Bangkok Post

Twins’ Molitor, D-Backs’ Lovullo win Manager of Year awards

- Torey Lovullo Paul Molitor

NEW YORK: Arizona’s Torey Lovullo and Minnesota’s Paul Molitor were named Major League Baseball’s top managers on Tuesday in voting by a media panel.

Lovullo won the National League Manager of the Year award while Molitor captured the honour for the American League.

The Diamondbac­ks went 93-69 under Lovullo in 2017, winning 24 more games than the season before, and reached the play-offs for the first time since 2011, beating Colorado in the wild-card game before losing to the Los Angeles Dodgers in the division semi-finals.

Molitor guided the Twins to an 85-77 record this year after they went 59-103 in 2016. Minnesota lost the AL wild-card game to the New York Yankees.

Lovullo received 111 total points and 18 of 30 first-place votes in media voting to defeat runner-up Dave Roberts of the Dodgers with 55 points and Colorado’s Bud Black on 43.

Lovullo, a bench coach for the Boston Red Sox before joining the D-backs this season, joined Bob Melvin (2007) and Kirk Gibson (2011) as the only Arizona managers to win the award.

Molitor became the first Minnesota manager honoured since Ron Gardenhire in 2010, the Twins’ most recent prior play-off campaign. The other AL top manager from Minnesota was Tom Kelly in 1991.

Lovullo is only the eighth manager to win the award in his first full season guiding a major league club, but the fourth in a row after Roberts last year, Jeff Banister in the AL for the Texas Rangers in 2015 and Washington’s Matt Williams in 2014.

Molitor became only the second Baseball Hall of Fame player to become a Manager of the Year after Frank Robinson, who took the AL award for Baltimore in 1989.

RED SOX GREAT DOERR DIES

Former Boston Red Sox second baseman Bobby Doerr, who had been the oldest living retired Major League Baseball player, has died at age 99, the Red Sox announced on Tuesday.

A nine-time All-Star, Doerr batted .288 with 223 home runs, 1,247 runs batted in and 2,042 hits over 14 seasons with Boston before a 1951 back injury ended his career.

Doerr died on Monday in Junction City, Oregon. He was also the oldest living member of the Baseball Hall of Fame, having been inducted in 1986. That tag now goes to ex-St Louis player and manager Red Schoendien­st, 94.

Doerr, who missed the 1945 season while serving in World War II, had his No.1 jersey retired in 1988 by the Red Sox.

Doerr served as a Red Sox scout from 1957-66 then a first base coach and hitting instructor from 1967-69. He also served as a batting coach for the Toronto Blue Jays in their first five seasons from 1977 to 1981.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand