The Oklahoman

TOGETHER AGAIN

- By Bob Nightengal­e

White Sox named Hall of Famer and threetime World Series champion Tony La Russa as their new manager 34 years after parting ways

PHOENIX — The Chicago White Sox, who never seriously considered anyone else, and spent the past three weeks convincing him to come out of retirement, on Thursday named Hall of Famer and three-time World Series champion Tony La Russa as their new manager.

La Russa, 76, last managed in 2011, and has declined several managerial opportunit­ies since but could not resist the White Sox when they reached out earlier this month.

There was speculatio­n in Chicago that former Houston Astros manager A.J. Hinch was the preferred candidate after his suspension was lifted following the World Series, but a high-ranking White Sox official told USA TODAY Sports he was never interviewe­d.

The official spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the hiring process.

The only question was whether La Russa, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014, was interested to returning to the daily grind of managing.

Simply, the opportunit­y to come full circle, help White Sox chairman Jerry Reinsdorf win another World Series title, while inheriting a championsh­ip-caliber ballclub, was too great for La Russa to pass up.

The hiring of La Russa will be criticized given his age (he'll be the oldest manager in baseball), time away from managing and the general shift toward younger, datasavvy managers. But those who have worked alongside him the past nine years in other baseball roles say his acumen hasn't faded.

“While I have had other inquiries about managing since retiring, this opportunit­y with the White Sox brings together a number of important factors that make this the right time and the right place,” La Russa said in a statement.

The White Sox were the team that provided La Russa with his first managerial job in 1979, and fired in 1986 by GM Ken “Hawk'' Harrelson, with Reinsdorf later calling it the worst decision the White Sox ever made. For firing La Russa? “No, for hiring Hawk,'' Reinsdorf would say, laughing, “because he's the guy who fired Tony.''

Reinsdorf, 84, and La Russa remained best of friends over the years, and when La Russa decided to retire late in the 2011 season, he had kept his decision a secret, letting few people in on his plans.

Well, on the night of Oct. 28, 2011, when La Russa's St. Louis Cardinals beat the Texas Rangers to win Game 7 of the World Series, guess who was on the field soaking in the scene, celebratin­g La Russa's glory. Yep, Reinsdorf. When the White Sox decided to fire Rick Renteria after making several bullpen blunders down the stretch, costing them the AL Central title and a first- round loss to the Oakland A's, the White Sox immediatel­y reached out to the Los Angeles Angels to gain formal permission to speak to La Russa, who was a senior advisor of baseball operations.

They made it clear to La Russa that it was his job if he wanted it, and it took several weeks for him to decide whether he was ready to jump back into the rigorous managerial lifestyle.

Besides, there is a legacy to protect.

La Russa has won the third- most games in history with 2,728, trailing only Connie Mack (3,731) and John McGraw (2,763). The older managers in baseball history are Mack, 87, and Jack McKeon, 80.

This is the only job that would lure him out of retirement simply to help realize Reinsdorf's dream of winning at least one more time.

Will it work? Will the dream come to fruition with Reinsdorf and La Russa riding off the sunset together?

Time will tell, but certainly, this will be worth watching.

 ?? PHOTO/MATT MARTON, FILE] [AP ?? Tony La Russa, the Hall of Famer who won a World Series championsh­ip with the Oakland Athletics and two more with the St. Louis Cardinals, is returning to manage the Chicago White Sox 34 years after they fired him, the team announced Thursday.
PHOTO/MATT MARTON, FILE] [AP Tony La Russa, the Hall of Famer who won a World Series championsh­ip with the Oakland Athletics and two more with the St. Louis Cardinals, is returning to manage the Chicago White Sox 34 years after they fired him, the team announced Thursday.

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