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Sunday, January 06, 2008

LoHud: Abraham: Cashman: My job has changed

“Oogie waits for just another day
Drags his bones
to see the Yankees play”

For the first time in public, Cashman admitted what has become increasingly evident: That his job has changed since the Steinbrenner sons took control of the team.

“The dynamics are changing with us. When I signed up with this current three-year deal, and this is the last year of it, it was with full authority to run the entire program. George had given me that. But things have changed in this third year now with the emergence of Hal and Hank Steinbrenner and that started this winter,” he said, “I’m learning as I go along, too. But it is different. But one thing is that I’ve been with this family, the Steinbrenner family, for well over 20 years. So I’m focused fully on doing everything I possibly can to assist them in their emergence now as decision makers.”

Cashman’s contract runs out in October. Asked whether he wanted to return, he didn’t answer directly.

“Because of all the work that gets involved with doing the job, it kind of prevents me from really looking ahead past this year,” he said. “I’m just doing everything I possibly can to assist the transition with the new manager, the new owners, with the involvement now with the Steinbrenner sons. And then the rest will take care of itself at another time.”

Repoz Posted: January 06, 2008 at 01:43 AM | 19 comment(s)
  Related News: GeneralNY Yankees

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   1. neknhaM yrraL Posted: January 06, 2008 at 03:07 AM (#2661551)
He gone.
   2. mlbfan303 Posted: January 06, 2008 at 04:28 AM (#2661575)
Cashman's probably a better GM than he gets credit for due to all the signings George has basically made and probably vetoed over him.
   3. jyjjy Posted: January 06, 2008 at 05:39 AM (#2661586)
He gone.

Exactly what I thought as soon as I read the headline. Not a good thing for the Yankees.
Over the next few seasons the Yankees are going to need to replace basically the whole team apart from A-Rod, Wang, Cano, Melky(if he isn't traded) and whichever young pitchers pan out(I don't see Jeter remaining useful for long go forward, especially if they keep him at SS). That's an ok core to build around if you do it right but without Cashman I can easily see it not turning out very well.
   4. SouthSideRyan(hates Casey McGehee) Posted: January 06, 2008 at 05:59 AM (#2661588)
Cashman's probably a better GM than he gets credit for due to all the signings George has basically made and probably vetoed over him.


Unless you assume George is incompetent when it comes to baseball, that should work both ways. That Stein was also basically making and vetoing both good and bad moves.
   5. Juke Posted: January 06, 2008 at 08:38 AM (#2661599)
I don't care who stays or goes anymore. The NYY need a huge change and it won't happen with this bunch. They don't know #### about pitching & haven't for a long time; they just had some damn good luck with the chemistry + talent mix in the mid 90s.

What I want will never happen either, as long as the haybilly used car salesman & his fat ass cronies run & ruin MLB. And that is, Mark Cuban owning the Yankees. So, good luck, Cash-In or Cash-Out. . ..
   6. jyjjy Posted: January 06, 2008 at 08:52 AM (#2661602)
The NYY need a huge change and it won't happen with this bunch. They don't know #### about pitching & haven't for a long time

I dunno, they tried but I think they had pretty bad luck. The traded for 2 top young pitchers in Weaver and Vasquez and got burned both times and I don't remember many people predicting that when the trades went down. The Clemens trade worked out although he never replicated the insane numbers he put up in Toronto before or Houston after. The Johnson and Brown trades were questionable because of their age/health but they both immediately tanked in NY on a level that was rather unexpected considering the high level of performance they both put up right before coming to NY.
Free agent-wise I guess the Moose signing worked out well enough. The Pavano signing was questionable but he was highly sought after by a ton of teams and I don't think anyone would've predicted he would be quite as useless as he has been.
   7. kevin Posted: January 06, 2008 at 10:59 AM (#2661618)
Cashman had as much authority in the Steinbrenner administration as Dan Quayle had in the Bush I administration.
   8. schuey Posted: January 06, 2008 at 11:05 AM (#2661620)
How much of this is posturing by Cashman to get an even bigger contract? With Torre gone, rightly or wrongly, there is more pressure on the Young Elephants to keep Cashman (i.e. pay him more). He could be gone but how many GMs would love to run a team that will spend $200 million and have an even bigger revenue-producing stadium (thank you, taxpayers) about to come online?
   9. BeanoCook Posted: January 06, 2008 at 01:51 PM (#2661712)
If I were Ned Coletti, I'd look over my shoulder.
   10. snapper Posted: January 06, 2008 at 01:59 PM (#2661717)
and have an even bigger revenue-producing stadium (thank you, taxpayers) about to come online?

Actually, the new Yankee Stadium has relatively little to do with public funding (about $225M out of $1B+ total cost, mostly for parking and railroad station) and A LOT to do with the revenue sharing rules. The Yanks get to deduct the stadium cost from their revenue sharing payments, so the rest of the league actually pays for like 40% of the stadium.
   11. Munsons Stash Posted: January 06, 2008 at 02:41 PM (#2661740)
How much of this is posturing by Cashman to get an even bigger contract?


Maybe, but the last time he and the owners went through this what he wanted was autonomy, not more money. I don't get the feeling that he'll let Hank buy him out of the autonomy he won the last time around, and he's probably not pleased to suddenly find his powers of decision running squarely through a(nother) loud-mouthed owner...
   12. ValueArb Posted: January 06, 2008 at 03:30 PM (#2661766)
Unless you assume George is incompetent when it comes to baseball, that should work both ways.


And the evidence George isn't, er wasn't, incompetent, is??

Actually, the new Yankee Stadium has relatively little to do with public funding (about $225M out of $1B+ total cost, mostly for parking and railroad station)


Only in a america is a $225M handout to a wealthy business owned by wealthy businessman "little to do" with public funding.
   13. kevin Posted: January 06, 2008 at 03:32 PM (#2661767)
What I don't get is, why do the Yankees keep him around at the salary they are paying him anyway?

Figureheads are a dime a dozen.
   14. ValueArb Posted: January 06, 2008 at 03:34 PM (#2661771)
And this is horrible news for the Yankees. Not because Cashman is omnipotent or even great, but any team run more by silver spoon kids than true baseball executives isn't going to be run well.
   15. Jeff K. Posted: January 06, 2008 at 03:38 PM (#2661776)
The Yanks get to deduct the stadium cost from their revenue sharing payments, so the rest of the league actually pays for like 40% of the stadium.

The rest of the league doesn't pay for it. The rest of the league doesn't get money because of it. That's a big difference.
   16. W0lverine Posted: January 06, 2008 at 04:29 PM (#2661818)
The Yanks get to deduct the stadium cost from their revenue sharing payments, so the rest of the league actually pays for like 40% of the stadium.

If you bought a house, deducted 10K of interest payments from your income tax, and used that 10K to purchase a car, would you say that the rest of the country just paid for your car?
   17. Dan Posted: January 06, 2008 at 04:51 PM (#2661825)
He could be gone but how many GMs would love to run a team that will spend $200 million and have an even bigger revenue-producing stadium (thank you, taxpayers) about to come online?


There are plenty of GMs that would love to run the Yankees (probably including Cashman himself even). The question is who wants to be the GM of the Yankees and get all of the blame for everything that goes wrong and little of the credit for what goes right when most of your moves are dictated by Hank and Hal.

I imagine Cashman will do OK financially wherever he ends up, with the Yankees or any other team. But much like Epstein took a stance when he left for a few months over a lack of autonomy, it's very easy to see Cashman not re-signing as Yankees GM in order to get a position where he has 100% control over personnel moves.
   18. pkb33 Posted: January 06, 2008 at 08:51 PM (#2661923)
The rest of the league doesn't pay for it. The rest of the league doesn't get money because of it. That's a big difference.

Actually, there is no difference at all currently. What you say is accurate in theory but applied to the actual facts of MLB revenue sharing it's not really the case. That's just because of the Yankees current situation, of course, but that is what it is, too....if you change the revenue sharing rules or look at a larger time window (during which the Yankees economics could change) that may no longer be true.

The only difference between the original statement and yours today, though, is that not every team receives revenue sharing dollars, and thus it's only those who do which are effectively paying for the new stadium in an economic sense. For those teams (and for the Yankees) a cost avoided is no different than a lost revenue source and in this case, those two items are the flip-sides of a coin for the teams involved.
   19. Cris E Posted: January 07, 2008 at 02:17 PM (#2662443)
I forgot about this dodge on the luxury tax. That throws a new light on some of the Santana talk doesn't it? Last week I read something saying $140/7 was going to cost upwards of $40-50m in tax. That could go way down regardless of who else is affected.
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