Mike Scioscia
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Categories: Articles with trivia sections from August 2007 | 1958 births | Living people | Major league catchers | Los Angeles Dodgers players | Major league players from Pennsylvania | National League All-Stars | Baseball managers | Anaheim Angels managers | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim managers | Manager of the Year Award | Italian-American sportspeople | Penn State University alumni
Michael Lorri "Mike" Scioscia (born November 27 1958 in Morton, Pennsylvania) is a former catcher and current Major League Baseball manager. His last name is pronounced SO-shuh. He is often referred to by the nickname Sosh. Since 1999, he has served as the manager of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Scioscia led the team to its first World Series championship in 2002 as a wild card entry, as well as to its fourth American League (AL) West division title in 2004 (their first since 1986), fifth AL West division title in 2005, and sixth AL West division title in 2007. Scioscia was honored as 2002 American League Major League Manager of Year by the Baseball Writers Association of America (the official Manager of the Year award, as recognized by Major League Baseball). He was also named 2002 A.L. Manager of the Year by The Sporting News, USA Today Sports Weekly, and the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. He was further named the overall Major League 2002 Manager of the Year by Baseball America. In his playing days, Scioscia spent his entire career (1980-1992) with the Los Angeles Dodgers, with whom he won two World Series (1981 and 1988) and hit a memorable home run in the 1988 NLCS.
Playing careerMike Scioscia was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1st round (19th overall pick) of the 1976 amateur draft, debuting for the Dodgers in 1980 (replacing Steve Yeager) and went on to play 12 years for the team. Dodger manager Tommy Lasorda helped lobby Scioscia to sign with the Dodgers after the team drafted him out of Springfield High School, a public school located in the suburbs of Philadelphia in 1976.
Scioscia went to the San Diego Padres in 1993, but suffered a torn rotator cuff injury during spring training that year and did not play in any regular season games for the team. He closed out his career with the Texas Rangers in 1994 after a failed attempt to come back from the injury, again without having played in any regular season games that year. Exclusively a catcher, the 6-foot, 2-inch, 230 pound Scioscia was primarily known for his defense. Former Dodgers vice president Al Campanis once called Mike Scioscia the best plate-blocking catcher he had seen in his 46-year baseball career. In one collision with St. Louis Cardinals' slugger Jack Clark in July, 1985, Scioscia was knocked unconscious but still held onto the ball. Scioscia, however, has claimed he had an even harder plate collision the following season.
Scioscia's technique for blocking the plate and making a tag varied slightly from the traditional manner employed by most catchers. When applying the tag, most catchers hold the baseball in their bare hand, with that hand then being inside their catcher's mitt to apply the tag with both hands. Scioscia preferred to hold the ball in his catcher's mitt without making use of his bare hand. Also, Scioscia felt he was less prone to injury in a collision if positioned his body so that he was kneeling on both knees and turned to the side, whereas most catchers make their tag either standing or on one knee. Indeed, Scioscia was noted for his durability. After missing most of the 1983 season after tearing his rotator cuff, Scioscia played in more than 100 games each season for the remainder of his career with the Dodgers. Offensively, Scioscia was generally unspectacular, but he was known as a solid contact hitter, striking out fewer than once every 14 at bats over the course of his career. Because of his ability to make contact, he was sometimes used as the second hitter in the batting order—an atypical slot for a player with Scioscia's large-set frame and overall batting average. He had a particularly strong season on offense in 1985, batting .296 and finishing second in the National League in on-base percentage. Scioscia also hit a dramatic, ninth inning, game-tying home run against the New York Mets' Dwight Gooden in the Game 4 of the 1988 National League Championship Series. With the Dodgers going on to win that game in extra innings, Scioscia's blast (which came after he had hit only three home runs that entire season) proved crucial to the Dodgers' ultimately prevailing in that series. Scioscia was a key player on the Dodgers' 1981 and 1988 World Series champion teams, and is the Dodgers' all-time leader in games caught (1,395.) Mickey Hatcher and Alfredo Griffin, Scioscia's teammates from the 1988 Dodger team, are currently on Scioscia's coaching staff with the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. Scioscia earned as much as $2,183,333/year in salary toward the end of his career, and earned the unofficial total sum of $10,109,999 over his career. Scioscia signed with the San Diego Padres and then the Texas Rangers after leaving the Dodgers, but he did not play a regular-season game due to injury. Career Statistics
Managerial record(updated thru Oct. 8, 2007)
Trivia
Scioscia is only the 17th person in history to win World Series Championships as both player and manager. (12 others won as player/manager in same season.) Scioscia is the winningest Angels manager as he picked up his 626th win on May 4, 2007 in a home game against the Chicago White Sox. Scioscia caught two no-hitters in his career, thrown by Fernando Valenzuela on June 29, 1990 vs. the St. Louis Cardinals and by Kevin Gross on August 17, 1992 vs. the San Francisco Giants. In 1990, Scioscia became the first Dodger catcher to start in an All-Star Game since Hall of Famer Roy Campanella. Scioscia is one of the few managers in the Major Leagues who is bilingual in both English and Spanish, an especially rare skill for a manager who is not a native Spanish speaker. Scioscia's Spanish is fluent enough that he often gives interviews in Spanish. His skill with the language is particularly useful with the Angels, as the team currently includes many Latin American players and since the Los Angeles area has a large Hispanic contingent. In addition to his more orthodox work in baseball, Scioscia is also notable for a guest appearance on The Simpsons in 1992, in which he played himself as a deer hunter and power plant employee.
Scioscia is featured along with Fernando Valenzuela and Jack Perconte on his 1981 Topps rookie baseball card. Scioscia regularly participates in the Angels' community relations activities. Scioscia acts a celebrity endorser of the Howard's Appliance & Big Screen Superstore chain in Southern California. In the 2002 World Series, Scioscia was pitted against the San Francisco Giants manager, Dusty Baker, a former teammate of Scioscia's with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Tommy Lasorda claimed that he always knew that both players would end up as managers, for their curiosity and willingness to learn. Scioscia wore #14 for the majority of his playing career, and he currently continues to wear that same uniform number as a manager. In 2007 Scioscia a native of Morton, PA was named to the Delaware County, PA Sports Hall of Fame. He attended Springfield (Delco) High School Penn State University. In the Simpsons episode, Homer at the Bat, Scioscia is poisoned by radioactivity. See also
External links
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