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Larry Dierker

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Win–loss record
  
139–123

Win–loss record
  
435-348

Height
  
1.93 m

Earned run average
  
3.31

Winning %
  
.556

Weight
  
98 kg

Strikeouts
  
1,493

Name
  
Larry Dierker

Date joined
  
1964

Games managed
  
783

Role
  
Baseball Manager


Larry Dierker Larry Dierker Speakerpedia Discover amp Follow a World of

Education
  
William Howard Taft Charter High School

Books
  
This Ain't Brain Surgery: How to Win the Pennant Without Losing Your Mind

Larry dierker talks astros baseball on opening day in houston


Lawrence Edward Dierker (born September 22, 1946) is a former Major League Baseball pitcher, manager, and broadcaster. During a 14-year baseball career as a pitcher, he pitched from 1964–1977 for the Houston Colt .45s/Astros and the St. Louis Cardinals. He also managed the Astros for five years (1997–2001).

Contents

Larry Dierker wwwastrolandnetdierker2jpg

Playing career

Larry Dierker Bio Larry Dierker

Signed by the Colt .45s at age 17, Dierker made his major-league pitching debut on his 18th birthday – and struck out Willie Mays in the first inning. In 1969, he became the Astros' first 20-game winner, while compiling a 2.33 earned run average, 20 complete games and 232 strikeouts over 305 innings. He was elected to the National League All-Star team in 1969 and 1971. On July 9, 1976, Dierker pitched a no hitter against the Montreal Expos.

Larry Dierker Bio Larry Dierker

As of 2016, Dierker is the last 17-year-old to make his major league debut.

Larry Dierker Larry Dierker Wikipedia

On May 19, 2002, the Astros honored Dierker, retiring his No. 49 jersey.

Broadcasting

Larry Dierker Houston Astros history 1997 season

From 1979 to 1996, Dierker served as a color commentator on the Astros' radio and television broadcasts, a position he returned to in 2004 and 2005.

Managerial career

Larry Dierker Larry Dierker Tribute

Dierker was elected National League Manager of the Year in 1998. Houston finished in first place in four of the five years Dierker managed the team, failing only in 2000 when the Astros placed fourth.

In 1999, Dierker had a medical scare during a game against the San Diego Padres. The Houston manager had been plagued by severe headaches for several days. During the June 13 game, Dierker had a grand mal seizure that rendered him unconscious and nearly killed him. He required emergency brain surgery for a cavernous angioma caused by a tangle of blood vessels in his brain. The game was suspended with the Astros ahead 4-1; it was not completed until the Padres returned to Houston on July 23 (they won, 4-3). After four weeks of recovery, he returned to the helm of the Astros and guided the team through the duration of the season. The Astros won 97 games and a third consecutive National League Central Division title.

Later career

Dierker penned a book entitled This Ain't Brain Surgery, which detailed his baseball career as a pitcher and a manager. He later wrote My Team, in which he ruminated on the greatest players he had been witness to in his years of baseball.

After a short period where Dierker had terminated relations with the club, as of 2015, the Astros' website lists Dierker as employed by them in the role of Special Assistant to the President, Reid Ryan.

References

Larry Dierker Wikipedia