'Felipe Rojas Alou' (born
May 12 1935 in
Bajos de Haina,
Dominican Republic), is a former
outfielder and
first baseman in
Major League Baseball and the former
manager of the
San Francisco Giants and
Montreal Expos. The first Dominican to play regularly in the major leagues, he is the most prominent member of one of the sport's most notable families of the late 20th century: his younger brothers
Matty and
Jesús were both longtime
National League outfielders, and his son
Moisés is a current outfielder with the
New York Mets; all but Jesús have been named
All-Stars at least twice. The family name in the Dominican is
Rojas, but Felipe Alou and his brothers became known by the name Alou when the Giants' scout who signed Felipe mistakenly thought his
matronymic was his father's name.
During his 17-year career spent with the Giants,
Milwaukee & Atlanta Braves,
Oakland Athletics,
New York Yankees,
Montreal Expos, and
Milwaukee Brewers, Alou played all three outfield positions regularly (736 games in
right field, 483 in
center, 433 in
left), and led the
National League in
hits twice and
runs once. Batting regularly in the leadoff spot, he hit a
home run to begin a game on 20 occasions. He later became the winningest manager in Expos history, leading the team from 1992 to 2001 before rejoining the Giants in 2003.
Playing career
Alou lived in poverty in the Dominican Republic and dreamed of escaping it by becoming a doctor. However, a switch from
track and field to baseball at the
Pan-American Games revealed a talent for the game as the Dominican team took gold. He still pursued a university career a while longer, but was finally forced to sign with the Giants in November
1955 for only $200 due to family financial problems.
Alou made his major league debut in
1958 and was an All-Star in
1962, when he
batted .316 with 25 home runs and 98
RBI.
Alou was joined by his brothers, Matty in
1960, and Jesus in
1963, who became the first all-brother outfield.
Alou was traded to the Braves before
1964. Two years later he enjoyed his best season, when he batted .327 with 31 home runs and led the league in runs (122), hits (218), at bats (666), and
total bases (355); he finished second in the batting race to his brother Matty. He also had a good year in
1968, batting .317 and leading the league in hits (210) and at bats (662); he made the All-Star team both years. Alou continued to play with several more teams through
1974, though he never again approached this level of success.
Managing career
After the end of his playing career, Alou joined the Montreal Expos organization in 1976, becoming a
batting coach and a
minor league manager. The Giants offered him the manager's spot in
1985, but he remained with the Expos out of loyalty. On May 22,
1992, Alou was promoted from the Expos bench coach to field manager, becoming the first Dominican-born manager in MLB history.
[1]
The team was developing a core of young talent during this period, including
Larry Walker,
John Wetteland,
Delino DeShields, and Alou's own son, Moisés. In
1994 the Expos had the best record in the major leagues; however, the
strike that year denied the Expos a chance at getting to their first
World Series, and ownership soon began dealing all their young talent to cut payroll. Alou was named the
NL Manager of the Year. The
Los Angeles Dodgers tried to lure him away in
1998, but he declined to leave Montreal. Eventually, Alou became the winningest manager in team history.
Despite Alou's popularity in Montreal, the Expos' dismal record eventually led to his dismissal by new owner
Jeffrey Loria, who replaced him with
Jeff Torborg during the
2001 season. Several teams tried to lure Alou out of retirement, including the
Boston Red Sox, but he would not budge. He finally agreed to serve a single year as the bench coach for
Detroit Tigers rookie manager
Luis Pujols (
2002). Prior to the
2003 season, Alou was named manager of the Giants, the team where he began his professional baseball career, replacing
Dusty Baker who had left to manage the
Chicago Cubs. In his first season in San Francisco, he managed his team into the playoffs, where they were defeated by the
Florida Marlins in the
NL Division Series in 4 games. The Marlins went on to win the World Series.
In
2005, the Giants signed Moisés Alou to a one-year contract with an option for the
2006 season, reuniting him professionally with his father after seven seasons apart.
Despite his team's poor performance, the Giants signed the elder Alou to a one-year contract extension midway through the 2005 season, bringing him back for his fourth season as the team's manager. During the 2005 season, Alou and some Giants players, such as Omar Vizquel, were publicly offended by racially inflammatory comments made by local radio host
Larry Krueger towards Giants hitters of Caribbean/Latin origin. In response, Alou refused to accept Krueger's apology and called him "this messenger of "
Satan". Alou's contract ended after the 2006 season. He was replaced by former
San Diego Padres manager
Bruce Bochy.
See also
★
Players from Dominican Republic in MLB
★
Top 500 home run hitters of all time
★
List of major league players with 2,000 hits
★
List of Major League Baseball runs scored champions
★
List of second generation MLB players
★
Montreal Expos all-time roster
References
1. Expos Media Guide 1996, Montreal Expos, , , , 1996,
External links
★
career statistics @ Baseball-Reference.com &
managing record @ Baseball-Reference.com
★
Baseball Almanac
★
Baseball Library