Name

Mike Scioscia

(Michael Lorri Scioscia)

Thumb
Player Thumbnail
Image Source Creative Commons logo

User Rating
(0 users)
Data Complete 60%
15%

Born
1958 (67 years old)
Shiny National flag Upper Darby Township, United States

Position
Catcher

Status
Retired

Ethnicity
White

Team Number


Outfitter

Kit
Side
Left

Wage Year

Player Cutout
No Cutout thumb

Archive


Full Body Render
No Render Icon

Sport
Player sport icon Baseball

Team
_Retired Baseball

League
_No League Baseball

Creative Commons Artwork
Creative Commons logo Yes


Description English Flag icon

Michael Lorri Scioscia (born November 27, 1958), nicknamed "Sosh" and "El Jefe" (Spanish for "The Boss"), is an American former Major League Baseball catcher and manager in Major League Baseball (MLB). He managed the Anaheim / Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim / Los Angeles Angels from the 2000 season through the 2018 season, and was the longest-tenured manager in Major League Baseball and second-longest-tenured coach/manager in the "Big Four" (MLB, NFL, NHL, and NBA), behind only Gregg Popovich at the time of his retirement. As a player, Scioscia made his major league debut with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1980. He was selected to two All-Star Games and won two World Series over the course of his 13-year MLB career, which was spent entirely with the Dodgers; this made him the only person in MLB history to spend his entire playing career with one team and entire managing career with another team with 10+ years in both places. He was signed by the San Diego Padres and Texas Rangers late in his career, but never appeared in a major league game for either team due to injury.

After his playing career ended, Scioscia spent several seasons as a minor league manager and major league coach in the Dodgers organization before being hired as the Angels manager after the 1999 season. As a manager, Scioscia led the Angels to their only-to-date World Series championship in 2002. He is the Angels' all-time managerial leader in wins, games managed, and division titles. Scioscia was honored with the American League Manager of the Year Award in 2002 and 2009. On May 8, 2011, Scioscia became the 56th manager to win 1,000 or more games, and the 23rd to have all 1,000 or more victories with a single team.
wiki icon creative commons icon



Trophies search icon

Honour icon
MLB World Series
2002
Honour icon
MLB All Star
1990
Honour icon
MLB All Star
1989
Honour icon
MLB World Series
1988



Milestones


Former Youth Teams search icon


Former Senior Teams search icon
Former team badge icon
1980-1992


Former Club Staff search icon
Former Manager Team Icon
1997-1998
Coach
Former Manager Team Icon
2000-2018
Manager


Contracts search icon



Fanart search icon
no fanartno fanartno fanartno fanart

Player Poster
No Poster thumb

Banner



News Reports
None found...

Collections
None found...


Statistics search icon
None Found...


Other Links
ESPN Icon
ESPN
Wikidata Icon
WikiData