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Tony La Russa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tony La Russa after the 2006 World Series
Tony La Russa after the 2006 World Series

Anthony La Russa, Jr. (born October 4, 1944, in Tampa, Florida) is a manager in Major League Baseball, currently with the St. Louis Cardinals. In 2004 he became the sixth manager in history to win pennants with both American and National League teams; in 2006 he became the first manager ever to win multiple pennants in both leagues and became one of only two managers to win the World Series in both leagues. With a 2297-1986 record as a manager, he is ranked third all-time for total number of career wins, trailing only Connie Mack (3,731) and John McGraw (2,763). He is one of only three managers to be named Manager of the Year in both of baseball's major leagues.

Contents

[edit] Playing career

1964 Topps baseball card #244
1964 Topps baseball card #244

La Russa (often misspelled LaRussa) was signed by the Kansas City Athletics as a middle infielder prior to the start of the 1962 season. He came up to the A's the next season, making his debut on May 10, 1963. In the following off-season he suffered a shoulder injury while playing softball with friends, and the shoulder continued to bother him during the remainder of his playing career.

Over the next six seasons, La Russa spent most of his time in the minor leagues, making it to the now-Oakland A's roster in 1968 and 1969. He spent the entire 1970 season with the big club, and then late in 1971 the A's traded him to the Atlanta Braves. His final big league playing stop was with the Chicago Cubs, where he appeared as a pinch-runner in one game, on April 6, 1973. He also spent time in the organizations of the Pittsburgh Pirates, Chicago White Sox, and St. Louis Cardinals.

In 132 total games played, (40 in the starting lineup), he went 35-for-176, a batting average of .199. His 23 walks pushed his on base percentage to .292. He had 7 RBI and scored 15 runs. He made 63 appearances at second base, 18 at shortstop, and two at third base, fielding .960 in 249 total chances and participating in 34 double plays.

[edit] Managerial career

Before becoming a manager, he earned a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from Florida State University, but never entered the legal profession. La Russa has been quoted as saying, "I decided I'd rather ride the buses in the minor leagues than practice law for a living." He is one of a select number of major league managers in baseball history who have earned a law degree; others include Monte Ward (New York Giants, Brooklyn and Providence, late 1800s), Hughie Jennings (Detroit, 1907-20, New York Giants, 1924), Miller Huggins (St. Louis Cardinals and New York Yankees, 1913-29), Muddy Ruel (St. Louis Browns, 1947), Jack Hendricks (St. Louis Cardinals, 1918, Cincinnati, 1924-29) and Branch Rickey (St. Louis Browns, 1913-15, St. Louis Cardinals, 1919-25, later the creator of the modern farm system in baseball and still later the executive who broke the color line by signing Jackie Robinson), Jim O'Rourke and James Lyman Price.

The White Sox hired La Russa as their manager two-thirds of the way through the 1979 season. He was named American League Manager of the Year in 1983, when his club won the AL West but fell to the Baltimore Orioles in the American League Championship Series. The White Sox fired La Russa after the club got off to a 26-38 start in 1986.

Tony La Russa autograph on a 1987 Topps baseball card - 1987 Series, #127
Tony La Russa autograph on a 1987 Topps baseball card - 1987 Series, #127

La Russa had a vacation of less than three weeks before his old club, the Athletics, called him to take over as manager. With the A's, he led the club to three consecutive World Series, from 1988 to 1990, sweeping an earthquake-delayed Series from the San Francisco Giants in 1989. In 1988 and 1990, La Russa's Athletics lost the World Series to the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Cincinnati Reds in significant fashion, despite the fact that the A's were heavily favored on both occasions. He earned two additional Manager of the Year awards with the A's, in 1988 and 1992, again winning the Western Division in the latter year.

After the 1995 season, in which the A's finished 67-77, the Haas family, with whom La Russa had a close personal relationship, sold the team after the death of patriarch Walter A. Haas, Jr. La Russa left to take over the helm of the St. Louis Cardinals. The team promptly won the National League's Central Division crown in 1996, a feat his club repeated in 2000, 2002 (his fourth Manager of the Year award), 2004, 2005, and 2006 (the Cardinals also won the National League Wild Card in 2001). He became the first manager to win the award four times. La Russa's fourth Manager of the Year award was arguably the most emotional; La Russa led the Cardinals to the National League Championship Series (where they would ultimately lose in five games to the San Francisco Giants) in a year in which the Cardinals were traumatized by the deaths of beloved Hall of Fame broadcaster Jack Buck and 33-year-old pitcher Darryl Kile just four days later.

However, it was not until 2004 that the Cardinals finally won the National League pennant under La Russa. The team had the best record in the majors at 105-57, and defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers, 3 games to 1, in the National League Division Series, and the Houston Astros, 4 games to 3, in the NLCS. That put the club in the 2004 World Series against the Boston Red Sox, the Cards' first Series appearance since 1987. However, they were swept by the Red Sox, losing four games to none.

In 2006, La Russa managed the Cardinals to a four-game-to-one World Series victory over colleague Jim Leyland's Detroit Tigers. This makes him only the second manager to win a World Series in both the American League and the National League, a distinction shared with his mentor, Sparky Anderson. La Russa's 83-78 record with the Cardinals in 2006 becomes the lowest winning percentage for a World Champion, dropping behind the 1987 Minnesota Twins' 85-77 record.

Through 2006, La Russa's regular season managerial record is 2297-1986 (.536), including 977-803 (.549) with the Cardinals. He credits Paul Richards with first inspiring him to believe he could succeed as a major league manager.

It was as a player with the A's that La Russa first met catcher Dave Duncan, who would join his coaching staff in Chicago in 1983. The two have worked together on every La Russa-managed team ever since, and he often credits Duncan as playing a key role in his success.

[edit] La Russa in books and computer games

In 2005, La Russa was the focus of a book by sportswriter Buzz Bissinger. Bissinger's Three Nights in August delves into La Russa's role as manager during a 3-game series in 2003 between his Cardinals and manager Dusty Baker's Chicago Cubs, their longtime rivals. The book received much praise from both fans and critics, though some complained that Bissinger sets out to glorify La Russa's "old school" managerial style as a direct challenge to the statistical analysis theses of Michael Lewis's 2004 book Moneyball.

As David Leonhardt of The New York Times wrote of the "stats vs. hunches" debate in an August 29, 2005 piece, "What makes this fight truly comparable to those that periodically roil the world of art history or foreign policy is that the differences between the sides are not as great as the sniping between them suggests. La Russa spends much of his time jotting down information on index cards and studying statistics in his office."

George Will's book Men at Work likewise depicts La Russa and his long-time pitching coach Dave Duncan as making more use of statistical analysis than any other team in the major leagues.

La Russa also provided the AI for a series of successful computer and video games, Tony La Russa Baseball. The games won numerous awards and featured "new" statistics selected with La Russa (and provided by prominent sabermetrics authors John Thorn and Pete Palmer) as tools for players as they managed their teams.

[edit] Personal life

La Russa married Elaine Coker on December 31, 1973 and has two children, Bianca and Devon.

La Russa and his wife are the founders of Tony La Russa's Animal Rescue Foundation, headquartered in Walnut Creek, California, which saves abandoned and injured animals as well as running programs to bring dog and cat visits to abused children, hospital patients, seniors and shut-ins. La Russa is also a vegetarian.[1]

La Russa and his wife appeared in December 2006 in the 2nd annual MAD Hatter Performance and Tea Party in the new roles of the Grim Reaper Rabbit and Mother Ginger. They will be appearing alongside their daughter, Devon. This show is the annual holiday offering of Moving Arts Dance, a contemporary dance company based in Walnut Creek, California. The 2005 performance of the MAD Hatter Performance and Tea Party took place at the Animal Rescue Foundation Pavilion.

La Russa speaks fluent Spanish.[1][2]

On March 22, 2007 La Russa was arrested in Jupiter, Florida for suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol. He was found asleep at the wheel of his running SUV while at a green light. He did not initially respond to the police knocking on the window, even though he still had his foot on the brake. He was booked at the Palm Beach County Jail and blew a .093 blood alcohol content, which is above the legal limit of .08.[2]

Calling his arrest on the DUI charge an "embarrassment," Cardinals manager Tony La Russa apologized to "anyone who is close to me, members of the Cardinals organization, our fans." He was defended by the organization and players, such as Albert Pujols.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ http://www.ivu.org/people/sports/larussa.html
  2. ^ Cops: La Russa was asleep at intersection. Retrieved on March 22, 2007.

[edit] References

  • Bissinger, Buzz. Three Nights in August: Strategy, Heartbreak, and Joy Inside the Mind of a Manager. Mariner (paperback), 2006.
  • Will, George. Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball. Harper (paperback), 1991.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
None
American League Manager of the Year
1983
Succeeded by
Sparky Anderson
Preceded by
Sparky Anderson
American League Manager of the Year
1988
Succeeded by
Frank Robinson
Preceded by
Tom Kelly
American League Manager of the Year
1992
Succeeded by
Gene Lamont
Preceded by
Larry Bowa
National League Manager of the Year
2002
Succeeded by
Jack McKeon
Preceded by
Don Kessinger
Chicago White Sox Manager
1979-1986
Succeeded by
Doug Rader
Preceded by
Jeff Newman
Oakland Athletics Managers
1986-1995
Succeeded by
Art Howe
Preceded by
Mike Jorgensen
St. Louis Cardinals Manager
1996-
Succeeded by
Current Manager


Current Major League Baseball managers

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST DIVISION

Perlozzo (Baltimore)
Francona (Boston)
Torre (NY Yankees)
Maddon (Tampa Bay)
Gibbons (Toronto)

CENTRAL DIVISION

Guillén (Chi. White Sox)
Wedge (Cleveland)
Leyland (Detroit)
Bell (Kansas City)
Gardenhire (Minnesota)

WEST DIVISION

Scioscia (LA Angels)
Geren (Oakland)
Hargrove (Seattle)
Washington (Texas)


NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST DIVISION

Cox (Atlanta)
González (Florida)
Randolph (NY Mets)
Manuel (Philadelphia)
Acta (Washington)

CENTRAL DIVISION

Piniella (Chi. Cubs)
Narron (Cincinnati)
Garner (Houston)
Yost (Milwaukee)
Tracy (Pittsburgh)
La Russa (St. Louis)

WEST DIVISION

Melvin (Arizona)
Hurdle (Colorado)
Little (LA Dodgers)
Black (San Diego)
Bochy (San Francisco)

In other languages
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