Mariano Rivera is…impossible to dislike.
Read More...CLEVELAND—It is two hours before the scheduled start of Wednesday night’s Yankees-Indians game, and baseball’s all-time saves leader is deep inside the bowels of Progressive Field, holding a marching band’s bass drum.
Mariano Rivera wants to know how the drum’s owner, John Adams, hits it when he’s really mad.
“When the Indians are supposed to score, and they don’t score, how do you hit it?” Rivera asks. [...]
When Rivera decided to retire, he ...
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1. Joey B. has ignited his October #Natitude posted on July 19, 2012 at 08:37 AM # hit 0 | hit 0In the blink of an eye, we went from having one of the worst managers in the history of baseball to one of the best. Things like that almost never happen, especially to teams in this town.
Now now. They fired Manny Acta in 2009.
Actually though, do RTFA because Boz spends a lot of time breaking down just how ridiculously great a job Johnson has done getting production off the bench this season. It's not just a question of the guys he's chosen for those roles, it's the way he's used them and the inarguable results. This is one of the few things that managers actually have a direct effect upon, both long-term (in terms of roster composition) and on a day-to-day basis, and Davey's nailed it.
I find myself surprised every couple of years to find that Earl Weaver is still living. He seemed old when I was a kid in the 1970s, and he hasn't managed in 25 years. But there he is, 81 years old and still kicking.
Imagine if you could cycle Davey Johnson and Billy Martin--let them manage till they wore out their welcomes, then alternate.
The difference, it seems, is that Davey only seemed to wear out his welcome with management (it didn't help much his choice of employers). Billy wore his out with everyone.
Precisely. Let Davey show the players some love for a few years, then when they get soft, go to the whip.
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