Tony Torchia
Anthony Lewis Torchia (born December 13, 1943, in Chicago, Illinois) is a former minor league baseball player and manager. He was a left-handed throwing, right-handed batting first baseman who played 13 seasons in the minors. Originally signed by the Los Angeles Dodgers, he was drafted by the Boston Red Sox after his rookie season, 1962, and he would spend 24 years in the Boston organization.[1] Torchia played in 1,435 minor league games and batted .294 with 89 home runs.
Torchia holds the distinction of having been the only man who has served as a player, coach and manager of the Pawtucket Red Sox. After he retired as a player in 1974, he coached for the "PawSox" in 1975 (under skipper Joe Morgan). He then managed Boston farm clubs from 1976–1984, ranging from Class A to Triple A. His first team, the Winston-Salem Red Sox, won the 1976 Carolina League pennant. He skippered the Bristol Red Sox of the Double-A Eastern League for five seasons (1978–1982), winning league titles in 1978 and 1981. Torchia returned to Pawtucket as the third manager in the club's Triple-A history in 1983. He spent two seasons there, winning the 1984 Governors' Cup, emblematic of the championship of the International League.
Torchia then was named bullpen coach for the Boston Red Sox in 1985, his only full campaign in Major League Baseball. He managed Boston's Double-A New Britain farm club in 1986 before leaving the organization for good. He later sued the Red Sox, claiming he was fired for seeking therapy for personal issues.[2]
Beginning in 1987, Torchia coached and managed at the minor league level for the San Diego Padres, Colorado Rockies, Houston Astros and Montréal Expos.[1] His 1988 Riverside Red Wave, a San Diego affiliate, won the Class A California League championship. Torchia most recently managed the Mid-Missouri Mavericks in the independent Frontier League.[3]
Preceded by Joe Morgan |
Pawtucket Red Sox manager 1983–1984 |
Succeeded by Rac Slider |
Preceded by Walt Hriniak |
Boston Red Sox Bullpen Coach 1985 |
Succeeded by Joe Morgan |
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Tony Torchia Profile". MWL Guide. March 20, 1999.
- ↑ Associated Press, June 16, 1989
- ↑ "Meet the Mavericks". Columbia Daily Tribune. May 23, 2004.