Tag: Joe Torre

L.A. Dodgers: Eight Surefire Moves To Improve Management in 2011

With less than 40 games remaining in the 2010 season, there are still many questions looming for the Los Angeles Dodgers from an organizational standpoint.

The divorce trial between owner Frank McCourt and his wife Jamie is set to begin on August 30, and depending on what exactly transpires in the courtroom, future ownership may take a new direction.

The decision as to whether Joe Torre will return as Dodgers’ manager will be made once Los Angeles “officially” falls from contention, while controversies as to whom will be at the helm next year are already taking shape. If Torre decides to move on and continue managing, an entirely new team of coaches may need to be assembled, as part of the staff may follow in Joe’s path.

If indeed a new owner is introduced in Los Angeles, many managerial changes are anticipated. The current managers and coaching staff have been on the hot seat for most of the season, as coaching techniques, personnel decisions, and roster management were constantly criticized across Dodgertown.

And with more than a handful of players’ contracts expiring at the end of the year, roster changes may be imminent heading into 2011 as well. Frank McCourt’s notorious deferred money contracts have scarred the Dodgers’ budget for the past several seasons, and the possibilities of several players not returning or a number of contracts being restructured loom large.

Yet with the many questions and hurdles that lie ahead, the Dodger legacy will be forever intact, and the Dodger faithful will continue to show its relentless support.

The following slides show eight areas of coaching and management that may be addressed heading into the off-season, as well as offer recommendations of filling any vacated positions. The names shown are by no means based on any fact or inside information, but simply illustrate the many possibilities that exist if the Dodgers decide to make changes moving forward.

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MLB Rumors: Tim Wallach Arises as Potential Joe Torre Successor in LA

Recently, Major League Baseball has been buzzing about the future of several managers. From Tony LaRussa to Joe Girardi, these men are starting to make more headlines than this year’s looming free agent class. 

There could now even be a “Joe Torre Watch” as he is one of the most prized managers in the game and could be relocating this offseason. He has a few destinations to choose from.

The Chicago Cubs may want him as their successor to Lou Piniella, who is retiring after many years in the big leagues. The favorites to replace Piniella are currently Ryne Sandberg and Joe Girardi, if he chooses to pass on returning to the Yankees for the Cubs. Girardi and Torre have both won World Series Championships, but to do it with the Cubs would be historic.

The New York Mets have just joined the hunt for Torre, as many close friends and baseball executives could see a return to the Big Apple for the former Yankees and Mets skipper. 

But Los Angeles and retirement are big factors in his decision. Torre could either pass on all offers and ride off into the sunset or comeback and make one more attempt at winning it all in Dodger blue. 

Those who have started to believe that Torre will retire have started to point towards possible successors. 

Near the top of everyone’s list is Don Mattingly. Mattingly followed Torre from New York after not getting the managerial job there. It seems as if it is set in stone that once Torre is finished, the former Yankees captain would take over. 

But here comes a surprise from Bob Nightingale of USA Today. He believes that the Mattingly promise may never actually happen as a new contender for the possible managerial role has popped up with Tim Wallach. 

Wallach has been the Dodgers’ Triple-A manager since January 2009. Before that he served as the hitting coach for the Dodgers, until he was replaced by Eddie Murray. He has since won 80 games with the Isotopes and was named Manager of the Year. 

Wallach does seem to be quite suitable for the job. Mattingly and Wallach seem to have similar resumes. 

It all comes down to how big can they come up on the big stage and how successful can they make a team with a peculiar situation in the front office.

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MLB Rumors: Joe Torre To The Mets? Close Sources Expect So

A new question arises in New York. “How hot is the seat, Mr. Manuel?”

The season is starting to take a turn and head toward that final stretch, but some teams are already out of contention and could be looking into the future of their ball club.

The Mets could be one of these teams as things looked bright a bit early in the Summer, but have since taken a turn for the worse. The pitching has become weak and the bats are frozen. Players like Johan Santana and Carlos Beltran do not have the same look of dominance every time that they take the field.

When the blame game begins, the finger can be pointed at Jerry Manuel. Manuel has been given a bad reception at Citi Field several times lately. His head is definitely on the chopping block if the Mets fail to do anything in September.

Omar Minaya should not be too confident as he could be on his way out of town too. But before he goes, he might be hired to make an important move concerning Jerry Manuel. 

The hiring of Joe Torre for the New York Mets could be the swan song for Omar Minaya.

Jayson Stark of ESPN has been tracking the possible future destinations for Joe Torre and a friend believes he will either retire or stay in California. But a few Major League Baseball executives have been led to believe that the current Dodgers skipper might make a return to Flushing, New York.

Joe Torre was a lot younger when he was last in a Mets uniform. He was the skipper for five years and was never able to compile a winning season. Things were definitely a lot better in the Bronx for him.

Joe Torre has been welcomed warmly the last few times he was in New York against the Mets. That could also just be a ton of Yankee fans going to the game to see their former skipper make a special appearance in the Big Apple.

Torre will announce his plans for next year after the season ends for the Dodgers. If it ends with a World Series win, he could choose to ride off into the sunset a winner one last time. The other option is pull a Phil Jackson and try and win another one.

He would inherit a team that could use a few young faces. They have Ike Davis, a legitimate contender for the Rookie of the Year Award. In the starting rotation stands a man that the Yankees let get away for Torre in Johan Santana. People like David Wright and Jose Reyes are all too familiar due to the many Subway Series that Torre was a part of.

A New York Mets hiring of Joe Torre would definitely not be the worst thing that could possibly happen to the team. The worst could actually be giving the power over in an Isiah Thomas manner where Omar Minaya would be manager and a big shot in the front office. They should try and avoid that disaster.

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JC’s LA View: Desperate Dodger Deals Dare Disaster

Striker: Surely you can’t be serious.
Rumack: I am serious… and don’t call me Shirley.

One couldn’t be surprised if Dodgers manager Joe Torre slipped into the role of Ted Striker from the movie “Airplane!” when talking to L.A.’s GM Ned Colletti’s version of Dr. Rumack after hearing of the deals Colletti orchestrated at the trade deadline.

Meanwhile, the reaction from Dodger fans trend towards language with a much higher concentration of salt and vinegar.

Colletti landed Ted Lilly and Ryan Theriot from the Cubs, along with Octavio Dotel from the Pirates on the final day of non-waiver trades. A few days earlier, Scott Podsednik was acquired from the Royals.

The price tag for this collection of spare parts is even more staggering than the stench from a sack of month-old fish left to putrefy in the summer sun.

Blake DeWitt is a young left handed hitting infielder who plays with intelligence, grit, and desire. Thus, he obviously doesn’t fit in with the rest of the squad, necessitating his dispatch to Chicago.

Starting rotation anchor Clayton “Chinstrap” Kershaw—don’t call him an ace, as this year’s collection of Dodger starters clearly lacks one—summed up the deal best, “Honesty, it sucks.”

Now, Los Angeles can boast three right-handed hitting second basemen, killing off the logic of a platoon. They also got older, given Theriot is DeWitt’s senior by six years.

Two minor league pitchers were also sacrificed: Kyle Smit, a No. 5 pick in 2006, and 2009’s No. 3 pick Brett Wallach.

Given the Dodgers are not expected to keep Lilly after this season, and the specter of short-sighted frugality most likely will have them not offering arbitration, thus losing the chance to receive compensatory picks, this deal has to be seen as an act of desperation by Colletti.

Once can only guess if he was acting on orders from above to give the appearance of activity to sandbag fans into believing all that could be done to make the postseason is actually taking place.

The fear is all this sound and fury will end up signifying nothing, given the team’s lackluster attitude in conjunction with the confidence and upgrades coming from San Diego make achieving a playoff spot more and more unlikely.

Then, just before the deadline hit, Colletti shipped the talented but under-performing James McDonald along with drug tarnished former top minor league outfielder Andrew Lambo to Pittsburgh for Dotel, a reliever who drags his 4.50 ERA into the Dodger bullpen.

Granted, it is enough to make serial arsonist George Sherrill green with envy, but this deal should have cost one or the other, not both prospects.

Still, the transaction that really has me spitting bullets took place on July 28, when top minor league catching prospect Lucas May was sent packing, along with Class-A pitcher Elisaul Pimentel, for Scott Podsednik.

May was a Triple-A All-Star catcher this season, and just represented the organization in the Futures Game. Converted from shortstop, May is a line drive-type hitter whose defensive abilities continue to improve, and was the best catcher in the Dodger minor league system.

Colletti dealt Carlos Santana, considered the top catching prospect in the organization in 2008, for Casey Blake. Now A.J. Ellis, who has shown himself to be backup quality at best, has the mantle thrust upon him by default, leaving the organization with a gaping hole to fill.

Considering the nosedive Russell Martin’s career path has taken, this deficiency becomes even more pronounced.

Podsednik, who can be considered the poor man’s Juan Pierre, gives the team just about the same skill set in a fourth outfielder as last season. However, Torre has pushed Rafael Furcal out of his preferred lead off spot to make room for Podesdnik.

One can’t believe this will please Furcal, who has been the most consistent position player the Blue Crew has fielded this season, in spite of the family tragedy he experienced a little more than a month ago.

If Xavier Paul had taken advantage of the opportunity that came his way when Manny Ramirez suffered his leg injuries, this deal would not have been necessary. The same could be said if Garrett Anderson hadn’t needed binoculars to look up at the Mendoza line.

Hopefully Los Angeles will allow Anderson to ride off into the sunset when either Manny or Reed Johnson finally return from the disabled list.

Coming off a sweep at the hands of the cursed Giants, there is scant positive news Dodger fans can look forward to. The offseason, currently scheduled to begin while October is still in single digits, does not hold much hope either, considering the legal wrangling for control of the franchise will most likely not be concluded.

Whichever side emerges victorious, loyal Dodger fans have to seriously question the ability of McCourt to provide the cash infusion needed to upgrade the roster back to one that is a serious World Series contender.

Woe to the republic.

 

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Is There A Rift Brewing Between Joe Torre and Matt Kemp?

*Please note this article was written before Matt Kemp was inserted into the Dodgers’ lineup last night. However, the only reason Kemp was inserted into the lineup was because Manny Ramirez had an injury, so the basis of my article hasn’t changed.

Benching a star player one game I can understand. Two games I could still somewhat comprehend. But three games? That seems a little extreme to me.

However, I am not the manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers and the manager of the Dodgers feels that three games is the right amount of games to bench a star player. For a third straight game, Joe Torre has not penciled star CF Matt Kemp into the lineup.

I understand that Kemp is hitting .196 in June and I understand that Torre is a little peeved that Kemp got picked off second base last Wednesday in a game against the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim, but this is just silly. If Kemp is ready to go, then you insert him into the lineup.

Here is where Torre has reached Phil Jackson and Bill Belichick status. This happens when a manager or coach has had so much success in the past that no matter what they do, no matter what they say, or what move they make — even if it is completely absurd — it is somehow considered a stroke of genius.

Torre has clearly reached this status. He reached it in New York when he dropped Alex Rodriguez to eighth in the order in Game 4 of the ALDS against the Detroit Tigers. It was such a stupid move, but it was hailed as a motivational tactic by Torre.

The bottom line is even the Teflon wears off on the great managers, coaches or GM’s and they make mistakes. Torre is making a mistake with Kemp.

He belongs in the lineup.

You can follow The Ghost of Moonlight Graham on Twitter @ theghostofmlg

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Sorry Joe Torre, You Deserved to Lose to the New York Yankees

 

Once again, the New York Yankees utilized inter-league play by crushing the NL teams, winning 10 of 15 games.

 

The stressful, yet successful trip out west was exhausting. The Yankees played with so much heart making sure to win both series against the Diamondbacks and the Dodgers.

 

Sunday night’s game against Joe Torre and his Dodgers felt like deja vu from last season, as the Yankees were up for a fight again.

 

It was the ninth inning with one out and the Yankees were down 6-2.

 

Initially, my heart went out to A-Rod. I wanted the Yankees to win for him and I guess his teammates did too, as the Yankees came back to win in the tenth inning, 8-6.

 

The win came largely thanks to Robinson Cano’s two-run homer to take the lead, but getting to extra innings was a complete team effort. Torre also helped by over-using his closer Jonathan Broxton. I guess some things never change.

 

Before this series, never once did A-Rod mention anything about his feelings towards Torre. A-Rod respectfully took the high road, which was completely understandable.

 

Well, I am not A-Rod. I am a Yankees fan, and an A-Rod fan, so here is what I have to say…

 

I have three words on Torre’s The Yankee Years — low-class, unprofessional, and desperate. It was awful to read and it must have hurt A-Rod more than he will ever admit.

 

Torre deserved to lose. Torre was someone who I thought realized that players were human beings like everyone else. When he lead the Yankees for 12 years, Torre gave off the people first, baseball players second vibe.

 

Torre betrayed the organization that made him famous, the fans who were heart-broken to see him leave, and the players who trusted him.

 

This whole time, the real fraud was actually Joe Torre.

 

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The Yankee Years: Joe Torre’s All-Time New York Yankees!

With the weekend series between the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers coming to a close last night, the MLB and its fans are finally ready to move on with the post-Joe Torre Yankees.

While Torre may not be as loved and cherished by New Yorkers as he was once was, there is no denying that he brought the Yankees from a mediocre team to becoming the premiere franchise in all of professional sports.

This is what his starters would look like, if Torre selected individuals from his tenure with the Yankees and put them together on one team.

Remember that Joe took over as manager in 1996 and left the New York Yankees after the 2007 season. All of these players played multiple seasons under Torre as their manager with the Bronx Bombers!

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Los Angeles Dodgers Face Gut Check After Tough Sunday Night Loss

While the Major League season may be a marathon, and not a sprint, a tweaked ankle still stings at any distance. Such was the case for Los Angeles on Sunday night, as the Dodgers positive weekend took a turn for the miserable over two painful innings.

To make matters worse, a handful of roster staples played a part in souring the evening, and the club’s big time series with the Yankees. Now a team that stood just two outs away from a much needed spark must pick up the pieces following a “how’d that happen” ending.

Joe Torre’s men lost a game, and any sign of momentum, in their 8-6 heartbreaker at Chavez Ravine. The team is almost more of a mystery now then they were on opening day. The Dodgers still have plenty of questions on the table as they forge ahead toward the second half of the season.

The standings and statistics paint a less than favorable picture. It’s win now or forever hold third place time for Los Angeles. We’ll learn how this team navigates through the peaks and valleys of a season as they hope to shake off a real gut puncher.

In the here and now, Jonathan Broxton’s rocky ninth inning, James Loney’s uncharacteristic mental lapse at first base, George Sherrill’s hanger to AL batting leader Robinson Cano, and some heated player conduct left the home crowd faithful stunned, perplex, and disappointed.

Unfortunately for the Dodgers and their followers, pro-Yankees chants drowned out any true blue words of encouragement, as New York closer Mariano Rivera shut the door on yet another one of his dominant outings. To be fair, many LA fans probably hustled to the parking lot before Broxton took the ball in the ninth.

Who could blame them? With the Dodgers spotting the usually reliable Broxton a 6-2 lead, beating traffic seemed like the right call over witnessing a ho-hum end to what appeared to be a one-sided LA victory. Although Broxton struggled on Saturday, investing in him is still a good bet.

As the flood gates opened in the top of the last frame, where the bottom of New York’s lineup clipped, and tipped, and fought off every pitch Broxton threw their way, the big closer just didn’t have it. No other explanation needed. He battled with his C-level stuff and the Yankees hitters didn’t give him an inch.

And James Loney didn’t give the pitcher a hand.

Loney’s miscue, where he fielded a hot grounder and stepped on first before throwing home, when the immediate play was to the plate, puzzled anyone who’s ever watched the man play defense. The momentary gaffe allowed speedster Curtis Granderson to cross home, tying the score at 6-6 in the process.

There’s not much to say after surrendering a four run loss at home. There’s even less to say after surrendering a go-ahead two-run blast just an inning later. The Dodgers couldn’t muster any magic in their last half.

Throw in Garrett Anderson and Russell Martin’s ejections for arguing balls and strikes with home plate umpire Chris Guccione and that’s a pretty tough night for any squad. They dropped the game and appeared none too pleased in doing so.

Lost in the commotion are all the things LA did right for eight and a half innings. They manufactured runs and fed off a stellar performance from young gun starter Clayton Kershaw. Sunday’s early positives add some salt to the wound when looking at the grand scheme of things.

The numbers don’t lie, which is a big problem for Dodgertown.

They’re 3-7 over the past 10 games, third in the division, three games behind the wild card leading Mets, and five games behind the streaking San Diego Padres in the NL West. Not a whole lot to brag about behind those stats.

There’s little time to reflect on the loss, as LA now flies to San Francisco for a tremendously important three game showdown with the Giants. The series winner will also hold solo second place in the division as they leave AT&T Park on Wednesday afternoon.

While there’s plenty of baseball left, an agitating collapse against a big time opponent, where the visiting team’s fans took over the stadium, hurts all the same.

The Dodgers can still make a strong run at the postseason if they right the ship by the All-Star break on July 12. Until then, though, nothing’s certain for this talented, yet undefined roster.

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Latest Yankees-Dodgers Clash, Centered Torre vs. A-Rod Feud

The reality of the Dodgers purchasing space on nearly 300 billboards around the Los Angeles basin before the beginning of the season advertising a renewed rivalry in baseball, one known as the East vs. West rivalry dating back to the purist era of baseball, was for relieving traditionally the most dramatic rivalry in America’s pastime.

A legion of old timers, such as the elderly folks, still can recall 11 World Series meetings involving the Los Angeles Dodgers and the New York Yankees, each with a combined 33 titles and endless postseason drama. Back then, of course, the series were masterful performances as Hollywood vs. Broadway compelled a glamorous and a seductive landscape in sports.

While the Dodgers and the Yankees meet in the newborn era of the famous clash from the old-school days, a rational supposition is that the Los Angeles billboards earlier in the season were mistakenly written incorrectly. The slogan pronounced “Rivalry Renewed,” but would have been easier to decipher if the signs had stated “Torre vs. A-Rod in a Heated Feud.”

It was known all along that this was the most appealing interleague meeting this season, a dream competition the world desired to see deeply in the fall classic last season. But it’s not charming because of the wonderful memories or everlasting drama—perhaps the most drama involves Dodgers manager Joe Torre and Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez.

With all the Dodgers drama, as the payroll has massively decreased due to a messy feud and divorce between owner Frank and Jamie McCourt, the obsolete trauma isn’t disappearing anytime soon. The inconvenience dents a renowned franchise with troubles centering the fraudulent and sleazy Manny Ramirez that has become a disruption within a franchise once respected for incredibly winning the World Series in 1988.

Lately, the talk of the town evokes further disruptions, at least it has this weekend when Rodriguez came along with the Yankees for a three-game series in Los Angeles. It’s impossible for the Dodgers to downplay and keep the truth hidden.

The Dodgers welcomed the Yankees for an emotional reunion at Dodgers Stadium, when Torre reunited and reminisced with his former players without shaking hands and exchanging modest words with Rodriguez, which inflamed a ruckus more enormous than McCourt’s long-suffering divorce.

As he tries protecting his unstable credibility after he paid a staggering $19 million in court fees, Torre tries to avoid reporters as he expects to hear answers about his broken bond with Rodriguez. For the first time, there’s a sense that an irreparable relationship between Torre and Rodriguez is fixed, that their issues and disputes are behind them, finally in position to show remorse and move on.

If so, it’s a remedy for what had transpired in the past, ever since Torre was offered an ultimatum by general manager Brian Cashman and Hank Steinbrenner, who is notoriously known for threatening managers and mismanaging employees’ status. Just so you know The Boss fired Billy Martin five times.

He is the most respected and beloved skipper who now sits in the Dodgers dugouts, summoning relievers and deciding the starting rotation. From New York to California, he migrated to the Hollywood stage when he was targeted by the Dodgers general manager Ned Coletti, who hurried and hired the brilliant Torre to fill the managerial vacancy in Los Angeles.

He quickly adapted to the sunny and clear skies of Los Angeles, soaking in his refreshing restart near the beaches, a scenery which he avoided headaches and stress. Having been pressured to reach certain standards and an agenda, he was the most polarizing baseball manager in New York and had to work under a dictating and stubborn-minded Steinbrenner family.

No one questions the Yankees agenda in attempting to win a World Series every year, but we were curious to know why exactly Torre was fired after 12 seasons, leading the Yanks to 12 postseason appearances and won six pennants and four World Series. Meanwhile, he and Rodriguez ended a pity feud by resolving the messy turmoil Sunday evening in Los Angeles.

If someone had admitted before the season that A-Rod and Torre wouldn’t reconcile, we wouldn’t had witnessed Rodriguez encounter Torre near the batting cage before Sunday’s game. When the Yankees took the field and were in the middle of pregame workouts, they hugged, talked briefly and shook hands.

He clearly was amiable during the conversation. He hung on to Rodriguez’s hand. And his former third baseman smiled. First time since the ugly separation, both realized how insane and babyish it was holding grudges and having ill-humored outlooks.

Seven home runs away from 600, he amended his problems with his former manger Torre, who’ll turn 70 three weeks from now, putting the spiteful book to rest, “The Yankee Years,” a detailed narrative that revealed the true colors of Rodriguez. A few years ago, he was arrogantly seen at parties and was irresponsible, barely performing at a consistent level.

Instead, he underachieved and faltered in the postseason by finishing hitless and useless, but earned an enormous paycheck from the highest market with the richest payroll. That prompted Torre to lash out in his book a year ago, when he boldly stated that A-Rod was identified as “A-Fraud” in the Yankees’ clubhouse and had an envious persona of the well-known, beloved face of the Yanks Derek Jeter. It wasn’t pretty after departing from the Yankees to start a livelihood at Chavez Ravine, but at least now it feels as if there are no harsh feelings.

“He came over and he was who he always is,” Torre said to reporters. “It was never uncomfortable with Alex. I just told him again, I said, ‘I hope you got my message about sort of getting that monkey off of your back.’

“He’s a good kid. He’s a good kid and, to me, I think too much is always made of this stuff. I think we know in our hearts what goes on.”

For the entire weekend, it was very eccentric when he exchanged hugs, handshakes and friendly words with Jeter, Jorge Posada and Mariano Rivera, future Hall of Famers who played under Torre during his 12-year tenure and were accustomed to his presence.

Every player with long tenures who are still wearing pinstripes misses Torre, but understands that baseball is a business as the Yankees normally make offseason moves to overhaul a rotation and batting order and minimize failures, erecting around big-name players by pampering them with a huge salary.

The good news is that Torre and A-Rod found a remedy for all their issues. But the bad news is that the Dodgers blew a four-run lead in the ninth as the Yankees surged for the shocking 8-6 win in a mind-blowing comeback.  

More importantly, Torre and A-Rod put the rift behind them.

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Uncle Joe Is Still Missed in New York

It was a bitter-sweet sight.

Last weekend was the first series that the Yankees faced former manager Joe Torre, after a bitter breakup in 2007.

Before the game, Torre and the players he coached in New York embraced.

It was like watching a former couple seeing each other again after breaking up for mutual reasons.

It feels like far more than three years since Torre switched coasts.

The image of him in a Dodger uniform is still so disheartening, and I know why.

I, as a Yankee fan, feel guilty for the way he was treated at the end of his tenure.

Torre saw the revival of this historic franchise and lead the Yankees to four championships.

Steinbrenner and company did not welcome him back with open arms, so he left.

Now, as I look in the opposing dugout and see his same, calm demeanor, it just reminds me of the greatness he helped bring back to New York. 

There’s also a tinge of jealousy for the team that has the honor of having such a classy manager.

So, here’s to you Joe.  You’re still missed.

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