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One Last Strike

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The team that refused to give up
their manager in his final season
A comeback that changed baseball

After thirty-three seasons managing in Major League Baseball, Tony La Russa thought he had seen it all—that is, until the 2011 Cardinals. Down ten and a half games with little more than a month to play, the Cardinals had long been ruled out as serious postseason contenders. Yet in the face of those steep odds, this team mounted one of the most dramatic and impressive comebacks in baseball history, making the playoffs on the night of the final game of the season and going on to win the World Series despite being down to their last strike—twice.

Now La Russa gives the inside story behind this astonishing comeback and his remarkable career, explaining how a team with so much against it was able to succeed on baseball's biggest stage. Opening up about the devastating injuries, the bullpen struggles, the crucial games, and the players who made it all possible, he reveals how the team's character shaped its accomplishments, demonstrating how this group came together in good times and in bad to become that rarest of things: a team that actually enjoyed it when the odds were against them.

But this story is much more than that of a single season. As La Russa, the third-winningest manager in baseball history, explains, their season was the culmination of a lifetime spent studying the game. Laying bare his often scrutinized and frequently misunderstood approach to managing, he explains his counterintuitive belief in process over result, present moments over statistics, and team unity over individual talent. Along the way he shares the stories from throughout his career that shaped his outlook—from his first days managing the Chicago White Sox to his championship years with the Oakland A's, to his triumphant tenure as St. Louis's longest-serving manager. Setting the record straight on his famously intense style, he explores the vital yet overlooked role that his personal relationships with his players have contributed to his victories, ultimately showing how, in a sport often governed by cold, hard numbers, the secret to his success has been surprisingly human.

Speaking candidly about his decision to retire, La Russa discusses the changes that he'd observed both in the game and in himself that told him, despite his success, it was time to hang up his spikes. The end result is a passionate, insightful, and remarkable look at our national pastime that takes you behind the scenes of the comeback that no one thought possible and inside the mind of one of the game's greatest managers.

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First published September 11, 2012

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Tony La Russa

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 153 reviews
Profile Image for Justin Pascua.
50 reviews1 follower
March 9, 2025
Legendary manager, legendary season of the 2011 St. Louis Cardinals

Completion emoji: 🥳⚾️
Profile Image for Brad.
34 reviews1 follower
October 22, 2012
Over the weekend I read Rick Hummel and Tony La Russa’s book One Last Strike: Fifty Years in Baseball, Ten and a Half Games Back, and One Final Championship Season, recently published by William Morrow. I gave it 5 out of 5 stars over on Goodreads.

Before you start blasting me for just being a Cardinals homer, hear me out. :-) I will readily admit that this excellent rating is in part more as a baseball fan than as a straight-up book reviewer, but I honestly say that from the perspective of a baseball fan, and not just a Cardinal fan. Getting this kind of perspective from someone who has been around the game as long as TLR was really enjoyable. Even as a lifelong Cardinal fan, I’ve never been slow to criticize or question a coach’s or manager’s decision (see my Twitter feed during Tennessee games to catch some of my thoughts on Derek Dooley), and it was no different with La Russa. But in this book he allows the reader into his head for some of those difficult decisions. He even classifies some managerial decisions in his career as “didn’t work out but I think it was the right decision” vs. “didn’t work out and I know it was the wrong decision.” He talked a lot about not letting just the result make that kind of delineation for you, but honestly examining all the variables and asking whether the decision was the right one. Very late in the book, I think in the epilogue, he points out that it really is a book as much about leadership as it is about baseball, and I would certainly agree with that assessment.

The book is written in four parts: Part one is the end of the regular season and the great comeback from 10 1/2 games out, part two is the NLDS, part three the NLCS and part four the World Series. One thing I loved was that TLR would interweave stories from throughout his career into the narrative of last year’s postseason. In the book he addresses virtually every controversy he was involved with in his career, including Mark McGwire, malfunctioning bullpen phones, Dusty Baker’s dissatisfaction about the 2012 All-Star roster, and more. I already respected La Russa, but this book made me appreciate his leadership style even more. He certainly has an ego, but he is beyond loyal and is willing to take responsibility for everything that he knows was his fault and even a lot of stuff that probably wasn’t. I think it’s safe to say that, regardless of your feelings about La Russa, all of us would do well to create environments like the one he helped create in St. Louis during his tenure there.

If you’re a Cardinal fan or ambivalent toward the Cardinals but a baseball fan, I would very highly recommend this book. I’d understand the reluctance of those who dislike the Cardinals or TLR to read it, but I still think it’s worthwhile.
Profile Image for Jim.
40 reviews2 followers
April 29, 2013
This is a must-read for fans of the 2011 St. Louis Cardinals. It is a great way to re-live that almost-storybook. I say "almost" because nobody would believe the story if it was only written in a book. To believe it, we had to live through it.

If you're not a fan and/or didn't live through it, I'm not sure that this would be that meaningful to you. There are gaps to be filled in and nuance that you might not catch. Overall, it reminded me of one of the author's post-game news conferences. Okay, interesting to watch . . . but only if you had seen the game.

The writing was also seemed more like the writing of the author rather than his professional co-writer, with a little Rick Hummel play-by-play tossed in for accuracy. If you're looking for flowing prose, this isn't the place to look. If you're wanting to know what happened, from the viewpoint of a participant, that's what you're going to get - mostly - but even some of that was missing.

I'm glad I read it and many others will be too, but it is certainly not for everyone.
Profile Image for Lisa Kilbride.
27 reviews22 followers
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November 27, 2012
As much as I think I will always hate the St. Louis Cardinals, this book is so good I am sure I will read it again. In it he answers all the questions I'd had that Don Mattingly caused me to wonder re what is it a manager is supposed to do, anyway. He tells so much about the thought that goes into how to order a line-up, pitchers, catchers and how they think, and what he calls the "dance" between them, that my understanding of the game of baseball has grown exponentially. He also tells some spicy tales about on-field conflicts between players of opposing teams, and when it is appropriate for a pitcher to aim at a hitter. He weaves all this information and more as he tells how his team advances from heading to the Wild Card spot to winning the 2011 World Series. It's a wonderful book. I just wish it were written about a team I like.
Profile Image for Socraticgadfly.
1,411 reviews455 followers
August 20, 2025
Good for Cards fans, OK for baseball fans

This is an overview of the St. Louis Cardinals' 2011 run to the World Series victory over the Texas Rangers, mixed with TLR giving an overview of his managerial career in general.

Specific to the Cards, and a bit to the Oakland A's, TLR again says, as briefly as he can, that he knew nothing about roiding by Mark McGwire and/or Jose Canseco.

He also briefly but emphatically gives his side of the 2002 final-season blowout with Ozzie Smith.

Let's just say that I don't find him highly believable on the first, or 100 percent believable on the second.

Anyway, if Cards fans want to resavor the last title, this is a good read.
Profile Image for Grant.
161 reviews12 followers
June 10, 2013
This is a great book told by a great baseball mind. Itgives you insight into one of the best manager's thoughts, feelings and strategies of the game. Excellent read. Really a must for any baseball fan. Amust for Cardinals fans.
Profile Image for Andrew.
657 reviews162 followers
December 23, 2020
I have two obsessions: reading and Cardinals baseball. So this book is a guilty pleasure for me, especially given that I had heard it wasn't that great. I wouldn't have read it except that my uncle gave me a copy, which made me feel obligated. But hey, I don't need to defend myself to you!

In any case, the book lived down to its critiques. It was flat, uninspired, disorganized and trite. A red flag came less than twenty pages in when he said "I'm not going to. . . talk here to any great degree about specific incidents involving particular players as they relate to this issue of a decline in team cohesiveness. . ." Why not? That's why people read these books: to get the inside dirt!

You then know, by his own admission, that the book won't contain much beyond platitudes and generalizations. He even admits it later on, talking about the Cubs series that summer: "Cliches are born of truth." Yes, we all know that, but that doesn't make them interesting to read, so please find another way to describe your experience.

Perhaps there's no easy way to do it in prose, but to turn something as amazing as the Cards' 2011 World Series run into this boring account is a pretty remarkable feat. I have to think that ghost writer Rick Hummel deserves plenty of blame as well, for not eliciting a more interesting story. I'm not sure what makes someone a Hall-of-Fame sports writer, but whatever it is isn't on display here. Knowing what I know of Tony, it wouldn't surprise me that he wouldn't allow it to be more interesting. But still, a good writer has either got to find a way or let a bad writer do it.

Here, for example, is the passage concerning David Freese's now-legendary walk-off homerun, a moment that every baseball fan is aware of, which occurred in the 11th inning, after the Cardinals had come back from two-run deficits TWICE on their very last strike of the game, once each in the ninth and tenth innings:
David Freese led off for us against Mark Lowe, who mixed a mid-nineties fastball with a very sharp breaking slider. . . I watched Lowe intently, looking to see if he was around the plate, trying to figure out if the hit-and-run would be a good option. Descalso was in the hole, and he was our best chance to drive in a run if we got the man to second. Yadi liked the hit-and-run, and so that worked in the favor of hit-and-run. After Descalso was Jay and Westbrook. If it came down to it.

Three pitches later, David Freese did a solo version of the hit-and-run. He was soon joined by every one of his teammates in doing that. He hit a fastball on the inner half and crushed it to straightaway center field onto the grass of the hitters' backdrop. p377
Not real exciting, is it? He barely even addresses how such an incredible feat made him feel. To be fair, the narration of Freese's ninth-inning game-tying double is much better. But still, so much of the book is like the above, giving the impression that Tony is just going through the motions to relate a story. Part of it is that Tony's notorious surliness is omnipresent, like he's condescending to us and he wants to make it as unpleasant for us as it is distasteful for him.

Or, as he puts it: "I know that the anger and frustation sometimes surfaced more readily than my more positive attributes. Whether I should be criticized for that, I can't really say." Except that you did just say, indirectly, that you think it's bullshit.

He does the same thing with the Ozzie Smith episode (Paraphrase: "I'm not here to judge, but: JUDGE JUDGE JUDGE). In fact he does this throughout, apparently convinced that just by saying "I'm not (BLAH)," that makes it true, despite of whatever he follows or precedes it with. Or maybe he knows that he's obfuscating and just thinks that little of his audience.

But this is the way that he defends himself from criticism and indirectly attacks other players, managers, or media members, all while claiming to do the opposite. In a bizarre sequence, he even detachedly addresses his 2007 DUI and offers the lamest, least probing analysis of what happened: ". . . the police in Jupiter, Florida, found me stopped at a red light, napping. Evidently, I'd had too much wine and failed the breath test."

Yes, evidently.

You could have, you know, told us what YOU did, rather than explaining what happened to you, as if you were some passive bystander that was forced at gunpoint to consume alcohol and then drunkenly drive. You were, you know, the one who decided to do that, for reasons that should have been clearer after reading that passage but certainly aren't.

So yeah, disappointing not in that I expected much more, but just that he couldn't be more open, honest and relaxed. Hey Tony, you're retired, you can lighten up now!

Or maybe, despite all his brilliant analysis of baseball, Tony is just incapable of self-analysis. Maybe that cold exterior, that aloofness, is just his way of not having to deal with his own issues. An interesting idea, totally unconfirmable, but probably the most compelling part of this book. For a book about how La Russa REALLY thinks, Three Nights in August is much better (see my review).

Not Bad Reviews

@pointblaek
Profile Image for Mickey Mantle.
147 reviews3 followers
February 4, 2021
Tony La Russa is a lawyer. The book reflects his legal training. He says everything he wants you to know!!! At some points, the book becomes laborious. Very Lawyerly.

La Russa defies the Fanboy ideas that a Manager exists to make out the lineup card, argue with umpires, change pitchers, scream at his own players, or pat them on the ass when they do well.

La Russa was highly prepared. (Lawyer). He churned decisions over and over before making them. (Lawyer).

The stress of his job screams at the reader, while he downplays it. (Lawyer).

The book covers the 2011 Cardinals Championship season and a lot more.

La Russa is a COMPETITOR!!!

Highly recommended for a fan who seeks genuine knowledge!!
40 reviews
April 10, 2023
I really learned a lot about baseball and how it is played. I enjoy the perspectives of the Cardinal’s coach.
3 reviews
December 28, 2024
If you like baseball and want an in depth review on an incredible season this is your book. Brought back a lot of good memories and man what a World Series this was.
Profile Image for Merin.
938 reviews54 followers
November 6, 2021
As a longtime Cardinals fan, the 2011 World Series will forever live on in my memory. The thrill of those timely hits with two strikes and two outs are imbedded in my mind to this day, and I can't watch replays without getting chills. Tony LaRussa was always something of an enigma as a manager, making moves that you questioned but inevitably paid off. He made moves that made you question, and one thing I really loved about this book is his willingness to explain his decisions, and the history and experiences that went into each one. I loved the look at our colorful team of Redbirds during that magical 2011 season, the injuries and inconsistencies that plagued the team, and the trades and deals made to turn us into a World Series champion. This is a must-read for any Cardinals fan, but there's something for all baseball fans as well, regardless of the team you support. I highly recommend it!
Profile Image for Cedric Hendrix.
24 reviews7 followers
April 16, 2013
Full disclosure: When it comes to anything and everything St. Louis Cardinals, I am an unabashed "homer." My bias is deeply ingrained, and cannot be removed.

Perhaps that is why it pains me to say that while Tony LaRussa's "One Last Strike" certainly has its moments, it is by and large a disappointing read.

My reasoning is simple: there simply is not enough "there" there.

TLR is a remarkably intelligent man, possessing perhaps one of the greatest baseball minds of his generation. But that doesn't always come across in the book. If anything, he seems eager to gloss over some of the things that 1) Make him more human; and 2) Would add remarkable depth to his recounting of the 2011 Cardinals.

I'm not a fan of "tabloid" reading, by any stretch of the imagination. Still, it would have been nice to hear TLR speak about his DWI arrest during spring training, the breakdown of contract talks with Albert Pujols (who ultimately left the team for allegedly greener pastures in Anaheim), or his endless issues with phenom center fielder Colby Rasmus, who was ultimately traded away for the parts that helped make up this championship team. Alas, TLR blew right past these issues.

"One Last Strike" is not a bad book. It's just not as good as it could be. Given the level of expectation that comes from being a Cardinals devotee, that is disappointing. Feel free to read it, but lower all levels of expectation beforehand.
Profile Image for Shelly.
360 reviews
January 28, 2016
Okay, so I am a die-hard, utterly devoted St. Louis Cardinals fan so obviously I was going to love reliving the AMAZING 2011 Championship season. It is not just a loving rehashing of that great season and postseason; it is also very much a memoir of Tony LaRussa's life in baseball. While it is a great read for other Cardinal fans, hardcore baseball lovers, or anyone who wants to learn more about coaching or managing a baseball team, it might not be the right read for the casual baseball fan. The writing is often cold and clinical when talking about game, and often goes off on tangents in the midst of telling the tale of a particular game or incident, which is a bit distracting. Some parts, however, are very funny or heartwarming and being the Cardinal fan that I am, I have to admit that reading about the events of Game 6 of the World Series gave me goose bumps. Two years later, it is still a bit unbelievable.
Profile Image for Shannon Lovejoy.
78 reviews9 followers
January 28, 2013
I love baseball and I score every game I attend. I love the statistical part of the game. I also enjoy the physical and mental aspects of the game. However, I am not a Cardinals fan. To enjoy and understand this book, you have to love all three - baseball, statistics, and the Cardinals.

It is interesting to get into the head of a MLB manager because sometimes you watch a game and wonder what he was thinking when he makes a substitution or doesn't let a pitcher stay in the game longer. One Last Strike gives the reader a very detailed description of La Russa's last season...his every thought, his every emotion, his every move. If you are a Cardinals fan and you want to relive the season, this book is for you.
Profile Image for Jason Russell.
37 reviews13 followers
January 22, 2013
I'm a huge Cardinals fan, so perhaps fans of other teams might not rate it so highly. It tells a great story, even one whose ending is known beforehand. It could perhaps be a little shorter, and sometimes La Russa's storytelling thread gets tangled up a bit when he looks back to other moments during his career. There were also a few head scratching items that seem like errors (for example, right at the end, he seems to say Tim Lincecum won the Cy Young in 2010, when actually Roy Halladay won). A very fun read for people interested in the inner workings of a baseball team.
Profile Image for Jane Patterson.
186 reviews
March 18, 2013
Tony LaRussa talks about the last year of his career ending in a World Series title. He looks back to the other teams he has managed talks about various players and coaches. Full of stats and believe me he keeps "Notes". If your not into stats this may bore you, but if your a true fan or at least a Cardinal fan this is a keeper.
Profile Image for Al Snyder.
1 review1 follower
July 8, 2013
Insightful perspective into the mind of the former Cardinals Manager. It still surprises me that so many of my close friends and loyal Cardinals fans despise Tony La Russa so much. Perhaps if they read this book, they might appreciate the great care that Tony took into his profession.
Profile Image for Chris Schaffer.
521 reviews1 follower
July 26, 2019
I mean it had it’s good parts - Larussa discussing managerial experiences in Chicago, Oakland, St. Louis; the Cards comeback in the standings; the grind of the season; the epic game 6. But there are so many strategic tangents he goes off on it gets a bit tiresome.
Profile Image for Reid Mccormick.
443 reviews5 followers
March 17, 2017
“There’s no metric that can adequately measure the size of a guy’s heart.”

Once upon a time, the manager was king. He made the decisions. He was the general. The team was his soldiers. His coaches were his trusted lieutenants.

The days of the authoritarian baseball manager are gone. Blame it on sabermetrics. Blame it on free agency and the big business of baseball. No longer do billionaires give complete control of their millionaires to a single manager. More than ever, baseball has become a team sport, from the general manager down to the bat boy.

Tony LaRussa was a game changer that brought baseball into a new age. He was the last of the influential captains but also the first of the highly intelligent diamond strategists. He was the link between the old school and the new school.

One Last Strike tells two amazing stories simultaneously. On the surface, LaRussa recalls the improbable season (and post-season) of the 2011 St. Louis Cardinals. On a deeper level, LaRussa reflects back on his amazing journey through baseball from a mediocre player to a naïve skipper to a humble veteran manager.

This is an amazing book written by a true baseball man. Managing a team is not science, it is an art. Keeping 25 prized athletes focused for 162 games is no easy task, but Tony LaRussa did it with such ease and determination. If you are interested in the inner workings of a Hall of Fame manager’s brain, then this is the perfect book for you.
Profile Image for Neil Funsch.
158 reviews16 followers
December 12, 2019
I should have known when a friend of mine gave me this book to read and said I didn't have to return it. A strange book in that it is not without some highlights but mostly mysteriously flat. How one makes a book about one of the most exciting seasons and post seasons in Cardinal history flat takes some doing and takes some analysis on my part to understand why. As a lifelong Cardinal fan I love reading about them and their history, love player anecdotes and insights into what goes on behind the scenes and that is what I expected from a book like this. I guess you might call it gossip. Well that's not what I got from this. Tony doesn't tell all or much of anything about the players, agents, umps, fans, front office etc... Now that could be to his credit, a noble exercise in self restraint or it could be his noted ego where he needs to stay center stage. His philosophy, his effort (he talks repeatedly about how he grinds and gives maximum effort), his emotions and his influence on the outcome of the game is what you get, told in flashbacks around the story of the 2011 season. There is some merit in that, after all Tony is the 3rd winningest manager in baseball history, but his insights are shaped by the course of events and were largely disjointed and weren't shaped as a coherent philosophy. But despite all this Tony would be proud, I ground through this although when I pass this on I won't ask for it back.
Profile Image for Grace Cuddihy.
81 reviews
October 10, 2023
This book was really interesting - I love reading about baseball from the perspective of people who clearly live and breath it. In some ways, though, the book felt a little limited by La Russa’s “win the series” mentality - he focused a lot on each game without really taking any time to relish in the enormity of what his team had accomplished. I suppose that’s because for him it always felt possible, which is interesting in itself. There was a lot of fascinating insight into his management style, his focus on chemistry, building unique relationships, and his ability to recognize his weaknesses and find other people who could supplement that. His consistent refrain that he was a mediocre position player during his time in the majors also highlighted his ability to recognize where his talents really where. Everyone likes an underdog story, and the 2011 Cardinals certainly fit the bill. I really recommend this book of you want to understand how they pulled it off, as well as how to provide leadership in tumultuous circumstances.
7 reviews
March 23, 2017
One Last Strike is a must read for any Cardinals fan, any baseball fan, and really any fan of a good underdog story.

Now, I may be biased with my review being that the 2011 Cardinal's season will resonate in my memory for the entirety of my life, I can only hope to experience the emotions felt that year again which this book helped rekindle the rollercoaster of emotions all Cardinal's fan endured that year. The book walks you through the season, highlighting key moments as well as giving you some needed behind the scene stories, hidden to the public at the time.

But, this book gave an insight into one of the game's most successful minds. A treat for any baseball fan, and allowed us to view the game through a totally different lens, truly an eye opening experience as I now have a more appreciated view on both the tactical and human decisions that can change a game's outcome.
Profile Image for Anthony Nelson.
263 reviews7 followers
March 6, 2022
Very in depth review of La Russa's decision-making process during the 2011 championship season, with some reminiscenses about his 50 or years in baseball as well. The book is incredibly detailed about the 2011 postseason and every decision he made, good or bad, so will be of interest to anyone who have ever weighed what options managers are considering. It also goes into detail about his process for keeping players motivated over a long season, and in that sense would be a useful read for anyone in a leadership position.
Profile Image for Vanessa Olson.
307 reviews5 followers
October 31, 2023
This was a good read about a legendary team and manager. Their comeback was truly remarkable. La Russa did an excellent job making the book about the team and their experience together and not just his experience as their manager. This one has been on my to be read list for a decade, and I'm happy to say I finally got to it. A great read during World Series week.

I will say, even as a baseball fan, it was a little more technical than I expected and a couple of times, I found myself getting lost in all the situations described.
2 reviews
June 24, 2022
This book contains some useful and interesting knowledge about the team that you can’t get elsewhere. It is also important to note that a lot of the book is like a baseball reference page of the box scores of all the games written out. That’s not what I wanted to read the book for. I wanted information about the decisions and thoughts that couldn’t be found elsewhere and that isn’t what I always got.
Profile Image for Robert Sparrenberger.
889 reviews9 followers
January 15, 2019
A look at the 2011 cardinals championship season through the eyes of their manager, Tony la Russa are explored in this sort of memoir.
Tony goes into detail about some of the big games during the season in great detail and also explored some
Of the big moments in is long baseball career.
This is definitely for a baseball fan or a fan of the cardinals. It’s interesting for sure.
Profile Image for Dennis.
272 reviews
September 17, 2018
An excellent book both on baseball and on leadership. There is a ton of detail around decisions he made on and off the field, and definitely shows a lot of light onto the game and how a manager thinks (see also Buzz Bissinger's Three Nights in August, also written around La Russa).
Profile Image for David.
292 reviews11 followers
June 16, 2019
What a great book on sports, leadership, teamwork, integrity, passion, heartbreak, love, devotion, belonging, determination, and just plain ol' dumb luck.
In other words, a guidebook of sorts on life.
Profile Image for Pablo.
58 reviews
July 31, 2018
Down to the last strike ... twice!
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