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  • Lary Sorensen

    Lary Sorensen Autograph

    Lary Sorensen's Autograph

    Lary Sorensen Bio

    Brewers Video

    Lary Sorensen was born in Michigan in 1955. He attended the University of Michigan for college and was drafted by the Brewers in the 8th round in the 1975 draft; He rocketed through the Brewers' minor league system, needing only 45 games to reach the majors. From there, he became a rotation mainstay for four seasons.

    Sorensen was a sinkerball pitcher who rarely walked batters (for his career, his walk rate is an impressive 2.1 walks per 9 innings). He hated walking batters, and he said that walking a batter sometimes made him more upset than giving up a home run. He never struck out many batters either, inducing countless grounders throughout his career.

    Sorensen's rookie season was promising, but it was his sophomore campaign in 1978 that made people take notice. Sorensen was a workhorse, averaging roughly eight innings per start. Surprisingly, his 17 complete games did not lead the team that year - Mike Caldwell had 23. Named to the all-star team (his only appearance in the mid-season classic), Sorensen worked three shutout innings in the Midsummer Classic.

    While Sorensen appeared to be a star in the making, the workload would take its toll on his arm. He had decent seasons in 1979 and 1980 but was far less dominant than his 1978 campaign. His innings and effectiveness waned with each season.

    Sorensen was dealt to the St. Louis Cardinals after the 1980 season in the famed deal that brought Pete Vukovich, Ted Simmons, and Rollie Fingers to Milwaukee.

    Sorensen would have a solid (but injury-limited) year in St. Louis before being traded to Cleveland. By 1984, his career as a starting pitcher was almost over. He would bounce around the majors and minors until 1988 with limited success. He was done as a player at age 32.

    During his four years in Milwaukee, Sorensen won 52 games, averaged 213 innings pitched a season, and had a 3.72 ERA. He produced a solid 12.2 bWAR / 11.6 fWAR.

    After baseball, Sorensen got into broadcasting, working for ESPN and then the Detroit Tigers. He was praised for his quick wit and friendly nature.

    However, Sorensen won't be best remembered for his time on the diamond or in the booth. Instead, his life has been littered with drug and alcohol-related problems. The first incident occurred while he was still a player when he was one of 11 players fined for admitting to cocaine use during a drug trial in Pittsburgh. In 1992, he received a DUI - the first of seven in his life. In 1998, Sorensen was let go as a Tigers announcer due to substance abuse problems.

    Things continued to spiral downhill for Sorensen. In the 2000s, he served two prison terms related to his alcohol-related arrests. In 2008, after crashing his auto, his blood-alcohol level was a staggering .480 - a level that would kill most adults.

    He lost his job, freedom, and marriage to alcohol.

    In 2014, Sorensen landed a broadcasting job for Wake Forest baseball and then added football in 2017, which he continues to do. But more importantly, he got - and stayed - sober. He credits much of his recovery to his now-wife, Elaine.

    Before becoming a lawyer, Sorensen's son, Mark, pitched for Michigan State before spending four seasons (2008-12) in the Detroit Tigers minor league system.

    Please share your memories of former Brewer pitcher Lary Sorensen

    Lary Sorensen Statistics

    Standard Pitching
    Year Age Tm Lg W L W-L% ERA G GS GF CG SHO SV IP H R ER HR BB IBB SO HBP BK WP BF ERA+ FIP WHIP H9 HR9 BB9 SO9 SO/W Awards
    1977 21 MIL AL 7 10 .412 4.36 23 20 2 9 0 0 142.1 147 72 69 10 36 4 57 1 3 2 594 94 3.63 1.286 9.3 0.6 2.3 3.6 1.58  
    1978 22 MIL AL 18 12 .600 3.21 37 36 1 17 3 1 280.2 277 111 100 14 50 4 78 5 2 3 1150 118 3.27 1.165 8.9 0.4 1.6 2.5 1.56 AS
    1979 23 MIL AL 15 14 .517 3.98 34 34 0 16 2 0 235.1 250 113 104 30 42 3 63 4 0 3 967 105 4.44 1.241 9.6 1.1 1.6 2.4 1.50  
    1980 24 MIL AL 12 10 .545 3.68 35 29 3 8 2 1 195.2 242 91 80 13 45 6 54 2 0 3 839 106 3.78 1.467 11.1 0.6 2.1 2.5 1.20  
    1981 25 STL NL 7 7 .500 3.27 23 23 0 3 1 0 140.1 149 59 51 3 26 2 52 1 5 1 579 109 2.71 1.247 9.6 0.2 1.7 3.3 2.00  
    1982 26 CLE AL 10 15 .400 5.61 32 30 0 6 1 0 189.1 251 130 118 19 55 6 62 3 3 5 849 74 4.29 1.616 11.9 0.9 2.6 2.9 1.13  
    1983 27 CLE AL 12 11 .522 4.24 36 34 2 8 1 0 222.2 238 112 105 21 65 9 76 2 1 9 941 101 4.20 1.361 9.6 0.8 2.6 3.1 1.17  
    1984 28 OAK AL 6 13 .316 4.91 46 21 9 2 0 1 183.1 240 117 100 21 44 4 63 6 4 4 818 76 4.39 1.549 11.8 1.0 2.2 3.1 1.43  
    1985 29 CHC NL 3 7 .300 4.26 45 3 18 0 0 0 82.1 86 44 39 8 24 10 34 4 2 0 355 93 4.14 1.336 9.4 0.9 2.6 3.7 1.42  
                                                                         
    1987 31 MON NL 3 4 .429 4.72 23 5 6 0 0 1 47.2 56 32 25 7 12 1 21 3 0 1 215 90 4.84 1.427 10.6 1.3 2.3 4.0 1.75  
    1988 32 SFG NL 0 0   4.86 12 0 4 0 0 2 16.2 24 13 9 1 3 0 9 0 0 0 78 69 3.01 1.620 13.0 0.5 1.6 4.9 3.00  
    11 Yrs 93 103 .474 4.15 346 235 45 69 10 6 1736.1 1960 894 800 147 402 49 569 31 20 31 7385 96 3.90 1.360 10.2 0.8 2.1 2.9 1.42  
    162 Game Avg. 11 12 .474 4.15 40 28 5 8 1 1 203 229 105 94 17 47 6 67 4 2 4 864 96 3.90 1.360 10.2 0.8 2.1 2.9 1.42  
                                                                   
    MIL (4 yrs) 52 46 .531 3.72 129 119 6 50 7 2 854.0 916 387 353 67 173 17 252 12 5 11 3550 107 3.77 1.275 9.7 0.7 1.8 2.7 1.46  
    CLE (2 yrs) 22 26 .458 4.87 68 64 2 14 2 0 412.0 489 242 223 40 120 15 138 5 4 14 1790 87 4.24 1.478 10.7 0.9 2.6 3.0 1.15  
    SFG (1 yr) 0 0   4.86 12 0 4 0 0 2 16.2 24 13 9 1 3 0 9 0 0 0 78 69 3.01 1.620 13.0 0.5 1.6 4.9 3.00  
    STL (1 yr) 7 7 .500 3.27 23 23 0 3 1 0 140.1 149 59 51 3 26 2 52 1 5 1 579 109 2.71 1.247 9.6 0.2 1.7 3.3 2.00  
    OAK (1 yr) 6 13 .316 4.91 46 21 9 2 0 1 183.1 240 117 100 21 44 4 63 6 4 4 818 76 4.39 1.549 11.8 1.0 2.2 3.1 1.43  
    MON (1 yr) 3 4 .429 4.72 23 5 6 0 0 1 47.2 56 32 25 7 12 1 21 3 0 1 215 90 4.84 1.427 10.6 1.3 2.3 4.0 1.75  
    CHC (1 yr) 3 7 .300 4.26 45 3 18 0 0 0 82.1 86 44 39 8 24 10 34 4 2 0 355 93 4.14 1.336 9.4 0.9 2.6 3.7 1.42  
                                                                   
    AL (7 yrs) 80 85 .485 4.20 243 204 17 66 9 3 1449.1 1645 746 676 128 337 36 453 23 13 29 6158 96 3.98 1.368 10.2 0.8 2.1 2.8 1.34  
    NL (4 yrs) 13 18 .419 3.89 103 31 28 3 1 3 287.0 315 148 124 19 65 13 116 8 7 2 1227 97 3.49 1.324 9.9 0.6 2.0 3.6 1.78  
    Provided by Baseball-Reference.com: View Original Table
    Generated 6/9/2024.

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    Crew Throwback: Lary Sorensen

    The numbers were phenomenal. 18-12 record. 280 innings pitched. 17 complete games. Only 14 home runs and 50 walks allowed. Three shutout innings in the All-Star game. It was 1978, and for 22-year-old Lary Sorensen, it was one of the finest years any Brewer pitcher ever put together. Sadly, he would never match his glorious 1978 campaign, and Sorensen's personal life would eventually overshadow his baseball achievements.

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