Larry Lucchino, the former president and CEO of the Boston Red Sox who oversaw three World Series titles during his tenure, has died, the team announced Tuesday. He was 78.

Lucchino, who had suffered from cancer, was also the force behind baseball’s retro ballpark revolution in a career that also included three MLB franchises, one NFL team and an appearance in the Final Four as a player.

He became CEO of the Red Sox upon purchase of the team by the ownership group headed by John Henry and Tom Werner in February 2002. Lucchino, who stepped down from his role in 2015, had a smaller financial stake. He previously served as president/CEO of the Baltimore Orioles (1989-93) and San Diego Padres (1995-2001).

Lucchino was with the Orioles when they won the World Series in 1983, he was Padres CEO when San Diego went to the World Series in 1998, and he presided over the 2004 World Series title that ended Boston’s 86-year drought, as well as subsequent championships in 2007 and 2013.

“Larry’s career unfolded like a playbook of triumphs, marked by transformative moments that reshaped ballpark design, enhanced the fan experience, and engineered the ideal conditions for championships wherever his path led him, and especially in Boston,” Henry said in a statement. “Yet, perhaps his most enduring legacy lies in the remarkable people he helped assemble at the Red Sox, all of whom are a testament to his training, wisdom, and mentorship.

“Many of them continue to shape the organization today, carrying forward the same vigor, vitality, and cherished sayings that were hallmarks of Larry’s personality. Larry was a formidable opponent in any arena, and while he battled hard, he always maintained the utmost respect for a worthy adversary and found genuine joy in sparring with people. I was lucky enough to have had him in my corner for 14 years and to have called him a close friend for even longer. He was truly irreplaceable and will be missed by all of us at the Red Sox.”

As CEO of the Red Sox, Lucchino famously clashed with late New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. It was Lucchino who labeled the Yankees “the Evil Empire” in an interview with The New York Times.

“Larry was a winner,” said former Red Sox second baseman Dustin Pedroia, who played for the team from 2006 to 2019. “Didn’t matter if it was a contract negotiation, saving Fenway, asking players what we need to compete. Larry was going to work until the job was finished. He had a presence and an attitude that wouldn’t be denied. He was a tone setter for our organization.”

Lucchino and the team decided to update Fenway Park rather than replace it — bucking the trend of building cavernous, cookie-cutter stadiums surrounded by parking lots. One of baseball’s jewels, Fenway Park will open its 113th season on April 9.

The bigger overhaul for the Red Sox came in the front office and on the field. With 28-year-old Theo Epstein, who started with the Orioles as an intern and followed Lucchino to the Padres, as general manager, the Red Sox ended an 86-year championship drought.

Current Red Sox president and CEO Sam Kennedy also followed Lucchino from San Diego to Boston.

“Larry leaves behind a giant baseball legacy full of historic accomplishments with three different organizations,” Epstein said. “For me and for so many of my best friends in baseball, Larry gave us our start, believing in us and setting an enduring example with his work ethic, vision, competitiveness and fearlessness. He made a profound impact on many in baseball — and on the game itself — and will be missed.”

Said Kennedy: “There are so many of us who were given our start in baseball by Larry. He instilled in us, and so many others, a work ethic, passion, competitive fire that we will carry forever. His legacy is one that all of us who were taught by him feel a deep responsibility to uphold.”

Lucchino’s last project was the Triple-A Worcester Red Sox and their Polar Park, which opened in 2021. The WooSox remembered their primary owner and chairman, whose group purchased the team in 2015 and eventually moved it from Rhode Island to central Massachusetts, with a moment of silence before Tuesday’s home opener.

Lucchino was an attorney whose involvement in sports can be traced to his long association with famous trial attorney Edward Bennett Williams, who was the owner of the NFL’s Washington franchise when Lucchino became the team’s general counsel and a member of the team’s board of directors from 1979 to 1985.

Lucchino often cited Williams as his mentor, and when Williams bought the Orioles in 1979, Lucchino became the team’s vice president and general counsel before he was promoted to president in 1988.

It was in his tenure that the Orioles replaced Memorial Stadium with a downtown, old-style ballpark. Camden Yards became a trend-setter, and Lucchino himself would follow up with a new ballpark for the Padres, for whom he served as president and CEO.

The Padres ended a 14-year playoff drought by winning the NL West in 1996, and then won the NL pennant in 1998. Lucchino was inducted into the Padres Hall of Fame in 2022.

“Larry Lucchino was one of the most accomplished executives that our industry has ever had,” MLB commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement. “He was deeply driven, he understood baseball’s place in our communities, and he had a keen eye for executive talent.

“Larry’s vision for Camden Yards played a vital role in advancing fan-friendly ballparks across the game. He followed up by overseeing the construction of Petco Park, which remains a jewel of the San Diego community. Then Larry teamed with John Henry and Tom Werner to produce the most successful era in Red Sox history, which included historic World Series championships on the field and a renewed commitment to Fenway Park.”

A native of Pittsburgh, Lucchino was a teammate of Bill Bradley, the former New York Knicks star and U.S. senator, when Princeton went to the Final Four in 1965. He has a Final Four watch from that season, a Super Bowl ring from his time with Washington (1983) and five World Series rings — having collected one with the Orioles in 1983 and another in 2018 as the Red Sox CEO emeritus.

He was also active in helping Major League Baseball spread internationally, taking trips to China and Japan and as an early supporter of the World Baseball Classic.

Lucchino, who survived three previous cancer scares, was also a chairman of The Jimmy Fund, the charitable arm of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

“To us, Larry was an exceptional person who combined a Hall of Fame life as a Major League Baseball executive with his passion for helping those people most in need,” Lucchino’s family said in a statement. “He brought the same passion, tenacity, and probing intelligence to all his endeavors, and his achievements speak for themselves.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source: www.espn.com