TERRE HAUTE — Former Indiana State pitcher Aric LeClair has finally realized his ultimate dream of pitching in a major league baseball setting.
Well, not exactly. LeClair, in his seventh year as a minor league player, will portray famous New York Yankees closer Sparky Lyle in ESPN’s eight-week limited series “The Bronx is Burning,” set to air the last week of July.
The series is based on the best-selling non-fiction book “Ladies and Gentlemen, The Bronx is Burning” by Jonathan Mahler. The book depicts the summer of 1977, the year the Yankees won their first World Series under the ownership of George Steinbrenner.
The plot revolves around the interaction between Steinbrenner (played by Oliver Platt), Billy Martin (John Turturro) and Reggie Jackson (Daniel Sunjata) plus subplots, including the NYPD’s pursuit of Son of Sam. Former Yankees Graig Nettles and Fran Healy served as consultants.
LeClair and two of his Nashua Pride teammates, Jason Kosow and Elliott Ayala, went to auditions in New London, Conn., following last season. “They went pretty well. Then it came down to who we most looked like,” LeClair said.
LeClair was cast as Lyle, Kosow as Catfish Hunter and Ayala as Roy White.
“The goal was to be Yankee players, because we’d get to be on the set every day. We were there for about four weeks,” LeClair noted.
None of the 20 “players” were supposed to have speaking parts, but one scene involving LeClair might make the final cut in editing, at the request of Turturro.
In that scene, LeClair has been summoned from the bullpen and was instructed for filming to “to do what I would normally say or do in that situation. I don’t know if it will end up on the cutting room floor,” he laughed.
Also, the bulge in his jaw in this scene is not tobacco, but a wad of raisins. LeClair doesn’t chew tobacco.
While he had the left-handed relief pitcher part down pat, the famous bushy mustache Lyle sported in his heyday was another story. LeClair admitted he needed a little assistance.
“I tried to grow one, but I don’t grow a mustache too well,” he said. “So they threw a mustache on me and they liked it. We just needed to look similar, since we were mostly in background scenes.”
Back in the real baseball world, LeClair, 29, is a model of perseverance. After playing at ISU in 1999 and 2000, he endured being cut by three major league organizations — twice by the same team — and has lost more than a full season because of rotator cuff surgery.
LeClair, a native of New Hampshire, came to be a Sycamore after playing at Crowder Junior College in Neosho, Mo.
“[Pitching] coach [Shohn] Doty got me to ISU, but he was gone when I got there,” LeClair noted.
After a solid 2000 season at ISU, LeClair was drafted in the 19th round of the major league amateur draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks.
“I got the opportunity, I couldn’t let it pass,” he said of his decision to sign with the D-backs. “I wasn’t locked down to a girl or a certain place. So I took the $1,000 and the plane ticket.”
LeClair pitched for South Bend (Class A) in 2000 and 2001, but “going into spring training [2002] I never really got an opportunity to play. [The Diamondbacks] gave me a bad vibe. Then they released me. It was a business decision I had to learn the hard way,” he said.
Undeterred, LeClair went the independent route to Albany-Colonie of the Northern League. Soon after, the Kansas City Royals came to see him pitch and signed him the next day.
With the Royals, LeClair finished 2002 with Burlington (Class A), then began 2003 with Wilmington (higher Class A). Then the unexpected happened again. On Aug. 8, 2003, he was traded by the Royals back to the D-backs for journeyman right-handed pitcher Paul Abbott.
“My thoughts were mixed at first, thinking they didn’t care about me the first time. But then I got fired up,” LeClair recalled. “I looked at it as a highlight to be traded for a major league guy.”
Back with the D-backs, he finished 2003 at El Paso (AA), then split time in 2004 between El Paso and South Bend.
“I started having pains in my shoulder in 2004. The doctor said to just fight through it and it will loosen up. I rehabbed, rehabbed and after a couple of [magnetic resonance imaging tests] they found I had a 20-percent tear in my rotator cuff.”
Instead of his plan to have already reached the Triple-A level, he underwent surgery in May of 2005.
“I had a lot of setbacks [after surgery] and was six months behind in my rehab … I almost retired in 2006,” he stated. “I could only throw 45 feet. Then I got a second opinion. I changed my arm slot and it got better.
“When I was finally released by the doctor, the Diamondbacks released me. I won’t forget the date. May 16, 2006.”
At the age of 28, LeClair returned to his native New Hampshire to begin anew with the Nashua Pride of the independent Cam-Am League midway through the 2006 season.
“They threw me right in there,” he said. “They gave me a shot and it helped to have a local kid for the fan base. Being home on weekends was good too.”
LeClair was traded by Nashua to the Camden Riversharks of the independent Atlantic League prior to this season. After only three games with Camden, he was “received” by an Atlantic League-run team, the Road Warriors, on May 15.
“Every three days we’re out on the road,” he said of the “homeless” Road Warriors. “Sometimes we get to games in a school bus … independent ball at its best,” he chuckles.
“Without a doubt, this is my last hurrah,” LeClair said of his future in baseball. “Unless I get back to form and get signed by a major league organization,”
LeClair currently resides in Marlborough, N.H., with his wife of four years, Holly, and their 14-month-old son Lane.
Local Interest
Former ISU pitcher has role in upcoming ESPN series
- Local Interest
-
-
METRO ROUNDUP: ISU track athlete selected as MVC scholar-athlete of week
Indiana State senior Ernest Rollins has been selected the Prairie Farms/Missouri Valley Conference Male Scholar-Athlete of the Week it was announced Friday.
-
Union season more fun with Talpas around
The Union boys basketball team has had its share of fun moments in the past, arguably the most fun being its Class A state runner-up in 2000.
-
Injury bug follows girls into postseason
Who’s healthy is the question at least three of the four teams will be asking tonight when Class 4A girls high school basketball sectional play begins at Terre Haute North.
-
A day later, Giants basking in win
A little more than nine hours after the New York Giants registered their second Super Bowl triumph in four years, coach Tom Coughlin and quarterback Eli Manning met with the media covering Super Bowl XLVI one last time Monday morning.
-
METRO ROUNDUP: Evans, West receive track accolades
Two Rose-Hulman track and field athletes received weekly honors from the Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference on Monday.
-
MIKE LUNSFORD: Books open our eyes to that which we will never see
I got a letter last week from a friend, Sister Margaret Quinlan, who lives amidst the beauty of the St. Mary-of-the-Woods campus. Besides the email space and the time she invests in describing the flowers and trees and birds that she shares with her roomies out there, as well as her accounts of teaching and traveling, Margaret most often writes about books. She loves them, and she knows I do, too.
-
METRO ROUNDUP: North boys, girls bowling team in Jasper Regional
Terre Haute North’s boys and girls bowling teams will be competing in today’s Indiana High School Bowling regional at Jasper.
-
Indiana Senate approves right-to-work bill
Indiana’s Senate has passed right-to-work legislation, placing the state on the verge of becoming the Rust Belt’s first to enact the contentious labor law.
-
Back home again in Indiana
Former Indianapolis Colts coach Jim Caldwell has landed a job as quarterbacks coach for the Baltimore Ravens. The Ravens announced Caldwell’s hiring Monday.
-
Sink or swim: South boys chose the latter
Terre Haute South’s boys swimming and diving team is currently enjoying it’s lofty No. 21 ranking in the state of Indiana.
-
It’s on: Sycamores, Bulldogs to play at Hinkle on Feb. 18
How badly did Indiana State want to get Butler as its BracketBusters opponent?
-
METRO ROUNDUP: Four from Rose receive weekly honors
Four Rose-Hulman athletes earned Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference weekly honors, the HCAC announced Monday.
-
PREP ROUNDUP: Warriors rally, but fall short
Newton built a big lead and held on to defeat Casey 72-69 in Illinois high school boys basketball Monday night.
-
Eli slowly emerging from Peyton’s shadow
Eli Manning has lived in the shadow of older brother Peyton all of his life. Whatever successes Eli has had on the football field, they often paled in comparison to what his more illustrious sibling had already accomplished.
-
Heftier home schedule awaits Rex fans
Terre Haute Rex fans will get to see their favorite baseball team play two additional home games this year — and it will be a championship team they’re watching.
-
PREP ROUNDUP: Marshall plays Casey in LIC semifinals tonight
Semifinal games of the Little Illini Conference basketball tournaments will be played tonight.
At Red Hill, Flora (20-2) meets Hutsonville-Palelstine (16-5) in the first boys game at 6 p.m. CST with Casey (10-5) facing Marshall (14-5) in the second contest.
-
METRO ROUNDUP: Honey Creek 8th sweeps in Vigo tourney
Host Honey Creek swept a pair of games over Otter Creek and Sarah Scott and Woodrow Wilson came up with a split at Chauncey Rose on Monday as Vigo County eighth-grade basketball tournaments began.
-
TH native made the right call
The Indiana High School Athletic Association is always seeking licensed high school officials in its 20 sanctioned sports, a selling point being “participation in high school athletics doesn’t have to end with high school graduation.”
-
PREP ROUNDUP: Smith leads Class 2A No. 8-ranked Arrows to victory
Rhagen Smith had a double-double and host Sullivan took a 21-point lead into the fourth quarter of an eventual 52-40 win over North Knox in girls high school basketball Monday night.
-
METRO ROUNDUP: Kovach earns AP All-America honors
Rose-Hulman’s Kyle Kovach has become the first Engineer football player since 1958 to earn Associated Press All-America honors, it was announced Monday.
-
Coaches with credentials: As a unit, Terre Haute North’s staff 2nd to none
Surrounding yourself with excellence.
Some high school basketball head coaches might be intimidated or insecure having talented assistants on their staff. That is certainly not the case for Terre Haute North’s Todd Woelfle.
Woelfle has the vast resources of four — count ‘em — former NCAA Division I college players on his staff this season.
-
Yeargin, Odum fight ailment as a pair
Often overlooked, athletic trainers are as much a part of the fabric of a team as the players and coaches are.
-
Evansville will test ISU’s toughness
Indiana State’s fall-from-ahead 69-63 loss to Missouri State on Saturday exposed several problems on both the offensive and defensive ends of the floor, but the root cause can be traced back to the lack of a important quality.
-
PREP ROUNDUP: West Vigo girls break 5-game losing streak with 38-32 win
West Vigo’s girls basketball team broke a five-game losing streak as it defeated Cloverdale 38-32 on Monday.
-
Right up their alley: Bustling bowling league isn’t just for novices
The competition is fierce, yet friendly at the same time.
-
AMEY TAKES AIM: The biggest & baddest of a holiday classic
There are more things to love about the Pizza Hut Wabash Valley Classic than could fit in this newspaper, but one of this year’s best things was that for an hour or so on Wednesday, it was Justin Paddock’s world and we were just living in it.
-
Thomas ISU’s mainstay
When Indiana State’s women’s basketball opponents gameplan for the Sycamores, the defensive scheme begins with 6-foot-4 senior Shannon Thomas.
-
METRO/PREP ROUNDUP: Pomeroys finish fourth at Taylor
St. Mary-of-the-Woods ran into a pair of strong NAIA teams and finished fourth in the Taylor Tournament in women’s college basketball last weekend.
-
Colts give the boot to Polian duo
It didn’t take long for Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay to start making moves with his team.
One day after Irsay’s Colts dropped a 19-13 road decision to Jacksonville, giving Indianapolis a 2-14 record and the No. 1 pick in the 2012 National Football League draft, longtime Colts executive Bill Polian and his son, vice-president/general manager Chris Polian, were both fired.
-
Ring the bell: Which ISU player has the greatest Classic legacy?
The Pizza Hut Wabash Valley Classic begins today at Terre Haute North. One would be hard-pressed to find a local event that is more beloved by a wider cross-section of sports fans and non-sports fans alike.
- More Local Interest Headlines
-
METRO ROUNDUP: ISU track athlete selected as MVC scholar-athlete of week








