Lenny Randle, a 12-year major league veteran who once punched his manager and also got down on his hands and knees on the infield grass to blow a baseball foul during a game, died Dec. 29. He was 75.
Randle broke in with the Washington Senators in 1971 and followed the franchise when it moved to become the Texas Rangers the following year, according to Baseball-Reference.com . He also played for the New York Mets (1977-78), New York Yankees (1979), Chicago Cubs (1980) and Seattle Mariners (1981-82).
He later played professionally in Italy and for the short-lived Senior Professional Baseball Association in Florida, Sports Illustrated reported.
Randle was a two-sport star at Arizona State, where he played for the Sun Devils’ 1969 NCAA baseball champions . He set a Western Athletic Conference football record, returning five punts for touchdowns -- a mark that stood for 35 years.
He was fluent in three languages and was working toward a master’s degree in special education.
Randle had a breakout year in 1974, batting .302 with 49 RBI and 26 stolen bases. He was a valuable utility player, with stints at third base and in the outfield. He hit .276 with 57 RBI and 16 stolen bases in 1975, but his production dropped off in 1976.
That set the stage for an incident during spring training on March 28, 1977, when Randle punched Rangers manager Frank Lucchesi in the face in a confrontation that took place during batting practice, Sports Illustrated reported.
Lucchesi was hospitalized with a fractured cheekbone and Randle was suspended 30 days and fined $10,000, according to the magazine. He was charged with battery in Florida and pleaded no contest; he eventually paid Lucchesi $20,000 as part of an out-of-court settlement.
Randle was quickly traded to the Mets, where he rebounded with a career-high .304 average.
While controversial, Randle was also inventive.
In 1981, he was playing third base for the Mariners when Kansas City’s Amos Otis topped a ball down the third base line. Randle got on his hands and knees and blew the ball foul.
“I’m going, OK, eat it, kick it, yell at it! So, I yelled at it,” Randle told MLB Network . “‘Go foul, go foul, go foul.’”
It worked, but Otis was awarded a base hit on the play.
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