BOSTON — Tony La Russa and Dave Dombrowski have been talking about working together again since meeting more than three decades ago.

That reunion will finally happen with a Boston Red Sox franchise that continues to shake things up in its pursuit of another World Series championship.

The Red Sox hired La Russa on Thursday to serve as a vice president and special assistant on its baseball operations staff. He will work for Dombrowski, the team’s president of baseball operations, in player development and consultation with the major and minor league staffs.

La Russa, 73, served in a similar role with the Arizona Diamondbacks the past four seasons.

“It was an opportunity that I was excited about,” La Russa said. “Everything you do professionally, if somehow there’s a personal connection, I think it adds something to the opportunity. Dave and I go way back.”

La Russa was a first-time manager and Dombrowski an energetic young executive with the Chicago White Sox when their careers first crossed paths in the mid-1980s.

Advertisement

“He had more guts than brains is what I remember,” said La Russa, joking about meeting a 23-year-old Dombrowski in his second year as assistant director of the farm system for Chicago.

It’s a fearless approach that La Russa believes has served Dombrowski well since they left Chicago in 1986. La Russa also thinks Boston’s front office chief has an appreciation for his 50-plus years of professional baseball knowledge.

“We’ve talked every year for years, many times about the responsibilities we’ve both had and the ups and downs. When we’ve had questions, we’d always trust each other,” La Russa said. “So it’s a very familiar position.”

Dombrowski said adding someone with La Russa’s knowledge is a natural fit for the change in direction the Red Sox made with the dismissal of John Farrell as manager last month.

“For me, it’s a situation where he’s a great resource for many individuals,” Dombrowski said. “I can’t think of anybody else that’s around in today’s world that has more knowledge than that.”

One of the other big draws to the position for La Russa was the opportunity to work alongside a first-time manager, Alex Cora. But he sees his new job as helping without interfering too much.

“I think you just stay out of the way, and you contribute when you’re asked,” La Russa said.

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.