Dick Tracewski


Richard Joseph Tracewski is a retired American professional baseball player, coach and manager. During his active career, he was an infielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers and Detroit Tigers of Major League Baseball, appearing in 614 games over eight seasons. He threw and batted right-handed, stood tall and weighed.
Tracewski was a four-time World Series champion as a player and coach. He participated in three World Series as a player: two with Los Angeles and one with Detroit. He was the starting second baseman in the Dodgers' four-game sweep of the Yankees in 1963, and also started four games at second during the seven-game 1965 classic. He also served as first-base coach for the Tigers in the 1984 World Series.
Tracewski's playing career began in the Brooklyn Dodgers' organization in 1953 and it took him almost a decade to reach the majors. After early and late-season trials with the 1962 Dodgers, Tracewski earned a spot as a utility infielder, getting into more than 100 games in both and. He was the Dodgers' second baseman on the evening of September 9, 1965, when Sandy Koufax tossed a perfect game against the Chicago Cubs. He was traded to the Tigers for Phil Regan on December 15, 1965, and spent the rest of his career in the Detroit organization.
During his eight-season MLB playing tenure, he batted.213, with eight home runs and 91 RBIs. He had 262 hits in 1231 at bats. He went 4-for-30 in World Series play.
Tracewski then managed in the Detroit farm system for two seasons. In 1972, he began a 24-year stint as a coach for Detroit, longer than any other coach in Tiger history. Tracewski, on two occasions, filled in as the Tigers' interim manager. He managed the club for two games in 1979 before Sparky Anderson arrived, and from May 20, 1989, to early July while Anderson recovered from exhaustion.
Tracewski retired from baseball after the season, as did his long-time boss, Anderson.