A conversation between Bob Knight and Tony La Russa
Coaches Roundtable: Bobby Knight and Tony La Russa
Editor's note: ESPN's Rece Davis sat down earlier this week with Hall of Famer Bob Knight, the all-time winningest coach in NCAA Division I men's basketball history, and St. Louis Cardinals manager Tony La Russa. An edited transcript of their conversation:
Rece Davis: You two guys have achieved a lot of success, but your paths don't necessarily seem to be ones that would meet together. How'd you get to know Tony so well?
Bob Knight: Well, one of the guys that I think is really partially responsible Eddie Einhorn was the guy that started college basketball on television, and he was one of the owners of the White Sox. So I'd gotten to know him really well and he knew I was a baseball fan and he said, "You'll really like our manager. You gotta come up and meet our manager." So I did and uh, I told you about the equipment that I've worn where Parcells has coached. I've had White Sox stuff, A's stuff and Cardinals stuff with where [La Russa has] managed. And when we start talking -- he's just like I felt about Bill -- and I've told him this a bunch of times, he's a guy that could coach anything, could teach any team sport, because he just has a great concept of what it takes to win and also what causes you to lose, and those two things are so important with these teams going into these last four games. And I once asked him, and I'll ask the question again, but it was really kind of -- it was a basketball question asked in a baseball way, "Would you rather go into the playoffs and the World Series with good hitting and just adequate pitching, or great pitching and just adequate hitting?"
Sunday Conversations
Rece Davis' interview with Bob Knight and Tony La Russa will air Sunday on SportsCenter at 11 p.m. ET. To read Davis' interview with Knight and Bill Parcells, click here.
Tony La Russa: That's not even a hard question, as I answered because what you learn in baseball, and I think it's true in a lot of other sports: you can't outscore the other team and be successful. The first thing you gotta do is pitch and defend and then score however much you can. But if every night you win 10-9, you won't do that very often.
Knight: Well, you know, that's kind of the way in basketball, too, I think, and that's one of the reasons why I've had over the years such a tremendous appreciation for being able to be around Tony and his teams because I relate what he's doing to basketball: the pitching and the defensive positioning and the ability of defenders, and now you can win games 3-2. It's like Tony said, "It's hard to win 9-8," and I think it's hard to win 91-90. And you've got a much better chance if we can win 62-58. Davis: Tony, when do you remember the relationship between you and Coach starting to develop and becoming more than just a meeting? La Russa: Well, I did meet him as the White Sox manager. He was by the cage there, and I shook his hand. And he told me to get out of the way, he was busy, and when I had enough time in the league I could come back and say hello to him. But I went to the A's, and our trainer, who is still in St. Louis, Barry Weinberg, was the trainer for Bob at Indiana. And I still do it. I did it especially in my first year that I was managing. If I talk to the team and I said something I thought was important and it was something I had learned, I would attribute it to who[m]ever I had heard or read it from. And you know, four or five times, I said, "This is what we gotta do and this is why" So somehow Barry calls the coach and says the guy that's managing our club keeps referring to you. So one day the phone rings and I pick it up. He says, "Well, if you're gonna quote me, I want to make sure you quote me accurately, and I'm gonna come by." And I'm thinking to myself, "Who the heck is this guy? It sounds like Bob Knight." I said "Coach, is this you?" And he said, "Yeah, I take it very personal when someone is quoting me, and I wanna make sure that if someone's quoting me they're quoting me correctly, and I will be in Yuma, Ariz., in 1988." And, ever since then, I don't think he's missed one spring since 1988. Knight: We're playing the Padres, and we beat [them] 2 or 3-0 on Saturday night and his meeting with coaches is on Sunday morning. This is one of my greatest thrills in sports. So I'm kinda, "When are we gonna get some hits? We gotta have a few hits, and I know that we're gonna win a lot of games 3-2 and 2-1 and so forth." So I'm kinda needling the next morning. Well, we both take a lot of needling but there also comes a point. And he's got the lineup card, and if you've ever seen one, it's a pretty stiff piece of cardboard. And so I'm sitting across the table from Tony. He flips the lineup card at me and I think it stuck in my throat. I'm afraid to pull it out because I think blood's gonna go everywhere. He says, "All right then, you make up the lineup if you know so much about it." Well, I did know one thing: Dave Stewart's pitching that afternoon. So I said, "Well, I need a pen." I don't think he ever thought -- I think he thought when he said that it was gonna be over with. I said, "I need a pen." Six coaches hand me a pen. And Tony's great. He says "All right, I got into this, but here are the eight guys you gotta play. You can bat them any way you want to." So about the third inning some guy is sitting behind us. [He says,] "One of them doesn't know anything about basketball and the other doesn't know anything about baseball." And Tony says, "Don't turn around." He nudges me and says, "Don't turn around. Let's not get in an argument with some moron sitting behind [us.] Let's just keep watching. Don't turn around." About an inning later, curiosity gets the best of me. And I turn around, and it's Dick Enberg sitting behind us. He had been at the game the night before, and he saw the two of us sitting there. Well anyhow, at the end of five innings, we're ahead 3-0 and I quit. I said, "It's too easy." I said, "Baseball's too easy. I quit." And of course as I said, Dave Stewart was pitching and I know nobody's gonna hit Dave Stewart. Davis: Were you hoping he'd be behind when he left? La Russa: No, no. We're keeping score. I don't care who makes the lineup; I want to win the game. But here's a couple of P.S.'s. His big issue with my lineup the night before was that our big slugger was not protected. And we had a split squad game, which half the team went to Phoenix and the other half stayed in Yuma. And McGwire was not protected properly, 'cause I had Dave Henderson I had brought, and he was sitting in the second spot. So he was griping that several times in the game they pitched around McGwire and we didn't score. That's when I threw the lineup at him, and it just brushed his cheek; it didn't stick in his throat (Knight grabs throat and coughs). But his big move was to move Dave Henderson behind McGwire, and so when I posted it, I posted it "Per B. Knight". Henderson walks in and he says "Hey Coach, you're the guy I should play for. You know how good I am." And Coach looks at him and says, "Let me tell you something. Talk is cheap. We'll see what you do during the game." And Dave says, "OK." He hits a 2-run double for two of the three runs. Bob's excited, he's high-fiving him and everything. Now he didn't turn it over until the fifth inning, now it gets to be the eighth, ninth. He says, "How are we gonna close this one out? Where's Eckersley?" I said, "Back in Phoenix." He says, "You gotta be kidding me. Go get him." I said, "No, Bob, he's in Phoenix." So till we get that third out, he jumps up, sprints onto the field and is high-fiving the guys. And he wants the lineup card, which I think he still has, right? Knight: Got it in a frame in my office. Davis: What kind of baseball manager would he have been? La Russa: Outstanding. I think, I don't know if he'd admit it to others, [but] he told me he likes baseball better than basketball. He knows the game really, really well. He was great friends with Sparky [Anderson] for many, many years, so, I mean, he's been around baseball people and talked baseball. He's got great knowledge. Davis: Is that true? Knight: Well, you know, I like it. I don't -- I don't think -- I wouldn't ever profess to be in a position to be a baseball manager, but I would hope that I could teach fundamentals. It's just like if he were coaching basketball. I don't think there would be he played basketball in high school and then the only thing that's kinda shady about his background in any way, shape or form is a law degree. But I've just watched him, and I've watched what he does, and I've watched what he says, and I've been fortunate enough to be around when he's talked to the team, and right away I said, "He happens to be a baseball manager." Here's a guy that could coach anything, just because he's gonna spend the time and he's gonna pay attention to some things that other guys just don't pay attention to. Davis: Tony, how does motivation in players now compare to when you first started managing? La Russa: There's a bigger difference now than when I first got into professional baseball because that was before guaranteed contracts, before there was a lot of money, so it was mostly survival. You had more competition. I actually started managing in '79; the Messersmith decision was '75, so it already started to change the rights that players had. So what you have now, you have a lot of players who are distracted by what their family, their friends, their agents are telling them: get your numbers, get your money. And the coach stands up and talks about team. What you need to do more than anything is get their attention, persuade them that if they want to be selfish play golf or tennis, but they chose a team sport. And I think the only way you can do that is to be very personal. You have to go one-on-one with players. You can't manage by memo. You can't stand up there and just send out edicts. I think you just gotta really personalize your relationships.


