Tom Chandler Head Coach 1958-1984
During Tom's 26 years at the helm for the Aggies, he only produced one losing season. Through 999 games coached, he guided the Aggies to a 660-329-10 (.666 winning percentage) record along with 5 SWC Champions titles, 7 playoff appearances, and the Aggies' 2nd trip to the College World Series (1964). Tom took over as head coach after spending 1958 as the assistant to Head Coach Beau Bell. During his tenure, 54 players signed pro contracts, and 9 (by my count I may be off) would reach the majors. After retiring from his coaching job in 1983, Tom would spend the next decade and a half scouting for the Indians, Dodgers, and Tigers. During his scouting days with the Indians, he would sign popular Aggie short-stop Ever Magallanes. Tom has received numerous awards for his coaching, and his jersey is one of two that have been retired by the Aggies.
Dave "Davey" Johnson 1962
Davey was a two sport star at A&M excelling in both basketball and baseball. During his long MLB career as both a second baseman and manager, Johnson would become one of the more well-known Aggies in baseball. He participated with the 4-time AL pennant and 2-time WS winning Baltimore Orioles from 1965-1972. During this stretch, he was a 3-time gold glove winner, joining his double-play partner, Mark Belanger, for two of his awards (one of only ten such double-play combos to win the awards in the same season); third baseman Brooks Robinson was in the middle of his 16 gold glove streak at that time as well. Upon his trade to the Atlanta Braves, he would team up with Hank Aaron and Darrell Evans to become the first trio to hit 40+ home runs in a season. Johnson's 42 homers that year (only as a second baseman he hit 1 more as a pinch hitter) would tie Roger Hornsby's record for most by a second baseman. At the end of his playing career, he played briefly for the Yomiuri Giants in the Japanese League. When Davey transitioned into a MLB manager, all he did was win; he only posted 3 losing records in 17 years managing in the MLB. He led the 1986 Mets to an improbable World Series title, and posted a lifetime 1,372-1,071 record winning two Manager of the Year awards; he would finish in the top three of voting five other times. Because Johnson retired in 2013, he will appear on the Expansion Era Committee ballot in 2016 with a chance for HOF enshrinement in 2017. If elected, he will join Yale Lary as the only HOFers in the major professional sports from A&M. I created a thread a while back discussing why I think he has a legitimate chance:
here.
Doug Rau 1968-1970
Doug was solid in all three years of his career at Texas A&M. He went 18-7 during that time and posted a minuscule 1.70 ERA; his 228 career strike outs was a record for A&M at the time of his departure. During the 1970 campaign, he led the Aggies with a 9-1 record and a draw-dropping 0.86 ERA; this single season Texas A&M ERA record would last for 40 years. Doug was drafted in the first round of the 1970 amateur draft by the Los Angeles Dodgers, and would make his MLB debut two years later. Despite his success as a starting pitcher, he is best known for getting into a profanity-laden argument with Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda when Lasorda went to lift him in Game 4 of
the 1977 World Series for a reliever (
Audio Clip - NSFW).