Chuck Kniffin
Charles Edward Kniffin (born October 28, 1950) is an American former professional baseball player and coach. Much of Kniffin's three-decade professional career was spent in minor league baseball, but he served 2½ seasons as the Major League pitching coach of the 2002–04 Arizona Diamondbacks on the staff of then-manager Bob Brenly.[1]
Kniffin was born in Rockville Centre, New York. A 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m), 185 lb (84 kg) left-handed pitcher during his playing days,[2] he was selected by the Philadelphia Phillies in the 25th round of the 1969 Major League Baseball draft out of Nassau Community College.[3] He pitched for ten seasons in the Phillie farm system, compiling a 55–40 record in 244 appearances.[2] He then was out of baseball from 1979–87 before becoming a pitching coach at the minor league level in the Seattle Mariners' organization.[1] He switched to the Montreal Expos' organization in the early 1990s, then to the Diamondbacks' farm system when that expansion team began play in 1998, serving such teams as the Harrisburg Senators, Ottawa Lynx and Tucson Sidewinders.
Kniffin succeeded Bob Welch as pitching coach of the defending 2001 World Series champion Diamondbacks in 2002, when Arizona won 98 games and the National League West Division title before falling in the Division Series. He worked on Brenly's staff until July 3, 2004, when both he and Brenly were fired in the midst of the rebuilding D-Back's disastrous 51–111 season.[4] Kniffin then served as pitching coach of the Triple-A Colorado Springs Sky Sox from 2006–09 until his retirement at the close of the 2009 minor league season.
References
External links
- Career statistics from Baseball Reference (Minors)
- 1950 births
- Living people
- Arizona Diamondbacks coaches
- Baseball players from New York (state)
- Major League Baseball pitching coaches
- Nassau Community College alumni
- Oklahoma City 89ers players
- People from Rockville Centre, New York
- People from Teller County, Colorado
- Pulaski Phillies players
- Reading Phillies players
- Spartanburg Phillies players
- Sportspeople from Colorado Springs, Colorado
- Toledo Mud Hens players