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1. The Keith Law Blog Blah Blah (battlekow) Posted: September 13, 2007 at 05:07 PM (#2523191)The guys above him in the organizational chain (St. Peter and Bell) are bumbling fools. They repeatedly almost lost the stadium deal that should not have been as difficult as it was, and they do an absolutely terrible job of PR for the very top of the organization. I'm guessing that they saw trouble ahead (as anyone can pretty easily imagine with the dried up position player talent in the minors, the impending difficulty of having every productive team member within a couple of years of free agency, and an already resurgent division), and they panicked, blaming Ryan for making relatively small mistakes that won't handicap the team in the long run (other than wasting draft picks on juan pierre wannabes).
Still, I am stunned.
A huge part of being a good GM is having good scouts and minor league staff. All of that is still in place. It sounds like he mostly listened to his scouts when they said "try to trade for this guy" or "draft that guy". I have a hard time thinking Bill Smith is going to make dramatic changes to the organization as a whole. He might make a dramatic trade or something, but he's not going to fire the manager or scouts. If he steps in and listens to the same scouts, I don't expect a whole lot to change from a long term perspective. And they didn't lose him as a talent evaluator...he's apparently staying on in the scouting department.
I think TR's tired of being "the guy", and thinks that Tom Kelly had a good idea when he rode off in to the sunset to have some fun.
He would be perfect for that job. I think he needs to stay in a small market - his free agent track record doesn't look that great to me (correct me if I'm wrong Twins fans). But man, his player development and eye for scouting looks awesome. Make it happen Connelly.
I was obviously kidding above, but I think you're right. MacPhail was the GM when Ryan was hired in 1986. hmmmm...there's got to be some silver lining in this season for Orioles fans, right? Right?
I don't know if that's true or not, but if it is...
I would guess that very few low-to-mid payroll GMs have a good FA track record (e.g., Beane). Presumably, the reason is that they can't bid for the elite talents like Carlos Beltran and Manny Ramirez. Instead, they get guys like Esteban Loaiza.
The article states he is staying on the Twins payroll as a senior adviser.
Yeah, his track record isn't even that good.
The team experienced two shifts during his tenure. In the 2001 trade deadline, the team stopped selling Major League talent for prospects by sending Mark Redman to the Tigers for Todd Jones and Matt Lawton to the Mets for Rick Reed. Neither trade worked very well, but the team became buyers instead of sellers consistently. Not long after, Latroy Hawkins and Eddie Guardado left following the 2003 season, starting the inevitable bleeding that would mean the 3-8 fliers Ryan signs every offseason were pushed into duty as they had been in his first 3-4 years. During the Twins best years, their minor league system churned out enough talent to fill the entire major league roster. Once guys started leaving, the backups became more heavily used (Rincon, for instance), while the retreads became backups. Blame Ryan if you want, but it is hard for any organization to churn out enough talent to keep up with free agents leaving. Hawkings, Guardado, Jones, Christian Guzman, and Corey Koskie have walked. Eric Milton, JC Romero, Dustan Mohr, AJ Pierzynski, and Doug Mientkiewicz were traded due to payroll concerns (the last two also happened to be blocking Mauer and Morneau). They could have done a better job developing position players, but in fairness, they have been stretched pretty thin.
All told, three transactions stand out from Ryan's tenure: acquiring Johan Santana for nothing, releasing David Ortiz to make room for a rule 5 pick (David Manning) on the 40 man roster, and trading AJ for Liriano, Bonser, and Nathan. Two out of three ain't bad, and we'll take those four division crowns.
Good post. I'd say of all the free agents Ryan has let walk the only one that bit them was Koskie. He was well-liked, met the organization's fielding and "gamer" standards and provided some decent offense. But they just never found anyone to replace him. (Plus being Canadian is pretty much the same thing as being from MN.)
I'd only add that he can stand on his own two feet and not blame Pohlad when it comes to not signing big names. Old Carl has written the checks when asked: Puckett was the higest paid player of all at one point, he paid real money for his stars like Snatana, Radke, Hunter, et al, and big money was even available for average talents like Guzman and Milton. I just think when it comes down to paying for players he didn't develop inhouse Ryan was cheap. Top bad, as it proabably would have brought them a lot more success over the past few years.
All told, three transactions stand out from Ryan's tenure: acquiring Johan Santana for nothing, releasing David Ortiz to make room for a rule 5 pick (David Manning) on the 40 man roster, and trading AJ for Liriano, Bonser, and Nathan. Two out of three ain't bad, and we'll take those four division crowns.
Jose Morban, not David Manning, was the guy the Twins took in the Rule 5 just after deciding not to offer arbitration to Ortiz. Still, very good summary of his legacy.
During the press conference, Ryan basically came out and said that he had no patience left for dealing with agents, the media, etc. He loves baseball and scouting and developing players, but he didn't like the kind of person that other stuff was turning him into. So he's done. I buy that 100%. He'll never work for another team.
I'm shocked to see Ryan leave. He had a hell of a run and good for him that he gets to go out on his own terms.
It's easier to avoid criticism for an omission, but damn it was so obvious at the time.
I think he'll resurface before too long as someone's team president/CEO/whatever, a kind of Lucchino/Alderson role where you make a lot of the decisions but someone else has the GM title and takes a lot of the flak when something goes wrong. I don't know him, though, so that's just a guess.
It's nice that he stepped back early enough for the team to get rolling a little before their free agents hit the open market. It's not a lot of time, but depending on what the hangups were it could be plenty of time to work up a plan and hammer through the top priority contract. Like I mentioned somewhere else, Rob Antony is the VP of Operations and contracts and he's gone too, so the entire slate may have been wiped clean for a final charge at one or more of the Big Guys (or some quick trades).
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