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with Roy and Connie Jr. running the business side. However, Roy and Earle spent the better part of the 1940s in a dispute with Connie Jr. over the direction of the club. Connie Jr., some 20 years younger than his half brothers, had increasingly chafed at the family's bargain-basement approach to running the team, but Roy and Earle believed their half-brother's ideas were too expensive. Connie Jr. was able to push through some of his ideas by forming an alliance with the heirs of
Athletics co-founder
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157:. Johnson offered Roy more for his stock, as well as a guaranteed post in the reorganized franchise's front office. This led Roy to reverse himself and vote against the deal he'd just negotiated, much to the chagrin of his father. However, Connie Sr. resigned himself to the sale to Johnson after telling fans that he didn't have enough money to run the team in 1955, and no other deal stood a chance of winning league approval.
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and the other
American League owners felt chagrin at the A's meager attendance figures; the visiting teams' cut of the gate was frequently insufficient to justify the trip. At a meeting on September 28 they gave Roy until October 12 to acquire enough financing to buy the team. He was unable to do so,
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Connie Mack acquired controlling interest in the A's in 1937, and soon afterward transferred 489 of his 891 shares in the team to Roy, Earle and their half-brother Connie Jr.; the three sons each received 163 shares. Connie Sr. intended to have his three sons inherit the team once he died or retired,
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for the following season. Shortly before an
October 18 deadline to finalize the deal, however, Roy agreed to sell the A's to a group headed by Philadelphia auto dealer John Crisconi. Under the deal, Roy would buy a stake in the new ownership group and stay on as a senior executive. Roy was retained
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By July 1950, Connie Jr. and the Shibes decided to sell the team. However, Roy and Earle insisted on getting a thirty-day option to buy out their half-brother and the Shibes for $ 1.74 million. Connie Jr. didn't believe his half-brothers could pull it off, but Roy and Earle did so by mortgaging the
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However, the team was now saddled with mortgage payments of $ 200,000 per year, making it difficult to arrest the club's declining performance on the field and deteriorating financial picture. By the end of the 1954 season, the A's were dangerously close to bankruptcy. Roy hoped to either buy the
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team himself or sell it to investors who would at least retain him as day-to-day head of the organization. However, none of the prospective buyers were willing to keep Roy on in a senior role, given the A's humdrum performance under his stewardship. At the same time, American League president
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as collateral. The purchase closed the following month; in the resulting reorganization, Connie Sr., Roy and Earle became the
Athletics' only shareholders. While Connie Sr. nominally remained team president, he largely withdrew into the background. Roy became operating head of the franchise,
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The league approved the sale of the franchise to
Johnson in November 1954, and Johnson retained Roy as vice president. However, he had no role in the relocated club's operations, and retired after one season.
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and
Gertrude Browning Chaffee. His paternal grandparents, Michael McGillicuddy and Mary McKillop, were born in Ireland. He grew up in
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Roy Mack's baseball career was focused on front office administration and management. He served as business manager of the
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as vice president. When
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Initially, the Macks agreed to sell the
Athletics to Chicago industrialist
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This biographical article relating to a baseball executive is a
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Departure
Without Dignity: The Athletics Leave Philadelphia
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team to
Connecticut General Insurance Company (now part of
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186:"Schenectady Gazette - Google News Archive Search"
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16:For the Hollywood film director (1889β1962), see
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99:from 1919 to 1924, the
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40:Philadelphia Athletics
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105:Pacific Coast League
97:International League
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