LaRussa had managed less than two full seasons in the
minors when he replaced Don Kessinger
as the White Sox manager on August 2, 1979
at the age of thirty-four. LaRussa, who had graduated with a law degree
from Florida State the previous year, became the fifth lawyer/manager
in baseball history. The other four - Monte
Ward, Hughie
Jennings, Miller Huggins,
and Branch
Rickey -- are all in the Hall of Fame. Extremely bright and
articulate, LaRussa quickly established a reputation for being one of
the best field tacticians in baseball.
After consecutive third-place finishes in 1981 and 1982,
LaRussa led the White Sox to the AL West title in 1983 with a
major-league high 99 wins, winning several Manager of the Year awards
from various baseball publications. The White Sox stumbled in 1984-85,
however, and after a 26-38 start in 1986 LaRussa was fired, signing on
as the manager of the A's three weeks later.
LaRussa proved to be a much better manager for the A's
than he had been a player. He had first tasted major league action as a
teenager with the Kansas City A's in 1963 (LaRussa, Robin Yount
and Alex
Rodriguez are the only eighteen-year olds ever to start a
major-league game at short) and returned to the majors in 1968 after
the team had moved to Oakland. After a few futile years with the A's,
Braves, and Cubs, LaRussa had returned to the minors in 1973 and
retired in 1977 with a .199 batting average in only 176 career at-bats.
As skipper, he began with the A's as he had with the
White Sox, finishing in third place twice in a row in 1986 and 1987
before a first-place finish the following year. Indeed, led by sluggers
Jose
Canseco and Mark McGwire
(aka the "Bash Brothers") the 1988 A's stormed to a 104-58 finish, only
to be upset by the Dodgers in five games in the World Series. In 1989,
the team managed to win it all after winning 99 regular-season games,
sweeping the San
Francisco Giants in the earthquake-interrupted "Bay Series." But in
1990 the team again lost the World Series after a 100-win season, this
time in four games to Lou Piniella's
Cincinnati
Reds. By the time his 1992 A's club had wrapped up the division
title with a 96-66 record, LaRussa had managed five AL West champs in
ten years.
LaRussa's 1993 A's collapsed after losing stars Dave Stewart,
Carney
Lansford, Harold Baines,
and Walt Weiss.
En route to a 68-94 finish, becoming only the second team to fall to
last place the season after a division title (the 1914-1915
Philadelphia A's led by Connie Mack
were the first) LaRussa for the first time lost his cool, analytical
demeanor and started hitting the panic button. At one point in the
season, faced with an ineffective pitching staff, LaRussa experimented
with using three pitchers a game for three innings each, setting
precise pitch limits. He lost his temper against opposing manager Phil Garner
of the Brewers, and once even canceled a post-game meal after a loss.
The A's rebounded in 1994 to second place, but still had
a losing record in the strike-shortened season. After another sub-par
finish in 1995 LaRussa left the A's for St. Louis and was successful in
luring some of the stars from his Oakland teams to the Cardinals. In
his first year with the club, aided by A's alumni Mike Gallego,
Rick
Honeycutt, and fireman Dennis
Eckersley (who saved 30 games,) LaRussa led the Cardinals to the
1996 NL Central crown. The young team took a step back in 1997, losing
89 games despite a mid-season trade that reunited LaRussa and home run
champ Mark
McGwire.
McGwire's unprecedented home run binge over the next two
seasons -- including his dramatic chase of Roger Maris'
single-season home-run record in 1998 -- overshadowed the uninspired
play of his teammates, and as the Cardinals hovered around .500.
LaRussa drew little criticism from fans enraptured by McGwire's feats.
However, he did raise eyebrows in the second half of the 1998 season
when he began to bat his pitchers eighth in the lineup, ostensibly to
put another bat in front of McGwire.
LaRussa's team continued to slide in 1999, finishing
with eight fewer wins and a fourth place finish while once again
watching McGwire put on a home run display, this time with 65
round-trippers. In 2000 the young Cardinals finally began to come into
their own, winning the NL Central and then defeating the heavily
favored Atlanta
Braves in the NLDS. Though they lost to the New York Mets
in the NLCS, LaRussa's team was ready for long-term success. In the
2001, down-to-the-wire pennant race, they lost to the Houston Astros
on the final game of the season, settling for the Wild Card instead of
the NL Central title.
LaRussa was the winningest active manager in the major
leagues, having compiled 1,827 victories in 22 years of managing --
good enough for 11th on the all-time list. (SCL/JGR)
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