Quick Facts
Byname of:
Anthony La Russa, Jr.
Born:
October 4, 1944, Tampa, Florida, U.S. (age 80)
Awards And Honors:
Baseball Hall of Fame (2014)
MLB Manager of the Year Award (x4)
Baseball Hall of Fame (inducted in 2014)
College:
Florida State University (Tallahassee, FL); University of South Florida (Tampa, FL)
Height/Weight:
6 ft 0 inches, 175 lb (183 cm, 79 kg)
Batting Hand:
right
Throwing Hand:
right
Debut Date:
May 10, 1963
Last Game:
April 6, 1973
Jersey Number:
29 (1963-1963, Kansas City Athletics)
10 (1968-1968, Oakland Athletics)
42 (1973-1973, Chicago Cubs)
11 (1969-1969, Oakland Athletics)
42 (1971-1971, Oakland Athletics)
22 (1970-1970, Oakland Athletics)
6 (1971-1971, Atlanta Braves)
Position:
second baseman and shortstop
At Bats:
176
Batting Average:
0.199
Hits:
35
Home Runs:
0
On-Base Percentage:
0.292
On-Base Plus Slugging:
0.542
Runs:
15
Runs Batted In:
7
Slugging Percentage:
0.25
Stolen Bases:
0
Twitter Handle:
@TonyLaRussa

Tony La Russa (born October 4, 1944, Tampa, Florida, U.S.) is a former professional baseball manager who led his teams to three World Series titles (1989, 2006, and 2011) and is one of the winningest managers in major league history. La Russa’s managerial career spanned more than three decades, and when he retired in 2022 he had a record of 2,884 wins and 2,499 loses. (Only Connie Mack has more wins, 3,731.)

La Russa signed to play baseball with the Kansas City Athletics (or “A’s”) out of high school. He spent the majority of his 16-season playing career in the minor leagues, but he appeared sporadically in the majors with the A’s (both in Kansas City and, later, in Oakland, where the franchise moved), the Atlanta Braves, and the Chicago Cubs. He was named the manager of a minor-league affiliate of the Chicago White Sox in 1978, and his first big-league managerial job came the following year, when he took over the White Sox late in the 1979 season.

The cerebral La Russa—who earned a law degree shortly before assuming managerial duties in Chicago—proved to be a natural leader in the clubhouse. He developed a managerial style that consisted of frequent in-game situational substitutions that came in response to the great attention he paid to the nuances and flow of a particular game (which occasionally led to criticism that La Russa “overmanaged”). In 1983 he guided the White Sox to a 99-win season and the team’s first playoff appearance in 24 years. However, a slow start to the 1986 campaign and a strained working relationship with the team’s new general manager (former outfielder Ken Harrelson, who left the announcing booth to spend only one tumultuous season running the White Sox) led to La Russa’s being fired three months into the season. He was out of work for less than a month before he was hired to manage the A’s.

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La Russa quickly turned the A’s into the most-dominant team in baseball. He led Oakland to the highest win total in the major leagues for three straight seasons (1988–90), each of which also ended with the Athletics’ winning the American League (AL) pennant. The team was upset in two of its World Series appearances during that period, but the A’s did defeat the San Francisco Giants to win a championship in 1989. La Russa and the A’s won another division title in 1992, but after the team posted three consecutive losing seasons (1993–95), he opted out of his contract and signed with the St. Louis Cardinals.

La Russa’s third managerial stint was even more successful than his first two. In his initial season in St. Louis, he guided the Cardinals to the first of seven division titles the team would win during his tenure. The Cardinals won a National League (NL) pennant in 2004, and in 2006 the team beat the Detroit Tigers to win the World Series. In 2011 La Russa led St. Louis on improbable comebacks to clinch a postseason berth (after trailing in the Wild Card standings by 8 1/2 games with a month remaining in the regular season) and to win the World Series (after twice being one strike away from elimination). La Russa retired soon after earning his third championship ring. He had been named the AL’s Manager of the Year three times (1983, 1988, and 1992) and won the NL’s version of the award in 2002.

Three years after his retirement from managing, La Russa joined the Arizona Diamondbacks as the team’s chief baseball officer. He was demoted to an advisory role with the franchise following the 2016 season after the Diamondbacks ran off three consecutive losing campaigns during his tenure, and he left the team after the 2017 season. La Russa then joined the Boston Red Sox as an assistant to the team’s general manager. After the 2020 season he returned to the Chicago White Sox as manager. In his first season back with the team, Chicago finished first in the Central Division, and La Russa won his 2,764th game, which moved him into second place for most career wins by a manager. In the 2021 postseason the White Sox lost in the AL Division Series. In August 2022 La Russa took a leave of absence owing to health issues, and two months later he stepped down as manager.

La Russa published a memoir, One Last Strike: Fifty Years in Baseball, Ten and a Half Games Back, and One Final Championship Season (written with Rick Hummel), in 2012. He was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 2014.

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St. Louis Cardinals

American baseball team
Also known as: St. Louis Brown Stockings, St. Louis Browns, St. Louis Perfectos

St. Louis Cardinals, American professional baseball team established in 1882 that plays in the National League (NL). Based in St. Louis, Missouri, the Cardinals have won 11 World Series titles and 23 league pennants. Second only to the New York Yankees in World Series championships, St. Louis is the oldest major league team west of the Mississippi River and one of baseball’s most consistently successful franchises.

Originally known as the Brown Stockings (1882) and the Browns (1883–98) and playing in the American Association (AA), the franchise met with almost immediate success, winning four consecutive AA pennants from 1885 to 1888. In 1892 the team moved to the NL, where it struggled, finishing in last or second to last place in five of their first seven seasons in the new league. In 1900 the franchise became known as the Cardinals after one year with the nickname “Perfectos.” The team continued to play poorly through the first two decades of the 20th century, but in 1915 it added future Hall of Fame infielder Rogers Hornsby, who sparked a Cardinals turnaround. In 1926 Hornsby guided the team to its first pennant in 38 years and a berth in the World Series, where the “Cards” defeated the New York Yankees in seven games. Another all-time great infielder, Frankie Frisch, led the Cardinals to three World Series appearances between 1928 and 1931, including one series win (1931). In 1934 future Hall of Fame pitcher Dizzy Dean won 30 games (and his brother Paul won 19) for a charismatic World Series-winning Cardinals team with a rough-and-tumble style that earned it the nickname “the Gashouse Gang.”

In 1941 Stan Musial joined the club. Musial became arguably the Cardinals’ most beloved star, playing 22 seasons in St. Louis and leading the team during the most successful period in franchise history. The Cardinals teams of the 1940s finished first or second in the NL standings in every year of the decade save one. They appeared in four World Series over that span and won three of them (1942, 1944, 1946), the last of which was famous for outfielder Enos Slaughter breaking an eighth-inning tie with the Boston Red Sox in the deciding seventh game by scoring from first base on a line drive over the shortstop’s head—a tremendous demonstration of hustle that became known as the “Mad Dash.”

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After a period of relative decline in the 1950s, the 1960s brought another Cardinals renaissance. Led by the dynamic pitching of Bob Gibson and the speedy Lou Brock, the Cardinals played in three seven-game World Series in the decade, with their series wins in 1964 and 1967 coming against the Yankees and the Red Sox, respectively. The Cardinals’ 1964 championship was notable for ending the Yankees’ remarkable mid-century dynasty that saw the New York team win 14 pennants in 16 seasons. In 1966 the team moved into Busch Memorial Stadium (renamed Busch Stadium in 1982), which would serve as the franchise’s home until 2005. The team began to play in a new ballpark, also called Busch Stadium, in 2006. In 1970 the Cardinals traded away outfielder Curt Flood, who then sued Major League Baseball to challenge the club’s ability to trade him without his permission, which later led to the establishment of free agency. The outstanding defensive shortstop Ozzie Smith joined the team in 1982 and helped them win the World Series in his first year in St. Louis. Smith’s Cardinal teams returned twice more to the World Series in the 1980s, losing both times.

In 1996 the Cardinals hired manager Tony La Russa, who would go on to become the winningest manager in team history. The following year, St. Louis added slugger Mark McGwire, whose chase of the single-season home run record in 1998 made him a local icon (though allegations of steroid use would later damage his reputation among Cardinal fans). Superstar slugger Albert Pujols joined the team in 2001 and led them to a return to the World Series in 2004, which was a sweep at the hands of the resurgent Red Sox. In 2006 an underdog Cardinals squad advanced to the World Series, where it easily defeated the favoured Detroit Tigers to become the champion with the lowest regular-season winning percentage in baseball history, after having posted a win-loss record of 83–79.

The Cardinals made just one postseason appearance between 2007 and 2010, a Division Series loss in 2009, but in 2011 St. Louis staged a remarkable comeback to advance to the playoffs after trailing the Atlanta Braves by 8 1/2 games in the Wild Card standings with just a month left in the regular season. The Cardinals then upset both the Philadelphia Phillies and the Milwaukee Brewers in the postseason to advance to the World Series. There St. Louis defeated the Texas Rangers in a dramatic seven-game series that included an 11-inning game six in which the Cardinals twice came within one strike of losing the World Series before getting timely hits to extend—and eventually win—the contest.

After losing a seven-game NL Championship Series (NLCS) to the eventual-champion San Francisco Giants in 2012, the Cardinals again won their way into the World Series in 2013, where the team was defeated by the Red Sox in six games. The team’s run of success continued in 2014 with another division title and a berth in the NLCS (a five-game loss to the Giants). After setting a franchise record with its fifth straight postseason berth in 2015, the Cardinals failed to reach the playoffs in 2016. The team then posted a series of winning seasons that failed to result in a postseason berth until 2019, when St. Louis captured a division title and advanced to the NLCS, where the team was swept by the Washington Nationals. The Cardinals also qualified for the playoffs in the 2020 and 2021 seasons—the former of which was shortened due to the COVID-19 pandemic—but both times the team lost in the Wild Card round.

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