I'm a big Detroit Tigers fan and have always been interested in Jewish baseball players in the Major Leagues. Therefore, the soon-to-be made announcement that the Detroit Tigers will hire Brad Ausmus to be their next manager is exciting news. Ausmus, who is Jewish and once played for the Detroit Tigers, is currently the manager for Israel's World Baseball Classic team.
The hiring of Brad Ausmus marks the first time the Detroit Tigers will have a Jewish manager*. As soon as Jim Leyland made his resignation public last month, Brad Ausmus' name immediately was mentioned on the short list of potential replacements for Leyland, who took the Tigers to the World Series twice during his eight years with the team. Last year, Ausmus interviewed with the Red Sox for their manager position and turned down an opportunity to interview with the Astros for their manager position.
Ausmus spent 18 seasons in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the Padres, Tigers, Astros and Dodgers. He won the Gold Glove Award three times and made the All Star team in 1999. In 2007 Ausmus won the Darryl Kile Award "for integrity and courage." Ausmus was inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2004. Now that he'll be back in Detroit, I will be certain to bring up his name as a candidate for the Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation's Hall of Fame, of which I'm a voting member.
Brad Ausmus was born in New Haven, Connecticut to a Jewish mother and Protestant father, who is a retired professor of European history. Of course, one of the first questions people ask about Jewish Major League Baseball players is whether they play on Yom Kippur. Like most Jewish professional baseball players, Ausmus has a mixed record of Yom Kippur play. He did not play on Yom Kippur in 2001. At the time, he was quoted in a collection of quotes by Peter Gammons in Sports Illustrated in a section titled "Everybody needs a little sanctuary" as saying he did play on Yom Kippur explaining that he "was trying to atone for my poor first half [of the season]."
While Brad Ausmus' mother is Jewish, he was not raised with the Jewish religion, but according to one interview he occasionally would celebrate the High Holidays with her and her side of the family. Like other notable Jewish players in baseball -- like Ryan Braun or Shawn Green -- while Ausmus didn't grow up in a Jewish way, he came to embrace it as his popularity grew and as he became identified as a Jewish player. In a 2009 interview with the Jewish Journal, Ausmus explained, "I wasn’t raised with the Jewish religion, so in that sense I don’t really have much feeling toward it... But, however, in the last 10 or so years, I have had quite a few young Jewish boys who will tell me that I am their favorite player or they love watching me play or they feel like baseball is a good fit for them because it worked for me or it worked for Shawn Green or other Jewish players at the major league level. It has been a sense of pride. If you can have a positive impact on a kid, I’m all for it."
Personally, I think this was the smart choice for the Detroit Tigers. Although Ausmus doesn't have managerial experience in the Major Leagues, he has demonstrated his baseball knowledge in other positions including as the manager of the World Baseball Classic Israel team. I hope he'll become involved in the local Detroit Jewish community while he's here as manager, but even more important than that I hope he'll do what Jim Leyland wasn't quite able to do... take the Detroit Tigers to the World Series and actually win the championship for the first time since 1984. Good luck Brad Ausmus and Go Tigers!
*The only other Jewish men to ever manage a Major League Baseball team were Lipman Pike (1800s), Lou Boudreau (Indians, Red Sox, Oakland and Cubs), Bob Melvin (Seattle, Arizona and Oakland), Norm Sherry (Angels) and Jeff Newman (interim for Oakland).
UPDATED: I wasn't sure if the local sports media would mention that Brad Ausmus is Jewish, but Lynn Henning of the Detroit News did. In his column, he wrote, "[Ausmus] is also Jewish, which will stoke a sense of kinship between Ausmus and the Tigers’ deep Jewish audience. In that context, there has been something of a void in the Tigers’ profile dating to the end of Hank Greenberg’s hallowed years in Detroit."
Brad Ausmus played for the Detroit Tigers in 1996 and 1999-2000. |
The hiring of Brad Ausmus marks the first time the Detroit Tigers will have a Jewish manager*. As soon as Jim Leyland made his resignation public last month, Brad Ausmus' name immediately was mentioned on the short list of potential replacements for Leyland, who took the Tigers to the World Series twice during his eight years with the team. Last year, Ausmus interviewed with the Red Sox for their manager position and turned down an opportunity to interview with the Astros for their manager position.
Brad Ausmus wearing a yarmulke and tefillin at the Kotel in Jerusalem while manager of Israel's World Baseball Classic team. |
Ausmus spent 18 seasons in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the Padres, Tigers, Astros and Dodgers. He won the Gold Glove Award three times and made the All Star team in 1999. In 2007 Ausmus won the Darryl Kile Award "for integrity and courage." Ausmus was inducted into the National Jewish Sports Hall of Fame in 2004. Now that he'll be back in Detroit, I will be certain to bring up his name as a candidate for the Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation's Hall of Fame, of which I'm a voting member.
Brad Ausmus was born in New Haven, Connecticut to a Jewish mother and Protestant father, who is a retired professor of European history. Of course, one of the first questions people ask about Jewish Major League Baseball players is whether they play on Yom Kippur. Like most Jewish professional baseball players, Ausmus has a mixed record of Yom Kippur play. He did not play on Yom Kippur in 2001. At the time, he was quoted in a collection of quotes by Peter Gammons in Sports Illustrated in a section titled "Everybody needs a little sanctuary" as saying he did play on Yom Kippur explaining that he "was trying to atone for my poor first half [of the season]."
Brad Ausmus, manager of Israel's World Baseball Classic team presents Shimon Peres with a baseball jersey as Dan Shapiro, U.S. Ambassador to Israel, looks on. |
Personally, I think this was the smart choice for the Detroit Tigers. Although Ausmus doesn't have managerial experience in the Major Leagues, he has demonstrated his baseball knowledge in other positions including as the manager of the World Baseball Classic Israel team. I hope he'll become involved in the local Detroit Jewish community while he's here as manager, but even more important than that I hope he'll do what Jim Leyland wasn't quite able to do... take the Detroit Tigers to the World Series and actually win the championship for the first time since 1984. Good luck Brad Ausmus and Go Tigers!
*The only other Jewish men to ever manage a Major League Baseball team were Lipman Pike (1800s), Lou Boudreau (Indians, Red Sox, Oakland and Cubs), Bob Melvin (Seattle, Arizona and Oakland), Norm Sherry (Angels) and Jeff Newman (interim for Oakland).
UPDATED: I wasn't sure if the local sports media would mention that Brad Ausmus is Jewish, but Lynn Henning of the Detroit News did. In his column, he wrote, "[Ausmus] is also Jewish, which will stoke a sense of kinship between Ausmus and the Tigers’ deep Jewish audience. In that context, there has been something of a void in the Tigers’ profile dating to the end of Hank Greenberg’s hallowed years in Detroit."
5 comments:
From the MLB website: http://mlb.mlb.com/news/article/mlb/reports-detroit-tigers-to-name-brad-ausmus-as-next-manager?ymd=20131103&content_id=63647888&vkey=news_mlb
Too bad he wasn't a match for "our" World Champion Boston Red Sox! It would have been nice to have another yid on the team now that Youkilis is gone!
Thanks for sharing the info. As always your blog us interesting.
Be well.
Perry
Of course he is a Jew according to Jewish law being that his mother is Jewish, however, it looks like that is all despite the picture with the טלית and תפילין. But there is still hope.net
Dear Rabbi Miller, wonderful blog entry. I look forward to reading your blog and also to joining you in rooting just a touch harder for the Tigers. How about a 3T Club on Sundays - Tallit, Tfillin and Tigers. Unfortunately, I live too far (Mozambique) to make with any regularity. All the best, Larry
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