McHale was born in the city ofDetroit, Michigan, and attended Detroit Catholic Central High School and the University of Notre Dame. He batted left-handed and threw right-handed, stood tall, and his weight was. He signed with his hometown Tigers in 1941 and two years later made his first MLB appearance. In five seasons and 64 games with the Tigers, McHale compiled a batting average of.193 with 22 hits. He was hitless in three at bats in the 1945 World Series, in which Detroit defeated the Chicago Cubs. Defensively, he recorded a.995 fielding percentage as a first baseman with only one error in 214 total chances. After the 1948 season, McHale retired from the field for a job in the Tiger front office as assistant farm system director. In 1953, he became director of minor league operations for the Tigers and was named general manager early in the season at the young age of 35. But after less than two full seasons, he soon was recruited by the defending NL champion Braves, where he succeeded John J. Quinn as general manager in January.
As it turned out, McHale presided over the slow decline of the Braves on the field. While superstar Hank Aaron was in the prime of his career, eventual Hall of FamersWarren Spahn and Eddie Mathews—along with Del Crandall, Lew Burdette, Joe Adcock and other stars of the Braves' 1957–58 NL championship clubs—aged and fell off in production. Meanwhile, the young players developed by the team's farm system could not pick up the slack. However, according to an April 8, 1963 article in Sports Illustrated, it was McHale himself who disposed of young talent and decimated the farm system: "With General Manager John McHale trading away brilliant young pitchers and solid everyday performers like Billy Bruton and Joe Adcock, and then unloading over half the once fertile farm clubs, Bragan will have to depend on old Braves who may prefer peace to war." As the Braves slipped into the middle ranks of the National League, attendance at Milwaukee County Stadium declined precipitously. In, the club was sold to a group of Chicago-based investors. By, the Braves were rumored to be moving to Atlanta. In, during their lame-duck season in Milwaukee, McHale was the figurehead for a supremely unpopular ownership. In, the Atlanta Braves' first year, the club started slowly. McHale was replaced as general manager in mid-season by Paul Richards, a former Tiger teammate of McHale's and a legend in Georgia's capital since his days as playing manager of the Atlanta Crackers of the Southern Association from 1938 to 1942. After the season, McHale left the Braves to replace Lee MacPhail as the chief aide to Baseball CommissionerWilliam Eckert.
Candidacy for Baseball Commissioner
In, the year before the National League expanded to 12 teams, McHale was named president of the newly-born Montreal Expos by their owner, Seagrams heir Charles Bronfman. A few weeks after McHale's appointment, Eckert was fired as commissioner and McHale emerged as a leading contender to succeed his former boss, along with executives Michael Burke of the New York Yankees and Chub Feeney of the San Francisco Giants. He had strong support in the American League, but NL owners—who wanted McHale's experienced hand turned toward the fledgling Expo franchise—intervened and McHale's candidacy was halted..
Putting the commissioner election behind him, McHale focused on building the first MLB franchise located in Canada. While McHale concentrated on upper management responsibilities during his first decade with the Expos, he eventually assumed their general manager portfolio as well, and it was during his watch that the Expos achieved their only playoff appearance, in. McHale resigned as general manager in favor of Murray Cook at the close of the season, then stepped down from the club presidency in ; he was succeeded in the latter post by Claude Brochu. McHale was also the last non-Hall of Fame member of the Hall's Veterans Committee, having been grandfathered in when the structure of the committee was updated in 2001. He died in Stuart, Florida, at age 86.