Eric Chavez, a defensive star at third base in Oakland, was Washington’s most famous student, because Chavez, in a gesture of gratitude for the hours of tutelage, gifted Washington with the third of his six consecutive Gold Gloves. It’s still displayed at Washington’s home.
Players like the results, but they also are drawn to Washington’s approach.
“You have to develop a relationship, and the way you develop it is you let them have say so in whatever you’re doing,” Washington said. “Whatever you’re teaching, two people should be learning. As the instructor, I should be learning what’s right and what’s wrong with the person I’m working with. And he should be learning what I’m instructing him in.”
That package of skills led him to the manager’s chair with the Texas Rangers from 2007-14. He guided the Rangers to American League pennants 2010 and 2011, and they came within a strike of winning the World Series in ’11 before being stunned by St. Louis.
He was so valued that when he tested positive for cocaine use, the Rangers kept him and helped him through it in 2010. But he resigned in September 2014, disclosing that he had to repair his marriage after the affair.