Master Index of Archived Threads
Loyalty and Deference
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 11:21 AM |
It's no secret that I hold the manager more responsible for the losing ways of this team than the general manager, and I think this is an actual winning unit playing losing baseball, but one thing that can be traced to both departments.* There's loyalty bordering on kowtowing, to players with some degree of status, going on and I'm terribly frustrated with it, because I think they're giving there players more loyalty than these guys are even demanding --- but which they come to expect if they keep getting it.
|
RealityChuck Aug 05 2010 11:31 AM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Interesting point. But, then, when Manual stops using a bullpen pitcher (other than Perez) because he's being ineffective, everyone complains that he's not utilizing that player correctly and he doesn't know how to manage a bullpen. Same thing if he goes with a pitcher that's being more effective than anyone else: he's overusing that player and he doesn't know how to manage a bullpen.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 11:34 AM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
I don't know about everyone. I certainly don't.
Who are we talking about here?
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 11:54 AM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Who starts in their place though? , I suppose if you are going down the swanie it's best to try and field your perceived strongest team that way as a manager people can't be saying that you went down with them on the bench. Not saying I like it but....
|
Benjamin Grimm Aug 05 2010 11:55 AM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
I think that happened recently with Francoeur. He had a good day and then was rewarded with another start. Anyway, one thing that Casey Stengel was free of was worrying a lot about contracts. He would have had a much easier time benching Jason Bay than Jerry would. And as for Pelfrey, I think he's burned up all the equity he earned with that 10-1 start. He's been brutal for what, six weeks now? He probably should have been pulled from the rotation a while back, before the Mets position in the standings had become so grim. Didn't Davey once do something like that with Sid Fernandez?
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 12:01 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Rewarding with another start I'm all for. Francouer has been starting regularly since Bay went down and had been until Beltran arrived. His good start was after 18 poor ones in the prior 20. That's not rewarding a guy for performance. That's staying loyal despite poor performance.
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 05 2010 12:12 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I've been on this for years. The Mets ever since the Piazza Era have tried to sell themselves as a superstar-driven team, and routinely make compromises, cut corners and endure negative side-effects in service of crafting a brand image around their players. It's a complete loser strategy that might succeed in selling season tickets but hasn't gotten them nearly enough success on the field.
|
Ceetar Aug 05 2010 12:18 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
While this may be part of the problem, I'm not sure it's all or even most of the problem. Take Frenchy. Sure, give him another start if he has a big game, but in context. If he gets a big game winning hit off a tough lefty, after going 0-2 against the Righty starter, does that justify a start? or maybe first shot at pinch hitting when a lefty is in instead? Manuel has given Bay a couple of days off this year. More than I expected out of him really. But then, sometimes you need to get a guy going. Take Castillo. (leaving aside his effectiveness or what you think of him or his paycheck for the moment) He was rushed back from the DL (4 games at St. Lucie) and shoved back in the lineup. Arguably he wasn't exactly going to have his timing down, and maybe a week long struggle doesn't neccesitate a day off, but actually keep playing to get into the speed of things. (They did the same thing with Castillo in 2008, only flipped. he filled out the 20 days of rehab play, but had a family emergency at the end of it , ended up sitting for like a week before being activated, and noticably struggled) Beltran sat for 4 days without games before being activated. These are things that concern me. It's a hard balance, loyalty, and I do agree for the most part the Mets have had too much of it. But I don't think it's a huge problem either. bullpen issues aer different. i'm not sure there is ever a correct way to use guys, although it does seem likely that he burnt out Nieve, but he's burning out Feliciano and it doens't seem to make him worse. Everyone's different. Every pitcher is different. (why the 100 pitch 'rule' is silly) It's a tough job too, balancing pushing guys versus helping them relax. The team seems to be pressing, hard, at times. Other times maybe they look too relaxed. When is it too much "staring over the shoulder" by standing on the top step for Pelfrey or threatening Maine and Perez (in April) that every start will be the last and when are you being too lax and not helping guys to push and grow?
|
Ashie62 Aug 05 2010 12:30 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
The top jockeys are the ones with the best horses.
|
TransMonk Aug 05 2010 12:38 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I perceive the general rule in today's game to be: the guy who's making the most money will start on the typical day as long as he's healthy. I'm genuinely shocked that the Mets had the balls to pull Perez from the rotation this season...and I fully believe it was only from fans clamoring for it. If the Mets had been playing under .500 ball since May, I think Perez would still be starting.
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 12:42 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
As it happens I caught some of Ken Burns Baseball on Long Island's Channel 21 last night and a good deal of it was about Stengel and his platoon system, and how star names mattered little to him.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 12:43 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
The thing is that I think they are indulging these "stars" (many lesser players as well) even beyound their demands. Worth noting: Torii Hunter just moved to right field --- in the middle of a season, with no soap opera --- and the earth didn't crack open. If Daniel Murphy can get out of bed as an Eastern League firstbaseman and go to bed that evening as a starting big league outfielder, then Carlos Beltran can move from center with two days of prep time. And every other player on that bench can take that lesson, if Beltran puts up with a llitte sacrifice in the name of victory, then I will to. Asked about their manager, most all players will answer, "I like him --- he gives us the best chance to win." I'm not shocked that the Mets pulled Perez, but it should have taken less struggle and less hatred to get to that point.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 12:46 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
I don't believe this. And I know that the best horse in the world would lose embarassingly if I rode him or her in the Kentucky Derby.
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 12:47 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
||
red pants and all?
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 12:48 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
He platooned Johnny Mize. He turned Yogi into a part-time outfielder. He routinely had as many as four "regular" middle infielders. I haven't fit in those pants in years.
|
Vic Sage Aug 05 2010 12:53 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
top jockeys EARN the right to ride the best horses after they've demonstrated an ability to get more out of mediocre horses than their competitors.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 12:56 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
A variation on this from Casey perhaps: "The secret of managing is to keep the guys who hate you away from the guys who are undecided."
|
batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 12:58 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 05 2010 01:00 PM |
But like others have already noted, Stengel was also a very powerful guy. At least until the day that his services were no longer required. Today's players are considerably cloutier. We sort of discussed this in the thread on relief pitcher usage when we considered whether today's "closer" role is as much a function of the influence players and their agents have, or whether management is mostly responsible......
|
Ceetar Aug 05 2010 01:00 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
Couldn't you argue that the Murphy thing was a bit silly, and that maybe it shouldn't happen. I'm up in the air on the Beltran thing, and I certainly don't think it's even a contributing reason we're losing games and I'm not sure I'd mess with it just yet. On this note, Bernazard and the Mets had a "fast track" program where they asessessd things like mental toughness and guys like Murphy who were part of it got special treatment.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 01:05 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
I'm not going to argue for or against the wisdom of calling up Murphy (and Evans) to play left, though it certainly worked. What I'm arguing for is that the Mets should be willing to demand as much flexibility (far less, actually) from a veteran centerfielder as from a AA infieilder.
You're really dancing around the subject I'm trying to bring up. And Beltran's performance in the field has certainly contributed to the Mets losing. And their deference to him has as well.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 01:09 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
I certainly acknowledge the leverage that they players have that they didn't before, but they have no commitment to Francoeur (even emotionally) beyond this year. A lot may be about clout, but is this? And again, contract clout only enters into it when the players have the moxy to play that card. I think the Mets have pre-emptively deferred to players who haven't played that card, which only gives a false sense of entitlement to all players no matter which cards they hold.
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 01:14 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
But he wasn't all powerful when he got the yankee job , he had a below par managerial record before that, at least that's how it was portrayed in Baseball.
|
LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 05 2010 01:22 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I'm surprised nobody's brought up Piazza-to-first in all this. It seems to me archetypal (if not original) among these sorts of situations (by which I mean star-moving-to-unfamiliar-position-for-good-of-team) with the modern-day Mets. Most everyone in the manager's (or GM's) chair during the last decade or so has seemed unable to have that conversation effectively or at all until the media gets in front of the issue.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 01:25 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I certainly meant to imply it. I defintitely think that was (1) a case where the Mets were indulging beyond what he was asking for, and (2) such a soap opera that the move was disportionately minor compared to the tears and ink spilled over it.
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 05 2010 01:26 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Until Bay got hurt, anyway, I thought the Mets had overcome whatever loyalty they felt to Francoeur, especially considering how they hyped him earlier this year.
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 01:34 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
IIRC Piazza seemed rather embarrassed by the whole thing and the mess was mostly Howe's . I really don't feel like Beltran has the history behind him to make a fuss about moving , too many injuries. I bet this comes up in September if the Mets are buried and drags through the spring.
|
batmagadanleadoff Aug 05 2010 01:35 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
I'm not sure that I understand your post. I'm confused because Piazza played 1B under Howe in 2004, and went back to catching exclusively in 2005, when Randolph took over. What am I missing?
|
LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 05 2010 01:46 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
-- So you did, JCL. Mea culpa.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 01:50 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
Yes!
|
LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 05 2010 01:58 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
You did read the first two names I plugged in there, right? And the second two, as well? (Both of whom are getting hammered every second or third start-- and not in the fun, beer-hat-wearing-way-- at Buffalo.)
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 02:04 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I just think it's only a somewhat related issue. He's certainly pitched poorly enough that it's not crazy that somebody who's pulling it off two games in three gets a looksee, or somebody who's been effective in the pen. So those guys are certainly candidates. Misch first, I think. Ramon Ortiz is on the list too.
|
Benjamin Grimm Aug 05 2010 02:05 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
What about Pat Misch?
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 02:05 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Would it be seen as an admission that the season is lost if you started skipping Pelfrey if if you sent him down?
|
Ashie62 Aug 05 2010 02:06 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
||
Are you a top jockey?
|
Ashie62 Aug 05 2010 02:07 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
Sure
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 02:08 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Grimm, all that is mostly sensible, but about having the guts and self-confidence to swap guys out in season.... .
|
Benjamin Grimm Aug 05 2010 02:09 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I think it would be an admission that Pelfrey isn't getting it done, and that they want to send their best pitchers out there in an attempt to stay in the race.
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 05 2010 02:09 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
They will have an interesting conundrum filling RF/CF next season. I'd trade Beltran's ass immediately if I could and make Pagan my CF, but that would really dare the Mets to try and sign Matt Kemp or something. Still gonna be a question of whether Fernando's ready.
|
LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 05 2010 02:11 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference Edited 2 time(s), most recently on Aug 05 2010 02:21 PM |
|||
I'm pretty sure Ortiz got released on Sunday or Monday (by mutual agreement). But, yeah, like Omar and the gang, I completely forgot about the Misch. Send me the Misch. Give me a rotation of four lefties and a knuckler! MAKE IT SO!
Okay, see, either I misunderstood your first point, or you're flipping it around completely now. You WERE saying something like the best horses make the best jockeys, yes? Or do you mean it the other way? Or do you mean that horses are great teachers (apart from not speaking English)? Either way, there's some truth to it-- I think? Like I said, I'm not quite sure what you're saying-- but it's REALLY reductive.
|
metirish Aug 05 2010 02:13 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
Agree, I fear that the Mets would think that it shows the fans that the jig is up and that's why I have little faith they would do that, send him down at least.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 02:15 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|||
No, that's my point. If I had the best horses, I still wouldn't be a top jockey, which weakens your position that the top jockeys are the ones with the best horses.
|
Benjamin Grimm Aug 05 2010 02:22 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
I like how you said "him or her" to avoid insulting any female horses who might be reading this thread.
|
LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr Aug 05 2010 02:24 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Yeah. You don't see that kind of courtesy to horses out of most horses.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 02:27 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Bad choice there by the Mets, who could still pick him up again, I guess.
|
Ashie62 Aug 05 2010 09:26 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
||||
How would you even know, you are not a jockey. At least that I am aware. Neither Jockeys nor managers win with nags.
|
Edgy DC Aug 05 2010 09:36 PM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Because I'm scarcely 5'9", 200 pounds and my wife rides circles around me no matter who has the better mount.
|
John Cougar Lunchbucket Aug 06 2010 06:03 AM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
|
Ortiz left because he had some agreement about a promotion by a set date, I'm sure the Mets didn't intentionally shoot themselves in the foot on this, there was prolly a reason they felt he wasn't ready or whatever to risk whatever changes they'd need to accommodate that request.
|
Ashie62 Aug 06 2010 08:36 AM Re: Loyalty and Deference |
Hoping the Mets make the Phillies pee their Red Jockeys
|