pink slips....

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Mets fire manager Valentine



NEW YORK (AP) -- Manager Bobby Valentine was fired by the New York Mets on Tuesday after a last-place finish in the NL East.
The team put together a $102 million payroll last offseason, bringing in Roberto Alomar, Mo Vaughn, Roger Cedeno and others, but struggled all year.

=======


McRae fired by Devil Rays
By FRED GOODALL
AP Sports Writer
September 30, 2002


ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -- Hal McRae saw it coming.


He was fired as manager of the Tampa Bay Devil Rays on Monday, one day after the team finished a miserable 55-106 season.

It was the second straight season of 100 or more losses for the Devil Rays, and the worst record for the team since it began play in 1998.

McRae replaced Larry Rothschild on April 18, 2001, and managed the Devil Rays to a 58-90 record over the remainder of the season. McRae had been hired the previous November as bench coach.

``It's not a surprise. ... The only thing I regret is we didn't win more games,'' McRae said by telephone from his home in Bradenton, adding that it was no consolation that there were stretches when Tampa Bay was more competitive than his two-year record of 113-196 would suggest.

The Devil Rays lost 16 games this season after leading in the eighth or ninth innings, including 10 in which Tampa Bay came within two outs of victory. The Devil Rays had 11 walkoff losses and dropped 39 games in which they had tying or winning run at the plate in the last inning.

``We were competitive, but we lost. The bottom line is that you lost,'' McRae said.

``And you lost because you weren't good enough to win or you lost because you didn't know how to win. We were in games. We had leads late. But we lost those games, so it goes down as a loss. It doesn't go down as a competitive game or a game you had the lead late. It's not counted that way.''

McRae was the third manager fired in two days. The Chicago Cubs got rid of Bruce Kimm on Sunday and Detroit fired Luis Pujols earlier Monday.

The Devil Rays, who have finished last and have lost at least 90 games in all five of their seasons, tied Detroit for the worst record in the majors this year.

McRae accepted a position as an assistant to the general manager. His job as manager was to run through 2003 -- under his new post, his contract was extended through 2004.

``I'm not making him a scapegoat,'' GM Chuck LaMar said. ``I'm responsible for the personnel. I think he could've won more games with better talent.''

A rough-and-tumble player with Kansas City for most of his playing career, he managed the Royals in 1991-94. He was later the hitting instructor for Cincinnati and Philadelphia before joining the Devil Rays' organization.

From the start, many felt McRae was set up to fail in Tampa Bay because of the club's financial problems and a history of poor personnel decisions by LaMar.

The general manager trimmed the payroll to about $34 million last winter -- lowest in the major leagues -- and McRae was expected to compete with one of the youngest rosters in baseball in a division dominated by the high-spending New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox.

LaMar will begin immediately to compile a list of potential replacements, but said it may be three or four weeks before someone is hired. He probably will want to interview candidates from clubs participating in the playoffs.

McRae didn't lobby for his return, but had the support of his players, who insisted the manager wasn't responsible for the poor results.

``We just don't have a very good team. There's nothing he can do about it,'' outfielder Ben Grieve said last week.'' You could put any manager in the major leagues on our team and we would have lost 100 games.''

LaMar has been the team's general manager since the franchise's inception. While his moves over the past five seasons have made him the target for widespread criticism, he remains under contract for two more years.

He said the decision to replace McRae was made during a meeting with the manager earlier Monday. The fate of McRae's coaching staff will be determined by the new manager.

``On most nights when he took the field, he was outmanned. I'll go on record as saying this organization has never made excuses about payroll, about ownership moves or any of these types of things, especially Chuck LaMar,'' LaMar said.

``I'm responsible for the personnel on the field, and the personnel right now isn't good enough to win as many games as everybody in this organization would like. It's getting better. We're going to get the job done. But no excuses have ever been made by me or anybody else.''

=======

DETROIT (AP) -- Manager Luis Pujols was fired Monday by the Detroit Tigers after their worst season in six years.
Pujols, who replaced Phil Garner in April after an 0-6 start, led the Tigers to a 55-106 finish, tied for the worst record in the major leagues. His winning percentage of .355 is the lowest for a manager in club history.

The Tigers lost to the Blue Jays 1-0 Sunday, ending their worst season since they went 53-109 in 1996. Detroit had the worst record in the major leagues after the All-Star break (24-51).

Team president Dave Dombrowski orchestrated an early season shakeup in hopes of reviving a franchise that hasn't had a winning season since 1993. But Pujols failed to provide a spark on the field or in the clubhouse and couldn't stop the losing.

``I don't think anybody was surprised'' by the team's poor play, Dombrowski said. ``I'm not going to place the blame on anybody.''

Dombrowski hopes to have a new manager by the end of October. He mentioned only one candidate by name: Bruce Fields, who managed at Triple-A Toledo this season. Former Tigers star Alan Trammell is thought to be high on the team's list.

Trammell is the first-base coach for the San Diego Padres.

``To be honest with you, if they call, I will talk to them. And if that happens, then we'll have to wait and see,'' Trammell said Sunday. ``It's a situation where I've been out here for three years now with the Padres, I'm from here and I'm very happy here. But again, if anybody was to call -- not just the Tigers -- I think at this point in my career, I would sit down with somebody.''

Pujols, a Dominican, was the Tigers' first minority manager. He was the team's fourth manager since Sparky Anderson's 17-season tenure ended in 1995.

Pujols managed the Tigers' Double-A affiliate in Erie, Pa., last season, his first in the organization. He was a major league catcher with three teams from 1977-85.

When Garner was fired after six games, it tied the quickest firing of a manager at the start of a season since 1900. Baltimore fired Cal Ripken Sr. in 1988 after the Orioles lost six games en route to an 0-21 start.

``Luis did a very professional job with his staff members, worked extremely hard, and they walked into a very difficult situation,'' Dombrowski said.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Rangers fire Narron after another last-place finish
By STEPHEN HAWKINS
AP Sports Writer
October 1, 2002


ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) -- Jerry Narron was fired as manager of the Texas Rangers on Tuesday after the team's third straight last-place finish in the AL West.


Narron went 134-162 after taking over in May 2001, including a 72-90 mark this season. He replaced Johnny Oates after the team started 11-17 last year.

``This has been a very difficult decision because I like and respect Jerry Narron,'' Texas general manager John Hart said. ``But we have to make some tough decisions now. Our fans deserve better than the record and performance of the 2002 Texas Rangers.''

Narron is the fifth manager fired since Sunday, the last day of the regular season. The New York Mets fired Bobby Valentine on Tuesday, while the Cubs' Bruce Kimm, Tampa Bay's Hal McRae and Detroit's Luis Pujols also were dismissed.

Hart spent several hours Monday and Tuesday meeting with owner Tom Hicks and assistant general manager Grady Fuson about the future of the team.

Narron drove home to North Carolina after Sunday's season-ending game. He had one year left on a two-year deal signed two months after he replaced Oates.

Narron did not immediately return a telephone call.

``I am convinced that John and Grady have made a thorough and complete evaluation in reaching the decision to change managers,'' Hicks said.

Texas struggled all season, even with All-Star shortstop Alex Rodriguez hitting .300 and leading the majors with 57 homers and 142 RBIs, and an opening-day payroll of $105 million.

Texas lost 13 of its last 16 games, including a closing 1-9 road trip. The Rangers finished 31 games behind AL West champion Oakland.

Part of the problem was injuries. The Rangers had 17 players spend a team-record 1,429 days on the disabled list, including closer Jeff Zimmerman, two-time AL MVP Juan Gonzalez, 10-time All-Star catcher Ivan Rodriguez, and expected No. 1 starter Chan Ho Park.

Narron used 51 players, including a club-record 27 pitchers.

``This season has certainly been very frustrating and painful for all of us,'' Hart said. ``Injuries have obviously played a major factor, but there are a number of areas in which we need to change and improve.''

Possible replacements include bench coach Terry Francona, pitching coach Orel Hershiser, and Buddy Bell.

Narron came to Texas as a third-base coach in 1995, then became manager when Johnny Oates resigned after an 11-17 start in 2001.

He was promoted by then-general manager Doug Melvin, who was fired following the 2001 season. Melvin recently became the GM in Milwaukee.
 

IE

Administrator
Forum Admin
Forum Member
Mar 15, 1999
95,440
223
63
Milwaukee Brewers - Fired manager Jerry Royster.
 
Bet on MyBookie
Top