Jump to content

Charley Lau

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Charlie Lau)

Charley Lau
Catcher
Born: (1933-04-12)April 12, 1933
Romulus, Michigan, U.S.
Died: March 18, 1984(1984-03-18) (aged 50)
Key Colony Beach, Florida, U.S.
Batted: Left
Threw: Right
MLB debut
September 12, 1956, for the Detroit Tigers
Last MLB appearance
September 29, 1967, for the Atlanta Braves
MLB statistics
Batting average.255
Home runs16
Runs batted in140
Teams
As player

As coach

Career highlights and awards

Charles Richard Lau (April 12, 1933 – March 18, 1984) was an American professional baseball player and a highly influential hitting coach.[1] During his playing career in Major League Baseball, Lau appeared in 527 games as a catcher and pinch hitter over all or portions of 11 seasons for four clubs. Then, beginning in 1969, he spent 15 years as a coach for five American League teams, most notably the Kansas City Royals. He was the incumbent hitting coach of the Chicago White Sox when he died, aged 50, from colorectal cancer in 1984.

As a player

[edit]

Lau batted left-handed, threw right-handed, and was listed as 6 feet (1.8 m) tall and 190 pounds (86 kg). Born in Metro Detroit, in Romulus, Michigan, he was signed by the nearby Tigers as an amateur free agent after graduating from high school. He began his playing career in the Tigers' farm system in 1952, missing 1953 and 1954 due to military service, and was called up for his first major league audition in September 1956. However, Lau could not nail down a regular job with Detroit; he got into only 35 total games over parts of three seasons (1956, 19581959), and collected 13 total hits, batting .157.

In October 1959, former Tiger executive John McHale, now general manager of the Milwaukee Braves, acquired Lau and pitcher Don Lee from Detroit for infielder Casey Wise, pitcher Don Kaiser and catcher Mike Roarke. Lau spent all of 1960 with the Braves as the primary backup catcher to veteran Del Crandall, but he hit only .189 in 21 games. In 1961, with Crandall sidelined by a sore shoulder, Lau appeared in 28 early-season games, 24 as starting catcher, into June. On April 28, he caught the second of Warren Spahn's two career no-hitters.[2] But again he struggled offensively, batting .207, was sent to Triple-A Vancouver, then sold to the Baltimore Orioles on August 21. His offensive problems continued, though, with Lau batting only .170 in limited duty for Baltimore.

Lau had shown flashes of power in the Tigers' farm system, reaching double figures in home runs three times between 1955 and 1959. But, in 1962, he adopted a contact hitter's batting stance: feet wide apart, his bat held almost parallel to the ground. The result was a dramatic upturn in his major-league fortunes. He played in 81 games and posted a .294  batting average, with 58 hits, six home runs and 37 runs batted in. He hit .367 (11 for 30) in pinch-hitting roles. In 1963, Lau started slowly, and after hitting .194 in 23 games, the Orioles sold his contract to the Kansas City Athletics on July 1. Given more playing time as a left-handed-hitting platoon catcher, starting 49 games over the 1963 season's final three months, he batted .294 in a Kansas City uniform.

On June 15, 1964, the pennant-contending Orioles reacquired Lau in exchange for relief pitcher Wes Stock.[3] Splitting receiving duties with right-handed-hitting Dick Brown and John Orsino, Lau appeared in 62 games (starting 42) as Baltimore finished two games behind the New York Yankees in the American League race. He batted .259 as an Oriole, and .264 overall.

In 1965, Lau began the transition to full-time pinch hitter, working in 35 games as a catcher, and collecting eight hits and seven bases on balls in 36 appearances as an emergency batsman; he batted a career-best .295. Then, in 1966, he underwent right elbow surgery and missed almost four full months of the regular season. Appearing in only 18 games, all in the pinch, he collected six hits and four bases on balls as Baltimore won its first pennant and World Series championship. Lau did not play in the Fall Classic; the Orioles used no pinch hitters in their four-game sweep over the Los Angeles Dodgers.[4] He spent one more season in the majors as a pinch hitter in 1967; after only one hit in eight at-bats with the Orioles, he was sold back to the Braves, now in Atlanta, where he closed his MLB career with nine hits and four walks in 49 plate appearances. On November 27, 1967, the Braves released him, but appointed him manager of their Double-A Shreveport affiliate in the Texas League.

As a major leaguer, Lau batted .255 over the course of his career. His 298 career hits included 63 doubles, nine triples, 16 home runs and 140 runs batted in. He had 47 pinch hits.[5]

As a hitting coach

[edit]

Lau spent only the 1968 season as a minor-league skipper before returning to the majors as a coach. He began as bullpen coach on Earl Weaver's staff in Baltimore (1969), then became the first-base coach of the 1970 Oakland Athletics, gradually assuming the extra duties of hitting coach during his early coaching career.

In 1971, Lau became the hitting coach (often doubling as first-base coach) for the Kansas City Royals. He held the post through 1978, with the exception of the early part of the 1975 season, when he was the team's roving minor-league hitting instructor after his temporary ouster from the Royals' staff by then-skipper Jack McKeon.[6] He worked with Hal McRae, Amos Otis, Willie Wilson and George Brett. He is also credited for reviving Cookie Rojas' career. Lou Piniella, who played for the Royals from 1969 to 1973, called Lau "the greatest batting instructor of them all."[7] After spending three seasons (1979–1981) with the New York Yankees, reunited with Piniella, Lau became the Chicago White Sox' hitting instructor in 1982, where his pupils included Greg Luzinski, Carlton Fisk, Steve Kemp, Harold Baines and Ron Kittle.

Contrary to popular belief, Lau did not emphasize releasing the top hand after making contact with the pitch and following through with only the lower hand on the bat. He did, however, suggest this measure to hitters who—for whatever reason—could not fully extend their arms during their swings.

Lau developed a list of "Absolutes" about hitting, which included:

  • A balanced, workable stance
  • Rhythm and movement in the stance (as opposed to standing still)
  • A good weight shift from a firm rigid backside to a firm rigid frontside
  • Striding with the front toe closed
  • Having the bat in the launching position as soon as the front foot touches down
  • Making the stride a positive, aggressive motion toward the pitcher
  • A tension-free swing
  • Hitting through the ball
  • Hitting the ball where it is pitched, rather than trying to direct it

While still serving as the White Sox' hitting coach, Lau died in 1984 in Key Colony Beach, Florida at the age of 50 after a year-long bout with cancer.[8] Since his death, only one White Sox player or coach — Lau's friend and disciple Walt Hriniak, the Chisox' hitting coach from 1989 to 1995[9] — has worn his number 6 jersey,[10] although it has not been officially retired.[11] The baseball field at his alma mater, Romulus Senior High School, is named the Charley Lau Baseball Field.

Off the field

[edit]

Lau also appeared in the film Max Dugan Returns as himself. The title character (played by Jason Robards) pays Lau to teach his grandson (Matthew Broderick's character) how to hit.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Charley Lau Dead; Called One of Baseball's Best Batting Instructors". The New York Times. March 19, 1984. Retrieved June 15, 2022.
  2. ^ "Retrosheet Boxscore: Milwaukee Braves 1, San Francisco Giants 0".
  3. ^ "Orioles Trade Wes Stock To A's for Lau, a Catcher". The New York Times. June 15, 1964. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved July 4, 2024.
  4. ^ Retrosheet: 1966 Baltimore Orioles World Series Roster by Position
  5. ^ Retrosheet: Batting Splits for Charlie Lau
  6. ^ "Royals Fire McKeon, Hire Herzog," The Associated Press (AP), Friday, July 25, 1975. Retrieved April 26, 2020
  7. ^ Lou: Fifty Years of Kicking Dirt, Playing Hard, and Winning Big in the Sweet Spot of Baseball by Lou Piniella with Bill Madden (HarperCollins, 2017), p. 329
  8. ^ United Press International, March 19, 1984
  9. ^ Baseball Digest Official Chicago White Sox roster; April 1989, p. 105; April 1990-91-92, p. 103; April 1993, p. 101; April 1994, p. 100; July 1995, p. 83
  10. ^ "Sox, Rios on board with changes, Beckham keeps No. 15, no more deals anticipated". Archived from the original on August 15, 2009. Retrieved January 15, 2010.
  11. ^ "Retired Numbers". Archived from the original on February 25, 2007.
[edit]