Tony La Russa
Tony La Russa, Baseball Hall of Fame manager, was selected to give the 153rd Commencement address at Washington University in St. Louis in 2014 and received an honorary doctor of humanities degree.
Making baseball history
Tony La Russa recently was unanimously elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame and is considered one of the best managers in baseball history. He is also known for his tireless animal rescue work and instilling in his players an interest in giving back to their communities.
During his 33-year career as a manager in Major League Baseball, he won three World Series and 2,728 games, placing him third in all-time major league wins.
He will be inducted to the Baseball Hall of Fame during ceremonies July 27 in Cooperstown, New York, as well as to the St. Louis Cardinals Hall of Fame Museum on Aug. 16.
Mr. La Russa, 69, managed the Chicago White Sox (1979-1986), Oakland Athletics (1986-1995) and St. Louis Cardinals (1996-2011).
In addition to leading the Athletics to the 1989 World Series title and the Cardinals to the 2006 and 2011 World Series titles, he also guided his teams to six league championships and 12 division titles.
He is the first manager to win multiple pennants in both the National and American Leagues and only the second manager to win the World Series in both leagues.
After managing 5,097 games, he ranks second in total number of games managed as well as number of years managing.
Mr. La Russa is the subject of two New York Times’ best-selling books — George Will’s 1990 “Men at Work: The Craft of Baseball” and Buzz Bissinger’s 2005 “Three Nights in August: Strategy, Heartbreak, and Joy Inside the Mind of a Manager.”
In his 2012 New York Times best-selling memoir, “One Last Strike: Fifty Years in Baseball, Ten and a Half Games Back, and One Final Championship Season,” Mr. La Russa recounts his legendary last season as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals.
Mr. La Russa, a native of Tampa, Florida, began his MLB career as a player, starting as an infielder for the Kansas City Athletics in 1963. He also played for the Atlanta Braves and Chicago Cubs, among other teams, before finishing his playing career in the minors in 1977.
In between playing, he attended the University of South Florida, graduating in 1969 with a degree in industrial management, and Florida State University College of Law, earning a juris doctorate in 1978. He passed the Florida bar in 1979, but by that time had found his true calling in managing.
When he took over the White Sox in August 1979 at age 35, Mr. La Russa was the youngest manager in the game. Since then, he has been named manager of the year in five seasons.
After he announced his retirement on October 31, 2011, Major League Baseball selected him to manage the National League team for the 2012 All-Star game in Kansas City, only the second retired manager to do so.
Currently, he is employed by Major League Baseball and is a special assistant to Commissioner Bud Selig.
Giving rescued animals a home
Lifelong animal advocates, La Russa and his wife, Elaine, co-founded Tony La Russa’s Animal Rescue Foundation (ARF) in Walnut Creek, California, in 1991.
Since then, the nonprofit organization has helped thousands of companion animals through a variety of programs, including adoption (more than 25,000 animals have been placed in homes), veterinary care for pets of low-income residents and low-cost spay and neuter surgeries.
Mr. La Russa serves as board chairman of ARF, whose mission has expanded to include outreach programs that promote and foster interaction between people and companion animals.
One such program uses therapy animals to provide animal-assisted activities in hospitals, schools, skilled nursing facilities, rehab centers and adult day care facilities. Another, Pets for Vets, pairs soldiers who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan with companionship and comfort.
Mr. La Russa has also been instrumental in the success of Cardinals Care, the St. Louis Cardinals Community Foundation that has distributed nearly $20 million to support St. Louis area nonprofit youth organizations, built 21 youth ball fields in local disadvantaged neighborhoods and served over 4,500 kids per season as part of the Redbird Rookies program since its inception in 1997.
The La Russas live in Alamo, California, and have two daughters, Bianca Tai and Devon Kai.