426 .778 130 .373 137 212 10 5 1 13 4 *5/HD AS,MVP-3
    1975 31 OAK AL 3.7 160 658 562 64 129 24 1 15 78 7 1 87 80 .230 .337 .356 .693 98 .338 101 200 10 5 2 2 2 *5/H  
    1976 32 OAK AL 5.8 158 640 550 75 132 18 2 27 84 20 6 76 74 .240 .335 .427 .762 128 .373 135 235 7 4 7 3 1 *5/6DH MVP-13
    1977 33 MIL AL 3.6 159 666 580 65 145 27 3 17 82 4 2 75 89 .250 .336 .395 .731 99 .337 98 229 10 3 3 5 3 *5D/46  
    1978 34 MIL AL 5.7 152 629 540 85 154 20 6 17 78 3 2 72 52 .285 .371 .439 .810 128 .373 127 237 11 6 4 7 4 *5D/3H  
    1979 35 MIL AL 0.7 130 543 476 57 117 14 3 9 43 2 0 57 42 .246 .330 .345 .674 83 .323 85 164 17 3 6 1 3 *5D/314H  
    1980 36 MIL AL -0.7 78 291 254 28 50 12 1 5 31 5 3 29 35 .197 .278 .311 .589 64 .288 67 79 7 1 3 4 2 5D/3H  
    1981 37 MIL AL 0.1 32 73 65 10 13 4 0 2 9 1 1 6 3 .200 .268 .354 .621 82 .318 100 23 1 0 2 0 1 5H/3D  
    16 Yrs 61.5 2019 8289 7060 982 1790 289 38 242 1039 75 46 1031 923 .254 .352 .408 .760 119 .362 124 2881 149 75 65 57 69 *5DH3/6417  
    162 Game Avg 4.9 162 665 566 79 144 23 3 19 83 6 4 83 74 .254 .352 .408 .760 119 .362 124 231 12 6 5 5 6    
                                                               
    OAK (11 Yrs) 52.1 1468 6087 5145 737 1311 212 25 192 796 60 38 792 702 .255 .359 .418 .776 127 .371 134 2149 103 62 47 40 56 *5H/D647  
    MIL (5 Yrs) 9.4 551 2202 1915 245 479 77 13 50 243 15 8 239 221 .250 .335 .382 .717 98 .337 98 732 46 13 18 17 13 5D3H/416  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 11/14/2024.

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    Sal Bando, Milwaukee's First Great Free Agent Signing

    Last month, former Brewer third baseman Sal Bando died at the age of 78 in Oconomowoc, Wisconsin. Bando was an important figure in Brewers history. He was the club’s first major free agent signing and the team’s general manager for most of the 1990s. 

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