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Ben Zobrist: Latest News, Rumors, Speculation on Free-Agent 2B

Long one of baseball’s most underappreciated players, Ben Zobrist now has nearly half of Major League Baseball chasing him in free agency.

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‘Very Strong’ Market for Zobrist

Thursday, Nov. 12

Chris Cotillo of SB Nation and ESPN’s Buster Olney highlighted the Kansas City Royals, Washington Nationals, New York Mets, San Francisco Giants, Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals as potential suitors. Cotillo put the number at “at least” 12 teams that have expressed interest in the utility man.

Zobrist, 34, hit .276/.359/.450 with 13 home runs and 56 RBI while splitting last season with the Royals and Oakland Athletics. While those numbers were solid, his overall contributions were his worst since 2008. His 2.1 wins above replacement were a 3.4-win drop from 2014 and mostly attributable to a surprising defensive regression, per FanGraphs.

After posting positive defensive metrics each of the previous six seasons—and at times being considered among the most versatile talents in the sport—Zobrist struggled in an inconsistent role. He spent most of 2015 bouncing back and forth between the outfield and second base, also spending four games at third. 

It’s worth noting this was his first season not playing 81 games on the Tampa Bay turf, but most teams likely view his downturn as an outlier. Zobrist also helped increase his value with a strong postseason, hitting .303/.365/.515 with two home runs and six runs batted in as the Royals earned their first World Series in three decades. 

“The way the front office runs things and the way the coaching staff runs things, it’s loose and fun but also structured,” Zobrist said of the Royals in August, per Jeffrey Flanagan of MLB.com. “It’s very professional. The way they go about everything is really good. It’s fun to be assimilated into a culture like that, because they’re already good. I don’t need to change anything. They’re already headed in the right direction. I just have to be a part of it.”

Signing a 34-year-old without much power or speed who is coming off his worst season in more than a half decade may seem like a risk. But given Zobrist’s track record, it’s probably one worth taking.

 

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Kris Bryant Wins NL Outstanding Rookie at 2015 Players Choice Awards

From the moment Kris Bryant stepped into an MLB batter’s box, he was a star. Now the Chicago Cubs third baseman has the hardware to back it up.

Bryant was named the 2015 Most Outstanding Rookie at Monday night’s Players Choice Awards, beating out the Pittsburgh Pirates’ Jung Ho Kang and the San Francisco Giants’ Matt Duffy. MLB announced the news: 

Every major publication had picked Bryant as its NL Rookie of the Year, which is understandable given his brilliant 2015 campaign.

Bryant, 23, hit .275/.369/.488 with 26 home runs and 99 RBI, adding 13 steals on the basepaths. He was called up in early April and became an integral fixture in the Cubs lineup, leading all rookies in WAR while anchoring the middle of the order. 

The postseason sapped Bryant’s power a bit, as he had only six base hits in 34 at-bats (.176 average) and hit only two home runs with five RBI. His struggles played a part in the New York Mets’ sweep of the Cubs in the National League Championship Series. It was a disappointing end to what was otherwise one of the best rookie seasons in franchise history.   

“It’s amazing,” teammate Anthony Rizzo told Baseball America‘s Gordon Wittenmyer. “He’s come up with all the hype and all the pressure that people try to put on him, and he’s never fazed by it, not one bit.”

It’s never been much of a question that Bryant would win the award. Kang and Duffy were solid contributors for their teams but never remotely approached Bryant’s all-around skills. Duffy is probably a little underrated by most casual fans and finished close to Bryant in WAR, yet the name-recognition factor made this not a close vote.

Duffy, 24, quietly emerged as one of the better young players in baseball under the nose of most casual observers.

The third baseman, who replaced the departed Pablo Sandoval, hit .295/.335/.428 with 12 home runs, 77 RBI and 12 steals. He was a far better defender than the stationary Sandoval and became a pleasant surprise after being a relatively unheralded 18th-round pick. 

Taking over at third base for Pedro Alvarez, Kang brought a promising combination of offense and slightly above-average defense to the table. He hit .287/.355/.461 with 15 home runs and 58 RBI, good for a 3.9 WAR, per FanGraphs. A broken leg and torn MCL prematurely ended his season in September, which will hopefully not hinder his development into a fixture in the Pirates lineup.

As it stands, all three players could have won awards in previous years. It’s just too bad for Kang and Duffy that they happened to run into a superstar in the making. 

 

Follow Tyler Conway (@tylerconway22) on Twitter. Advanced stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.    

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Carlos Correa Wins AL Outstanding Rookie at 2015 Players Choice Awards

For most of the second half of 2015, media members and fans alike debated whether Houston Astros shortstop Carlos Correa or Cleveland Indians shortstop Francisco Lindor was the American League Rookie of the Year. On Monday, the rookies’ fellow players backed the Astros phenom.

Correa took home the American League Outstanding Rookie award at Monday’s Players Choice Awards, besting Lindor and Minnesota Twins third baseman and designated hitter Miguel Sano, the MLB announced:

Opinion had been split for most of the regular season, but Lindor had been trending as a leader among media members. Sports Illustrated, CBS Sports and Bleacher Report picked Lindor, while Sporting News went with Correa.

KPRC-TV’s Adam Wexler passed along what Correa had to say about receiving the award from his peers:

Lindor, 21, hit .313/.353/.482 with 12 home runs, 51 RBI and 12 steals after being called up to the bigs in June. The switch-hitting shortstop spent most of 2015 living a bit in Correa’s shadow before busting out in a big way over the season’s final two months. His slash line improved to .346/.389/.548 after Aug. 1, leading some to put him over Correa in the rookie rankings.

“I’m probably shying away from [the debate] a little bit because some of the things I’m reading are starting to aggravate me,” Indians manager Terry Francona said in October, per Paul Hoynes of Cleveland.com. “This kid is Rookie of the Year. I’m missing something somewhere and I’m afraid if I keep [paying attention], I’m going to get mad.”

Correa, 21, hit .279/.345/.512 with 22 home runs, 68 RBI and 14 steals in 99 games. The 2012 top overall pick has proved he is worth every bit of the hype since his arrival, emerging as one of baseball’s best offensive shortstops and playing solid enough defense for a rookie. His 3.3 wins above replacement ranked sixth among rookies, all but one of whom had more games played, per FanGraphs.

That instant success translated to the postseason, where Correa hit two home runs and drove in four runs while posting a .292/.320/.583 slash line. 

“Just his poise. This kid came into the big leagues with a great spotlight on him,” Houston manager A.J. Hinch said of his young star in October, per Fred Kerber of the New York Post. “Everyone knows who Correa is, No. 1 pick, expectations through the roof. And you wouldn’t expect anyone to live up to them, let alone exceed them the way he has. So he’s handled himself with a ton of poise, a ton of charisma.”

The biggest separation between Correa and Lindor comes on defense. Whereas Correa graded as slightly below average, Lindor was actually better on the defensive side than on offense. His 4.6 WAR was significantly higher than Correa’s for the simple fact he’s already one of the better defensive shortstops in baseball.

Sano, meanwhile, didn’t have all that much of a chance, despite a solid season. He hit .269/.385/.530 with 18 home runs and 52 RBI in 80 games, yet spent most of his time at designated hitter. Given that his offensive numbers were worse than Correa and Lindor and the Twins finished a few games out of playoff contention, it would have been hard to justify handing him the award.

Debate will likely rage on in Houston and Cleveland about whether the players made the right choice. But either way, Correa’s season was deserving enough that it shouldn’t come with all that much controversy.

 

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Byung-ho Park Bidding Rights Won by Minnesota Twins

The small-market Minnesota Twins have made a big-market splash. MLB confirmed, via Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports, the Twins won the bid for coveted Korean first baseman Byung-ho Park.

Rosenthal and Jeff Passan of Yahoo Sports originally reported the Twins turned in the winning bid of $12.85 million for the negotiation rights to Park. 

The Nexen Heroes of the Korea Baseball Organization announced Friday they had accepted a bid from an unknown team over the weekend. Park, 29, had been officially posted for a five-day bidding window last Monday. His representatives and the Twins will have 30 days to come to an agreement on a contract.

Mike Axisa of CBS Sports noted the Pirates and the Yankees were chiefly mentioned as potential suitors during the regular season. It’s unclear how many teams posted a bid for Park, but the Twins winning the bid comes as a bit of a surprise. Jerry Crasnick of ESPN is intrigued by Minnesota’s new-look lineup:

Park hit .343/.436/.714 with 53 home runs and 146 RBI for Nexen in 2015. It was the power-hitting first baseman’s second straight 50-homer season, and he’s hit at least 30 in each of the last four. While the competition increase from the KBO to MLB will undoubtedly lower that homer total a bit, Park also regularly hit for average and has shown a keen eye at the plate.

Adding a first baseman to the mix could mark an organizational transition away from Joe Mauer as its franchise player. The 32-year-old moved from catcher to first base in 2014, but that hasn’t resulted in an offensive upswing.

Mauer posted a .265/.338/.380 slash line with 10 home runs and 66 RBI. He’s due $69 million over the next three seasons despite posting a 2.0 wins above replacement combined in 2014 and 2015, per FanGraphs

If the Twins can sign Park during their negotiating window, Mauer could be on the trade market this winter. 

 

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MLB Trade Rumors: Latest on Carlos Gonzalez, Padres Moves and James Loney

The first pillar of the 2015 MLB offseason has arrived. General managers are currently convening in Boca Raton, Florida, for their annual meetings, which serve as the unofficial beginning of the hot-stove season.

Free agency technically began Friday, but the GM meetings are where deals start to get done. We’ll probably see the first major free agent ink his deal over the next few days, though the biggest names will continue to wait out the market. 

More critically, GM meetings are where the trade rumors heat up. A vast majority of deals we’ll see over the next month or so will have Boca Raton to thank for getting things going. With that in mind, here is a look at some of the most notable rumors.

 

Rockies to ‘Listen’ to CarGo Offers?

It’s no secret that the Colorado Rockies are in a state of rebuild. They shipped out their franchise’s biggest star, Troy Tulowitzki, in a midseason trade that landed them three solid pitching prospects. Their most promising player is 24-year-old Nolan Arenado, who burst onto the scene in 2015 with a 42-homer season that seemingly came out of nowhere.

Stuck somewhere in the middle is Carlos Gonzalez. He is only 30 years old, so there’s a scenario in which Gonzalez is still an effective player when the Rockies are competing for the National League West crown again. He rebounded from a lost 2014 campaign by hitting .271/.325/.540 with a career-high 40 homers and 98 runs batted in.

There are two potential schools of thought here. The optimistic would view this as a return to form for Gonzalez, who has had only one bad season despite myriad injury issues. The pessimist would take those numbers and show them to the 29 other MLB teams in an attempt to salvage whatever remains of his trade value.

Patrick Saunders of the Denver Post indicated Rockies general manager Jeff Bridich is taking a middle-of-the-road approach, reporting he’ll “listen” to offers on CarGo. That removes the stigma of actively shopping a player but makes it clear he can be had.

Gonzalez is due $37 million over the next two seasons, which at once makes him expensive and low risk. When the Blue Jays added Tulo, they were assuming five more years for a player who has played 150 games just twice in his career. If CarGo doesn’t work out, he’s essentially a disappointment for one year and dead money the next. It’s not an ideal situation, but it is preferable to what will likely be an ugly couple of seasons for Tulo in Toronto.

As it stands, the Rockies should and likely will move Gonzalez at some point this winter.

 

Padres to Be Active This Winter?

Suffice it to say A.J. Preller is under pressure heading into his second winter as general manager of the San Diego Padres. Armed with a massively expanded budget, Preller made splashy move after splashy move a year ago in hopes of turning San Diego into an instant division contender.

It didn’t work. Most of Preller‘s moves fell on their faces, and the Padres went 74-88. They ranked among baseball’s worst in nearly every major offensive category despite adding Matt Kemp, Justin Upton and Wil Myers. They also topped out as middle of the pack in most pitching categories despite bringing in James Shields and Craig Kimbrel.

“Going into the year, I think we had better than a 74-win team,” Preller said in October, per Corey Brock of MLB.com. “I do feel like there was talent in the room. Overall, as a whole, it just didn’t work. We didn’t get guys to play as well as they did at other stops. We never got that group to play at the level we wanted them to all year.”

One way Preller seemingly plans to atone for his 2015 missteps is by undoing some of his roster moves. Dennis Lin of the San Diego Union-Tribune reported the Padres will “listen on just about anyone on the roster.” Lin specifically mentioned Shields, who went 13-7 with a 3.91 ERA and 1.33 WHIP during his first season in San Diego.

It’d be a bit strange to move Shields given that he was one of the few Preller moves that worked. He had a marked downturn in some categories, but there’s reason to believe 2015 was an outlier. Shields’ home run-to-fly ball ratio went up by nearly eight percent, and he set a career high with 3.60 walks per nine innings. Those numbers are so off from his career norms that even a slight mean regression would put him back on solid footing.

Another name making the rounds is catcher Derek Norris, who had a 2.4 WAR in 2015 (per FanGraphs). It seems Preller is shopping only the players who have been effective. Strange strategy.

 

Rays to Move Loney to Clear 1B Spot?

The Tampa Bay Rays need to make room at a corner infield spot for Richie Shaffer. The former first-round pick belted 26 home runs while splitting his time between Double-A and Triple-A during the 2015 season and has nowhere else to go but Tampa. The Rays might try to keep him in the farm system a bit for service-time purposes, but he’s biding time at this point.

One issue: Tampa’s corner spots are currently filled. Evan Longoria isn’t going anywhere. He’s a franchise mainstay, and after a couple of injury-plagued campaigns, he has returned to play at least 160 games in each of the last three seasons. 

The other infield spot, however, is being taken up by the fine but replaceable James Loney. The veteran first baseman is a career .285 hitter but brings nothing from a power perspective. His defense has also slipped to the point he was worth a negative-1.3 wins above replacement last season, according to FanGraphs.

Understandably, the Rays would prefer to move on. Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times reported trading Loney is a “key” to bringing Shaffer up from Triple-A. Loney is due $9.6 million in 2016, and the Rays aren’t in the business of parking one of their highest-paid players on the bench. At issue is the fact that not many teams are going to be keen on adding a weak-hitting first baseman who doesn’t offer much in the way of defensive excellence. 

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CC Sabathia Discusses Decision to Enter Rehab on ‘Good Morning America’

CC Sabathia knows he left the New York Yankees to enter rehab for alcoholism at the worst possible time; however, in his first interview since completing treatment, the former Cy Young Award winner said it’s what needed to be done.  

“Like I said, I know it was a bad time of the season, but I woke up on that Sunday morning in Baltimore and there was no other option for me but to get help,” Sabathia told Robin Roberts in a Good Morning America interview that will air in full Friday (h/t Katie Kindelan of GMA, via Yahoo).

Sabathia, 35, checked into rehab Oct. 5, a day before the Yankees played the Houston Astros in their American League Wild Card matchup. He would have been part of the team’s expected rotation for the ALDS had the Yankees won. Many fans were critical of the timing of Sabathia’s decision, which drew a mixed reaction from the lefty.

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World Series 2015: Top Stars, Stats and Highlights from Mets vs. Royals

It took three decades, but the Kansas City Royals are once again world champions. The Royals ruined Matt Harvey’s brilliant start with a ninth-inning comeback and then scored five runs in the 12th to earn a 7-2 victory and take home the title Sunday night.

Outfielder Lorenzo Cain drove in three runs, while series MVP Salvador Perez’s groundout to third base drove in the game-tying run in the ninth. The Mets got eight shutout innings from Harvey, but manager Terry Collins’ decision to keep him in for the shutout backfired. Harvey walked Cain, and then Hosmer drove an RBI double to left field before Collins came out and yanked his ace.

“He just came over and said, ‘I want this game. I want it bad. You’ve got to leave me in,'” Collins said, per Adam Rubin of ESPN.com. “I said, ‘Matt, you’ve got us exactly where we wanted to get.’ He said, ‘I want this game in the worst way.’ So, obviously, I let my heart get in the way of my gut. I love my players. And I trust them. And so I said, ‘Go get ’em out.'”

The decision might not have changed the outcome of the series as a whole; it was always unlikely that the Mets would make a comeback from 3-1. That said, it sends us into the offseason earlier than anyone expected. Here is a retrospective on the 2015 World Series, noting the best performers and top moments.

 

World Series Stars

Salvador Perez, C, Kansas City Royals

It’s only right to start with the unanimous MVP. Perez hit .364/.391/.455 while scoring three runs and driving in two, all while helping guide the Royals pitching staff through a sterling series.

“He just had a phenomenal series,” Royals manager Ned Yost said, per Christina Kahrl of ESPN.com. “I think if I had one regret during the whole playoffs, [it] was I had to pinch run for Sal there in that inning. But it opened up the door for us to score five. I really wish that Sal could have been out there to jump in [closer Wade Davis’] arms when we got the final out.”

Most impressive about Perez’s performance was his ability to play through a series of nicks and cuts. He’d taken a number of foul balls off his body during the series and played despite the pain, continuing to lead the Royals in nearly every offensive category.

It was a symbol of the leadership that’s been apparent since Perez’s arrival in the big leagues. Nearly everyone in the clubhouse acknowledges he’s been at the forefront of this World Series push.

“He’s a beast,” Cain said, per David Waldstein of the New York Times. “He’s a monster, he’s our monster. That guy gives everything he has. Without him, we aren’t here right now.”

 

Curtis Granderson, OF, New York Mets

The Mets offense, so clutch during their run through the National League, failed in the World Series. Daniel Murphy went from October legend to November disappointment, hitting just .150 and failing to drive in a single run. David Wright, Yoenis Cespedes, Travis d’Arnaud? Not so much. Michael Conforto was the only Mets regular who hit over .300. 

Granderson, meanwhile, had a power surge at a time the rest of his teammates were suffering an outage. The veteran outfielder hit three home runs, but they accounted for only four runs batted in. Because Granderson’s the team’s leadoff hitter, it’s worth noting that only one of those bombs came in the first inning.

Granderson, Conforto and Wright were the only Mets players who drove in more than two runs. 

“He’s a pretty special guy,” Lucas Duda said of Granderson, per Fred Kerber of the New York Post. “I don’t want to make his head too big, but he’s an unbelievable baseball player and an even better human being. I can’t say enough about him.”

 

Luke Hochevar, Kelvin Herrera and Wade Davis, Kansas City Royals

The Royals would have gone nowhere the last two seasons without their bullpen. No team in baseball can shut a game down earlier when ahead, and this trio didn’t miss a beat on baseball’s biggest stage. Hochevar, Herrera and Davis combined to throw 14 shutout innings, striking out 16 batters and holding the Mets bats at bay.

Add in three shutout innings from the perpetually underrated Ryan Madson, and it’s not hard to see why New York had so much trouble putting runs on the scoreboard. When the Royals tied Game 5 in the ninth inning, the entire clubhouse had the feeling they were going to pull off the comeback.

“And once we tied it, we knew we had it,” Royals captain Alex Gordon said, per Bob Nightengale of USA Today. “It was like, ‘Here we go again.’ We weren’t going to lose the game. No one can match up with our bullpen.”

“You look at our performances, (Edinson Volquez) was unbelievable,” Yost said, per Mike Axisa of CBS Sports. “Herrera with a three-inning stint; he hadn’t had one of those all year,” said manager Ned Yost after Game 5. “And Hoch coming back on his third day for two innings to get the win. And Wade to close it out, our pitching was absolutely unbelievably good.”

There’s no telling how long the Royals can afford to keep these guys together. They’ve been so good over the last couple of years that teams are going to look at them as potential closers. For now, though, they can all bask in how a special bullpen carried them to a title.

 

Highlights From the Celebration

Because it is fun to see grown men pile thousands of dollars worth of alcoholic beverages on each other, here are a few notable highlights from Sunday night:

 

World Series Leaders

 

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Yoenis Cespedes: Latest News, Rumors and Speculation Surrounding Free-Agent OF

Yoenis Cespedes‘ midseason acquisition helped propel the New York Mets to their first World Series appearance since 2000, but don’t expect him back in Queens next season.

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Mets Expect Cespedes to Leave in Free Agency

Monday, Nov. 2

Adam Rubin of ESPN.com reported the Mets are planning to only “modestly pursue” Cespedes when he hits the open market this winter. 

“It’s too early for that,” Cespedes, who indicated he’d like to return to New York, said of his future following the Mets’ World Series elimination, per Rubin. “My agent told me that we’ll see what’s going on around December or so. It’s just too early.”

Cespedes, 30, hit .287/.337/.604 with 17 home runs and 44 RBI in 57 regular-season games with the Mets. His performance was so impressive it even drew some outside National League MVP buzz despite Cespedes coming over from the American League’s Detroit Tigers at the trade deadline.

But while his performance burned hot early on, it regressed to the mean down the stretch. Cespedes did not hit a home run in the Mets’ final 16 regular-season games, and he struggled his way through an injury-riddled postseason. A foul ball to his left knee in Sunday night’s Game 5 loss to the Kansas City Royals ended his season early, and he battled a hand injury during New York’s playoff run.

Overall, he hit .222/.232/.352 with two homers and eight RBI in the playoffs. While far from an ideal outcome, Cespedes’ regular-season ascent may wind up taking him out of the Mets’ price range in free agency.

 

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Bud Black to Nationals: Latest Contract Details, Comments and Reaction

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Washington Nationals are talent-laden teams with seemingly unending budgets, each looking to get over the hump and contend for a World Series, and both showed an interest in Bud Black as a potential manager. 

In the end, Bud Black chose to become a National. Per James Wagner of the Washington Post on Wednesday, Washington and the veteran manager “intend” to agree to a contract, as Black will reportedly take over for the fired Matt Williams.

A formal announcement is not expected until after the World Series, as CSN Mid-Atlantic’s Mark Zuckerman noted:

The Nationals made their final decision on Black within the last 48 hours, according to the source, but intend to adhere to Major League Baseball’s longstanding request that clubs not make significant news during the World Series. Thus, a formal announcement and press conference isn’t likely to take place until sometime next week. 

The Nationals were one of baseball’s biggest disappointments in 2015, finishing 83-79 and missing the playoffs despite being considered a World Series contender in spring training. The down season ruined an MVP-level breakout from outfielder Bryce Harper and a successful first year in D.C. for Max Scherzer, Washington’s big offseason signing.   

Most of the blame fell on Williams, who butted heads with his players and lost the clubhouse a year after winning the NL Manager of the Year. The ugliest on-field incident happened when reliever Jonathan Papelbon attempted to choke Harper during a dugout argument, but behind-the-scenes reports painted an even more dysfunctional situation. 

“He’s like the guy in his house who hears a sound, like someone breaking in,” a player told the Washington Post’s Barry Svrluga of Williams. “And his reaction isn’t to take care of the problem or investigate. It’s to put his head under the pillow and hope it goes away.”

Black, 58, spent most of the last nine seasons as the San Diego Padres‘ manager. They fired him in June after the team started 32-33 despite a number of high-profile winter acquisitions. San Diego never made the playoffs under Black, but he did win Manager of the Year honors after a 90-72 campaign in 2010. 

“Very attractive position,” Black said of the Washington job earlier this offseason on SiriusXM MLB Network Radio (h/t Chris Johnson of MASN). “Very good team. A great city. That’s a good one.”

Joe Sheehan of Sports Illustrated said Black should thank the Padres for his ouster:

The Nationals also seriously considered former Cincinnati Reds, San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs manager Dusty Baker for the position, per CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman. With a roster filled with veteran talent, it was clear from the outset that the team would hire someone with an extensive resume. 

“We feel that where we’re at in our timetable of winning a championship, we certainly would lean toward someone that has some type of managerial experience, especially at the major league level,” general manager Mike Rizzo said, per Howard Fendrich of the Associated Press. 

It’s worth noting that Williams did not have managerial experience before arriving in Washington. The Nationals were likely looking to steer away from a similar situation following 2015’s troubles. 

Whether Black’s the right man for the job is up for interpretation. It’s a bit strange to hire someone without a single playoff game’s worth of experience to lead your World Series push. Then again, given the massive budgetary difference between San Diego and Washington, this move might finally unleash Black’s true potential as a manager. 

 

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World Series 2015: Updates on Weather Ahead of Mets vs. Royals Game 1

Game 1 of the World Series could be in danger, as rain has been coming down throughout the afternoon in Kansas City, Missouri. The first pitch is scheduled for 8:07 p.m. ET.

Matt Snyder of CBS Sports provided a Vine from the field about four hours prior to the scheduled first pitch:

Weather.com‘s forecast paints a more optimistic picture, with only a 15 percent chance of rain at 8 p.m. ET. There could be a shower around 9 p.m. ET, but the inclement weather is supposed to taper off before spiking again at 11 p.m. ET.

At 7:18 p.m. ET, the tarp was officially removed from the field, per Fox Sports: 

Both teams took indoor batting practice while the rain had been coming down. 

Snyder wrote his “hunch” is the teams will play as scheduled. Even if they do, it appears the Kansas City Royals and New York Mets will begin the World Series on a dreary evening.

Check back here for updates on the weather as the first pitch approaches.

 

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