Tommy Giordano


Thomas Arthur Giordano was an American professional baseball player, scout, front-office executive and minor-league player-manager. In, at age 92 and in his 71st season in organized baseball, he worked as a scout and special assistant to the general manager of the Atlanta Braves. He was an infielder during his 12-year active playing career, and appeared in 11 games in Major League Baseball for the Philadelphia Athletics.
As scouting and player development director of the Baltimore Orioles he drafted Hall of Fame shortstop Cal Ripken Jr., and signed and developed other players who would help Baltimore win the 1983 World Series.

Biography

Giordano was born in Newark, New Jersey. Nicknamed "T-Bone", as a player he stood tall and weighed and threw and batted right-handed. Apart from his 11-game trial with the 1953 Athletics, when he batted.175 with seven hits, he spent his entire uniformed career in the minors. In he became a playing manager for the Milwaukee Braves' organization, then returned to the Athletics two years later as a minor league manager. In 1960 Giordano became a scout, working for the Athletics, Cincinnati Reds, Cleveland Indians, Seattle Pilots/Milwaukee Brewers and the Orioles. He was a longtime associate of late Orioles and Indians executive Hank Peters and former Braves' president, baseball operations John Hart.
From 1976 he was a senior scouting or player development executive or assistant to the general manager for the Orioles, Indians and Texas Rangers. He was named Major League Baseball's East Coast Scout of the Year in 2007 in a vote of his peers. Giordano died on February 14, 2019 at the age of 93.