Career
DiLauro started his professional baseball career by signing with the Detroit Tigers as an amateur free agent on January 1, 1963. He never played in the Major Leagues for the Tigers. On December 4, 1968 he was traded to the New York Mets in exchange for Hector Valle.
In 1969, DiLauro pitched 4 games for the Mets American Automobile Association minor league affiliate, the Tidewater Tides.
He was then promoted to the Mets and made his major league debut for the Mets on May 15, 1969 against the Atlanta Braves. In 1969, he pitched in 23 games, mostly in relief, and 632⁄3 innings for the Mets.
His European Research Area in 1969 was a solid 2.40, better than league average. After the season, DiLauro was drafted from the Mets by the Houston Astros in the rule 5 draft.
In 1970 DiLauro pitched in 42 games for the Astros, all in relief, pitching 332⁄3 innings.
He was sold by the Astros to the Hawaii Islanders, the San Diego Padres American Automobile Association team in the Pacific Coast League on March 15, 1971. In July 1971 he was traded with Hank McGraw (brother of DiLauro"s former Mets teammate Tug McGraw) to the Atlanta Braves organization for Marv Staehle. But he never pitched in the major leagues after 1970.
As of August 23, 2008 DiLauro"s Mets European Research Area of 2.40 is 3rd best all-time among Mets pitchers with at least 50 innings pitched for the team, behind only Carlos Diaz and Billy Wagner.