“He’s on a whole different level. He thinks about stuff nobody else is thinking about. I played for him, I know how he is. He’s one of a kind.”
--Darren Oliver, Texas Rangers pitcher, discussing St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony LaRussa.
Tony La Russa has been a major league manager for
33 seasons. In the opening game of the
2011 World Series on Wednesday night against the Rangers, La Russa pulled the right levers with his bullpen,
making five changes. Each move went his way, and the Cardinals won the first games of the
series. 3-2 in front of 46,406 at St. Louis’ Busch Stadium.
LaRussa emphasizes caring as a key component of
this managerial style.
“There’s
a lot of smart baseball people around,” La Russa said. “Nowadays, with all the
distractions, you better get kids that care for your message. And how do you
get them to care? You care for them as people.”
It
is not easy and it takes time.
“Our
staff, we believe in being very personal, up-close with our players,” La Russa
said.
“It’s not a line drawn and you rarely step over it. We really believe in
a lot of intermingling and making each other personally accountable to each
other. In other words, you care for your players. Actually, it’s a harder way
to lead, because you spend a lot of time as a staff thinking about each and
every guy, every day.”
Excerpts
from the NYTimes.com (10/19/2011).
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