Bertrand: Larry Lucchino should be remembered fondly in Boston
Sad news for Red Sox Nation on Tuesday, as former president of the Red Sox Larry Lucchino passed away at the age of 78. Lucchino oversaw three championship clubs during his tenure with the Red Sox and changed the culture of winning for the team. Marc Bertrand says Larry Lucchino should be remembered fondly in Boston:
‘That guy was a bulldog’
“And the thing that I think about now, having reason to think about Larry Lucchino today is how different of a franchise the Red Sox now is compared to when Larry Lucchino was in charge. I mean this as a compliment. That guy was a bulldog. Right? Yeah. He rubbed people the wrong way. He didn’t care who got in his way. I mean, he was aggressive. He wanted to win. He wanted to win everything. Not just winning a title that was winning a negotiation at the free agency table. It was winning in media stuff. It was winning on all fronts. And it even meant winning battles with people inside. The organization notoriously rubbed Theo the wrong way, and there was friction between Lucchino and Theo Epstein. I mean, you want to win every battle there was to win. He wanted to win it. And I just think about how different the team is now, both in terms of their front facing people, their public facing people like Sam Kennedy or anybody else who’s willing to speak, lately it’s been Tom Warner, and how different it is now versus when Larry was in charge, and how you should probably, as a Red Sox fan, miss the fact that a guy like Larry Lucchino is not still in charge of the Red Sox, because I don’t think Larry Lucchino would enjoy running this version of the Red Sox. That’s not who he was.”