
Sparky Anderson is the first and only manager in MLB history to win 600 games in both the National and American Leagues. This milestone was achieved on July 29, 1986, when his Detroit Tigers defeated the Milwaukee Brewers 9-5, according to the Baseball Hall of Fame and This Day in Baseball. He had previously won 600+ games with the Cincinnati Reds in the National League. He also holds the distinction of being the first manager to win the World Series in both leagues, having won with the Reds in 1975 and 1976, and with the Tigers in 1984.


On July 29, 1986:
Sparky Anderson wins number 600 in the American League.
As a player, Sparky Anderson wasn’t much. Anderson was signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1953 as a second base prospect. Like most middle infield prospects, he was a pretty good fielder but a poor hitter. In the minors, he hit .263 with a .325 slugging percentage. Finally at age 25, he received his chance in the major leagues, but he didn’t do much. His glove couldn’t make up for a .218 average in over 500 at-bats when there was no pop (o HR, 9 2B). After that 1959 season, he was returned the minor leagues, where he would stay for four more seasons.
Fortunately while with the Toronto Maples Leafs (of the International League not the National Hockey League), Jack Kent Cooke saw Anderson’s leadership qualities and began trying to convince Anderson that his abilities would be best used in a managerial role. In 1964 and following several tough minor league seasons, Anderson relented and became the Leafs manager. Five years later, Anderson returned the major leagues but this time as a coach. He became an Angels coach in the following off-season, but the Cincinnati Reds called with a managerial position a few days later.
Anderson, of course, accepted the position, and the rest is history. In his first season, he won 102 games and an NL pennant. He and the Reds won 2 World Series titles in 1975 and 1976 as part of the Big Red Machine. In 1979, he left for the Detroit Tigers, and he became the first manager to win a World Series in both leagues in 1984. Two years after that and on July 29, 1986, he won his 600th game as a Detroit Tiger. Combined with the fact that he won over 600 in Cincinnati, Anderson became the first manager to win 600 games in each league.
Only five managers (John McGraw, Connie Mack, Tony LaRussa, Bobby Cox, and Joe Torre) have won more games than Anderson’s 2,194.

In honor of Sparky, here is a song that no one outside of Michigan will know. Our 1984 Tigers were magic. “Bless You Boys” became what everyone said that year. Sparky wrote a book with that title, and here is the cheesy song that played locally around ’84-85.
Sources: Wiki, This Day in Baseball, Baseball Hall of Fame
Great piece, Keith. And the Tigers are doing great this year, leading their division by 9 games!
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It’s been nice to see them win a couple after that slump the last 12 games
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That’s what I love about baseball, you never know what is going to happen!
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Loved him and I remember that song so well
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Sparky was a great one. He had a lot of big personalities to wrangle in and he did that and got the teams to play as a unit. And do so well! One of baseball’s best managers through the years, I’d say. I never knew he had a Toronto connection though – cool!
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Growing up here in Thunder Bay Ontario in the 80s we would get our U.S Tv stations at one point from Detroit. So we would get all the Tiger games. I always liked the pre show where there was a segment called “Ask Sparky”… great memories watching TV when there was only 12 channels at the one point lol
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Those were the day deKe!
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LOL – I loved Sparky!
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how weird, woulda thought you’d get Minneapolis or maybe Milwaukee. Where I was the cable gave us Buffalo stations, logically enough but my bro in Edmonton said (this being about 20 years back), there they got ‘local’ coverage all the way from LA!
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Before Detroit it was from Duluth which made sense as they are 3 hours away …
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Bless his heart. “Bless You Boys” and Tigers fever, both were alive and well in Southern Ontario in Sparky’s day.
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