September 16, 2024

Paul Snyder, legendary Braves scout, dies at 88

ATLANTA — Paul Snyder had an endless supply of great baseball stories. One of his favorites involved him unsuspiciously sitting in his car alongside a field at the Tigers’ Spring Training complex in 1990.

Atlanta Braves legend Paul Snyder dies at 88

Per the advice of Hep Cronin, one of his top scouts, Snyder was trying to learn more about a young high school shortstop named Chipper Jones. Before heading to Jacksonville to see the future Hall of Famer play at The Bolles School, Snyder opted to spy on a private workout the Tigers were conducting in Lakeland, Fla.

“They say if you can’t see, you can scout if you can hear,” Snyder said. “We sat in the car and listened for the wood bat to ring.”

Around this same time, Snyder had gone to Puerto Rico to see a young catcher named Javy Lopez. Not wanting the Yankees or any other club to know he was there, he hid under the stands. The view was fine. But a nail protruding from one of the wood benches ripped a shirt his beloved wife Petie had recently bought him.

Paul Snyder death: Braves Hall of Famer and iconic former scout Paul Snyder  passes away at 88, cause of death unknown

These were just a couple of the treasured stories told by one of the most beloved and influential figures in Braves history. Snyder’s impact on the organization was highlighted again on Friday, as many former Atlanta players and executives learned he had passed away Thursday night at the age of 88.

“I’ve always said I was raised by Hall of Famers and [Snyder] was one of them,” manager Brian Snitker said. “It was always about the person and about your family. He’s the one who embodied the ‘Braves Way.’ He helped create that.”

When Snyder joined the then-Class D Midland Braves as a lanky first baseman in 1958, nobody knew it was the beginning of what would become a celebrated 50-plus year stretch that included him being inducted into the Braves Hall of Fame in 2005. He was elected to the Professional Baseball Scouts Hall of Fame in 2013.

Snyder became a Minor League manager after never reaching the Majors, and he moved into the front office in 1973. He and Bill Lucas formed a strong bond before the latter became MLB’s first Black general manager (though Ted Turner never gave him the actual title) near the end of the 1976 season. Snyder served as one of Turner’s top lieutenants and truly flourished while working as Bobby Cox’s scouting director after Cox became Atlanta’s GM after the 1985 season.

This was around the same time current Dodgers president and CEO Stan Kasten began his long tenure as the Braves’ president.

“Someone very close to the organization said, ‘You need to get rid of Paul Snyder because that is where the breakdown is,’” Kasten said. “I said, ‘OK, thanks. I’ll make my own decision, but I appreciate that.’ He was in an administrative role and that’s not where he should have been. Bobby and I felt strongly about this. So we let him return to being a scout, supervisor and crosschecker. Let me tell you, that decision made a big difference for the next decade or more. He’s an unsung hero.”

Kent Mercker, Steve Avery, Ryan Klesko and Chipper Jones were among the future stars drafted over the next few years. Snyder had also targeted a young Tom Glavine a year before Cox returned to Atlanta. And he oversaw the signings of Lopez, Andruw Jones and other international players who would influence Atlanta’s great success during the 1990s.

When John Schuerholz came to Atlanta to become the Braves’ GM after the 1990 season, he put Chuck LaMar in charge of his scouting and player development departments. Snyder became a special assistant. The title was fine, but his role was a demotion as he was now essentially the northeast scouting supervisor.

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