Larry Sherry

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Larry Sherry
Larry Sherry

Lawrence Sherry (July 25, 1935 - December 17, 2006) was an American right-handed relief pitcher in Major League Baseball who spent most of his career with the Los Angeles Dodgers and Detroit Tigers. He was named the Most Valuable Player of the 1959 World Series as the Dodgers won their first championship since relocating from Brooklyn just two years earlier.

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Sherry was born with clubfeet for which he needed surgery as an infant and wore special shoes.[1] He attended Fairfax High School in Los Angeles.

From Los Angeles, California, Sherry made his debut with his hometown Dodgers on April 17, 1958 – just their third game after moving west. Adding to the pressure, the game was played on the road against their hated rivals, the San Francisco Giants, who had also relocated from New York City. Sherry had a brief outing, facing four batters without recording an out, and appeared in only four more games all year.

But he returned with a solid season in 1959, winning 7 games with only two losses, with an earned run average of 2.19. He was named MVP of the 1959 Series, in which the Dodgers defeated the Chicago White Sox in 6 games, and also received the Babe Ruth Award. Sherry completed all four Dodger victories during the Series, winning two of them, and had a 0.71 ERA in 12 and two-thirds innings.

In 1960 he won a career-high 14 games, finished 38 games (4th in the league), pitched in 57 games (6th in the league), and even received support for MVP.

In 1961 he was 5th in the NL in saves (15) and games finished (34), and 9th in games pitched (53).

In 1962 he was 7th in saves (11) and games pitched (58).

Sherry and his brother Norm, a Dodgers catcher from 1959 to 1962, became the first all-Jewish battery in major league history.

He was traded to the Tigers just before the 1964 season, and spent three and a half years with his new club, earning a career-best 20 saves in 1966, 3rd-best in the AL.

He was traded to the Houston Astros for the second half of the 1967 season, and ended his career with three games for the California Angels in 1968.

Sherry retired with a record of 53-44, 606 strikeouts, 82 saves and a 3.67 ERA in 416 games and 799-1/3 innings.

He later coached in the Dodgers' minor league organization.

On December 17, 2006, after a long battle with cancer, Sherry died at his home in Mission Viejo, California.

Preceded by
Bob Turley
World Series MVP
1959
Succeeded by
Bobby Richardson
Preceded by
Elston Howard
Babe Ruth Award
1959
Succeeded by
Bill Mazeroski
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