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Tommy Lasorda : ウィキペディア英語版
Tommy Lasorda

Thomas Charles "Tommy" Lasorda (born September 22, 1927) is a former Major League baseball player who has had a lengthy career in sports management. In 2009, he marked his sixth decade in one capacity or another with the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers organization, the longest non-continuous (he played one season with the Kansas City Athletics) tenure anyone has had with the team, edging Dodger broadcaster Vin Scully by a single season. He was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame as a manager in 1997.
==Playing career==
Tommy Lasorda signed with the Philadelphia Phillies as an undrafted free agent in 1945 and began his professional career with the Concord Weavers in 1945. He then missed the 1946 and 1947 seasons because of a stint in the United States Army. He served on active duty from October 1945 until spring 1947.
He returned to baseball in 1948 with the Schenectady Blue Jays of the Canadian-American League. On May 31, 1948, he struck out 25 Amsterdam Rugmakers in a 15-inning game setting a professional record (since broken), and drove in the winning run with a single.〔Hugerich, Frank (May 31, 1948). ("LaSorda Singles in 15th to Give Jays Victory Over Amsterdam" ). ''Schenectady Gazette''. p. 14. Archived at Google News. Retrieved May 3, 2013.〕 In his next two starts, he struck out 15 and 13, gaining the attention of the Dodgers, who drafted him from the Phillies chain and sent him to the Greenville Spinners in 1949. Lasorda also pitched for the Cristobal Mottas in the Canal Zone Baseball League in Panama from 1948 through 1950. Lasorda played for Almendares (Cuba) from 1950–52 and 1958–60, compiling a 16–13 record in four seasons, including 8–3 with a 1.89 ERA in 1958–59. The Mottas won the championship in '48 and Lasorda made his major league debut on August 5, 1954 for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Though he did not play in the 1955 World Series, he won a World Series ring as a member of the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers.
He pitched for the Dodgers for two seasons, and then for the Kansas City Athletics for one season, after the Athletics purchased him from the Dodgers. He was later traded by Kansas City to the New York Yankees in 1956. He appeared in 22 games for the Triple-A Denver Bears in 1956–57, and then was sold back to the Dodgers in 1957. However, during his brief tenure with the Bears, Lasorda was profoundly influenced by Denver skipper Ralph Houk, who would become Lasorda's role model as an MLB manager.
"Ralph taught me if that if you treat players like human beings, they will play like Superman," he told Bill Plaschke in the biography, ''I Live for This: Baseball's Last True Believer''. "He taught me how a pat on a shoulder can be just as important as a kick in the butt."〔Plaschke, Bill, ''I Live for This: Baseball's Last True Believer''. New York: Hughton Mifflin Co., 2007, p. 85〕
Lasorda was first optioned to the Montreal Royals of the International League in 1950. He also played winter baseball for Almendares (Cuba) from 1950–52 and 1958–60, compiling a 16–13 record in four seasons, including 8–3 with a 1.89 ERA in 1958–59. He pitched for Montreal from 1950–54 and 1958–1960 and is the winningest pitcher in the history of the team (107–57) (Lasorda was sent back down to Montreal in 1954 after the Dodgers were forced to keep a young Sandy Koufax on their roster due to the Bonus Rule. He would later joke that it took Koufax to keep him off the Dodger pitching staff). He led Montreal to four straight Governors' Cups from 1951 to 1954, and a fifth one in 1958. On June 24, 2006 he was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.〔Burnett, Richard. ("Walkie-Talkie Lasorda" ) - Hour.ca - June 1, 2006〕 He played only in the minors for the Yankees and the Dodgers returned him to the Montreal team where he was voted the International League's Most Valuable Pitcher Award in 1958, when he won his fifth minor league championship. The Dodgers released him on July 9, 1960.

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