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Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17
Aug 16 2010 01:48 PM

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/baseb ... eeded.html

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Who's in charge here?

The obvious answer seems to be Jeff Wilpon, at least partly because his father, Fred, clearly wants nothing to do anymore with running the club that he owns.
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OK then, if that is really true, and Fred wants Jeffy to take over the reigns, then Fred should officially step aside now.

The way the "Office of the Chairman" is set up right now is as follows (Anyone who has a yearbook can verify this):

Fred is CEO and Chairman of the Board
Saul Katz is President
Jeffy is COO

Perhaps someone with more knowledge of high-end corporate structures can further enlighten us as to what the differences amongst these three roles are, but I basically understand that the CEO/Chairman role is more "hands off"/big picture as opposed to COO (what the difference between "CEO" and "President" is I have no idea).

Back in the old, successful, days, Nelson Doubleday was CEO/Chairman, Fred was President and Frank Cashen was GM/COO(again, look at old yearbooks to see for yourself).

So, what it seems to me (like we don't already know this) is that Jeffy, in his current capacity, is the wrench in the machine. Since, right now, it is a pipe dream that the Wilpons sell the team, I think that the more prudent (and very achievable) thing to do would be for Fred to resign and give Jeff the CEO/Chairman role. Basically, kick the kid upstairs where he cannot gets in the middle of things quite as much. Then, whoever is GM (Ricco or whoever else) also gets the COO role.

Maybe it works, maybe it doesn't. But at least try to set this thing up the in the way that worked before, for the love of God!!

Frayed Knot
Aug 16 2010 02:00 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 16 2010 02:19 PM

1) The part about Fred "clearly" not having any interest in the team he owns is quite a statement for Harper to throw out there and then not explain other than connecting it to some stupid throw-away line about Minaya last week that was designed to do nothing more than change the subject.

2) Don't get too hung up on specific titles as if the duties associated with each are exactly the same in different companies or in different eras

3) the GM as COO (or whatever label you want to hand him) is a remnant of the past at this point. As Gary Cohen explained during the NYM HoF day a few weeks back, Cashen was in large part responsible for hiring him (Cohen) whereas today's GMs would have neither the power nor interest in deciding who the radio guy was today. It's much more an on-field only personnel job these days.

Benjamin Grimm
Aug 16 2010 02:09 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Yeah, the GM is no longer a "general" manager.

The title should probably be Manager of Baseball Operations, or something like that.

Edgy DC
Aug 16 2010 02:13 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

The chair manages the board duties. Their primary job, I think, is to appoint the president and review his or her work.

Ashie62
Aug 16 2010 02:31 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Omar serves at the pleasure of the COO who serves the President who is reviewed by the CEO. In a public company all are accountable to the Board of Directors voted upon by the shareholders.

In a private entity this structure can be less "formal." At any rate Fred Wilpon is certainly involved.

Mex17
Aug 16 2010 04:31 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 16 2010 07:16 PM

Ashie62 wrote:
At any rate Fred Wilpon is certainly involved.


OK, but for how much longer does he want to be? Regardless of Harper not backing up his statement, the man is getting up there in years. We all know that he wants Jeff as the heir apparent, but it seems as if this transitional stage where the elder has not yet stepped back officially has caused a bottleneck in the organization. I think there is, at minimum, one too many chefs in the kitchen.

Frayed Knot
Aug 16 2010 04:35 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

If Fred already has stepped back and Jeff is doing more (and I think that's probably true although not quite the same as Harper "disinterested" line) then I don't see where it matters if titles have changed place or not.
And if Fred still is running things just not as publicly as before then it really doesn't matter that titles haven't changed place.

Zvon
Aug 16 2010 06:22 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Oh, what I would give to see what how things would have gone if Doubleday bought out Wilpon instead of the other way around.

Frayed Knot
Aug 16 2010 06:42 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I fail to understand the Met fan (mostly belated) love for Nelson Doubleday. He was (IMO) the typical rich guy to whom the team was an expensive toy and who CLEARLY became disinterested in owning the team after a while.
Not that any of that makes him a bad guy necessarily (although at times was both a drunk and a bigot according to various sources) just hardly my idea of the ideal owner.

Zvon
Aug 16 2010 06:44 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Frayed Knot wrote:
I fail to understand the Met fan (mostly belated) love for Nelson Doubleday. He was (IMO) the typical rich guy to whom the team was an expensive toy and who CLEARLY became disinterested in owning the team after a while.
Not that any of that makes him a bad guy necessarily (although at times was both a drunk and a bigot according to various sources) just hardly my idea of the ideal owner.


I know next to nothing about him.
I only know he's not Fred Wilpon.

Mex17
Aug 16 2010 07:06 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Frayed Knot wrote:
I fail to understand the Met fan (mostly belated) love for Nelson Doubleday. He was (IMO) the typical rich guy to whom the team was an expensive toy and who CLEARLY became disinterested in owning the team after a while.
Not that any of that makes him a bad guy necessarily (although at times was both a drunk and a bigot according to various sources) just hardly my idea of the ideal owner.


He stayed out of the way and let Cashen build a champion.

Frayed Knot
Aug 16 2010 07:39 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Which says more, in my mind, about the presence of Cashen than it does about the presence of Doubleday.

MFS62
Aug 16 2010 09:58 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Bigot?
In what way?
Do you have any sources you can provide?

Later

Frayed Knot
Aug 16 2010 10:01 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Nelson got caught mumbling some anti-Jewish remarks at one point (or maybe more than one) although I forget the specific details.

Mex17
Aug 17 2010 03:57 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

MFS62 wrote:
Bigot?
In what way?
Do you have any sources you can provide?

Later


Pick up the book "Lords of the Realm".

Mex17
Aug 17 2010 04:01 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Frayed Knot wrote:
Which says more, in my mind, about the presence of Cashen than it does about the presence of Doubleday.


And quite a bit more about the enhanced presence of Wilpon once he bought (swindled?) an additional 49% of the team from Doubleday after 1986 and injected himself moreso into the operation.

G-Fafif
Aug 17 2010 04:39 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Nelson got caught mumbling some anti-Jewish remarks at one point (or maybe more than one) although I forget the specific details.


New York Observer story from 2000 recounted the episode here.

Then, in the spring of 1994, a book about the ouster of baseball commissioner Fay Vincent by a group of owners led by Bud Selig and Jerry Reinsdorf quoted Mr. Doubleday, a Vincent ally, telling league presidents Bobby Brown and Bill White: "It looks like the Jewboys finally got you." A former employee told Newsday that Mr. Doubleday had said similar things in his presence, but only "when he was drinking." Mr. Wilpon, who is Jewish, stood up for Mr. Doubleday, saying: "It's not like Nelson to talk that way."

After that, one person familiar with the team said, Mr. Doubleday disappeared from the scene and Mr. Wilpon took charge, with a more hands-on approach. He has installed loyal subordinates who have frequently come into conflict with executives loyal to Mr. Doubleday.

Mex17
Aug 17 2010 05:45 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Nelson got caught mumbling some anti-Jewish remarks at one point (or maybe more than one) although I forget the specific details.


New York Observer story from 2000 recounted the episode here.

Then, in the spring of 1994, a book about the ouster of baseball commissioner Fay Vincent by a group of owners led by Bud Selig and Jerry Reinsdorf quoted Mr. Doubleday, a Vincent ally, telling league presidents Bobby Brown and Bill White: "It looks like the Jewboys finally got you." A former employee told Newsday that Mr. Doubleday had said similar things in his presence, but only "when he was drinking." Mr. Wilpon, who is Jewish, stood up for Mr. Doubleday, saying: "It's not like Nelson to talk that way."

After that, one person familiar with the team said, Mr. Doubleday disappeared from the scene and Mr. Wilpon took charge, with a more hands-on approach. He has installed loyal subordinates who have frequently come into conflict with executives loyal to Mr. Doubleday.

Frayed Knot
Aug 17 2010 06:49 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
Frayed Knot wrote:
Which says more, in my mind, about the presence of Cashen than it does about the presence of Doubleday.


And quite a bit more about the enhanced presence of Wilpon once he bought (swindled?) an additional 49% of the team from Doubleday after 1986 and injected himself moreso into the operation.


Swindled?
C'mon now. Do you want to actually have a discussion about this or are you just going to stick the black hat on Wilpon in any instance whether it fits or not?

Edgy DC
Aug 17 2010 07:34 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Really, the baseless insinutation of "swindled" is about as anti-Semitic as anything reportedly mumbled by Nelson Doubleday.

Doubleday and Wilpon bought the team together from Doubleday, Inc.

If you think you don't like the Wilpons, imagine the Mets as a leveragable asset under a corporate owner treading water in a dying industry.

Mex17
Aug 17 2010 08:27 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edgy DC wrote:
Really, the baseless insinutation of "swindled" is about as anti-Semitic as anything reportedly mumbled by Nelson Doubleday.

Doubleday and Wilpon bought the team together from Doubleday, Inc.

If you think you don't like the Wilpons, imagine the Mets as a leveragable asset under a corporate owner treading water in a dying industry.


Nonsense. At no time did I make any reference to Wilpon's heritage or faith.

The fact is that Doubleday was attempting to sell his publishing company but wanted to retain the Mets (who were technically owned by Doubleday Publishing), so he needed to conduct a paper transaction from the company to himself personally. At NO TIME did he EVER intend to offer Wilpon 50% of the team. However, he must have had bad lawyers because Wilpon found a loophole that allowed him to buy half of it against the will of Doubleday.

Who is really the anti-Semite, the guy who is talking about a topic unrelated to ethnicity that just so happens to to touch upon a stereotype or the guy who pounces upon that coincidence and cry anti-Semitism?

Edgy DC
Aug 17 2010 08:36 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I didn't cry anything.

The accusation of swindling is baseless.

Mex17
Aug 17 2010 09:22 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edgy DC wrote:
I didn't cry anything.

The accusation of swindling is baseless.


You did and it's not.

Edgy DC
Aug 17 2010 09:51 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Listen, you'll know when I cry.

Wilpon made a purchase according to his contractual rights. It was a purchase that doesn't fit any definition of swindle.

LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Aug 17 2010 10:13 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edgy DC wrote:
I didn't cry anything.


Kinda, yeah, you did.

"Really, the baseless insinutation of "swindled" is about as anti-Semitic as anything reportedly mumbled by Nelson Doubleday."

Mex17 wrote:
Edgy wrote:
The accusation of swindling is baseless.


You did and it's not.


Unless you've got something tangible that's somehow escaped everyone else's notice for twenty years... it kind of is.

You're BOTH pretty. Now kiss and make up.

Edgy DC
Aug 17 2010 10:22 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I'M PRETTIER!

You're right. It isn't as anti-Semitic as Doubleday's mumblings. I think it's a wreckless smear. But making my logical leap to demonstrate how wreckless it is certainly wreckless and unfair as well. I apologize and withdraw.

LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Aug 17 2010 10:25 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I do remember reading something that alluded to the Doubleday, Inc.-to-Doubleday/Wilpon transaction as being something of a tactless Wilpon power grab. I don't remember what the material was, though ("Worst Team Money Could Buy?")... and, as I recall, it was all intimation, anyway.

Frayed Knot
Aug 17 2010 10:45 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

The deal was that Wilpon, who was a minority owner (about 10% I think) when Doubleday first purchased the team, had a clause in his contract (or whatever you call an ownership agreement) that he could get the right of first refusal to become an equal partner in the team if/when the team was sold.
So when it was sold from Doubleday the company to Doubleday the person Fred exercised that right and, as a result, increased his ownership (as in paid enough of the re-sale price) to a full 50%. That Doubleday was unaware of that clause, or that he didn't want to share, or that he decided he didn't like having a Jew partner, or that he just didn't like Wilpon for whatever reason is HIS problem not Fred's, and it certainly doesn't make it a "swindle".

Frayed Knot
Aug 17 2010 11:14 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
MFS62 wrote:
Bigot?
In what way?
Do you have any sources you can provide?

Later


Pick up the book "Lords of the Realm".



btw, If you read 'Lords of the Realm' you may remember the passage about how Doubleday locked himself into a 20-year deal with Cablevision despite the advice from MLB HQ that it would be much better to go with shorter deals that could be re-upped sooner at higher rates. "Go fuck yourselves" I think was Nelson's reply to that advice.

The point being that it turned out to be a not very smart business decision and one that almost certainly held back the team financially while the Yanx were able to sign their landmark deal with MSG in 1989 at a huge increase (while they were definitively NOT the hotter NY property) and then go on to start YES when that deal was over all while the Mets were playing with the same early '80s contract that eventually outlasted the owner who insisted on it. By the time it was finally coming to an end it was so past its sell-by date that Wilpon felt it better to pay a big fee and buy themselves out of the last year - possibly costing a player or two - just in order to get SNY started rather than living with the outdated deal one more season.

dgwphotography
Aug 17 2010 11:19 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Wasn't Fred the major player in buying the team from the DeRoulet's? IIRC, Fred didn't have the needed capital, and brought the proposal to Nelson, and had to convince him to buy in.

Zvon
Aug 17 2010 02:41 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I've been reading this and all the links and I must say I was very ignorant of the situation surrounding the Wilpon/Doubleday partnership.
I had read snippets here and there over the years but never really looked at the full picture.
I remember reading once that Doubleday was more of a "baseball guy" than Wilpon.
I don't see any evidence of that here.
From what I'm reading Doubleday may not have made things any better. Or any worse.
I can't say at this point.

One thing is clear is that we would not now have a stadium that pays tribute to Ebbets Field if he had his way.
I found this interesting. And that bad TV deal makes me think he thought the team had more of a Phillies kind of
market base as opposed to comparing the team to the Yankees model. That observation could be off base but interesting to me.

I wanna learn more about all of this.
Please continue this conversation. (
dgwphotography wrote:
Wasn't Fred the major player in buying the team from the DeRoulet's? IIRC, Fred didn't have the needed capital, and brought the proposal to Nelson, and had to convince him to buy in.


From a linked article here:
When the team went on the market in 1980, Mr. Wilpon was a successful real estate developer, but he hardly had the kind of wealth necessary to buy a team. He approached his friend John Pickett, then the owner of the New York Islanders, about mounting a bid. Mr. Pickett declined, but he did match him with another member of the Long Island aristocracy: Mr. Doubleday.

In the beginning, Doubleday Publishing owned 95 percent of the team. Mr. Doubleday gained a reputation as a hands-off owner who let general manager Frank Cashen make all the baseball decisions. The strategy paid off in 1986, when a Mets team filled with young players cultivated by Mr. Cashen won the World Series. But around the same time, Mr. Wilpon was outmaneuvering Mr. Doubleday, parlaying his 5 percent stake into half-ownership. At the time, Mr. Doubleday was selling the publishing company that owned the Mets to the German firm Bertelsmann A.G. But Mr. Wilpon had a right of first refusal in the event of any sale of the team, and his lawyers made it clear he was ready to exercise it. In a settlement, the two men agreed to become equal partners, paying Bertelsmann $81 million for the team. It has been said that Mr. Doubleday never forgave Mr. Wilpon.

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 05:12 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

What Zvon posted (and Frayed Knot paraphrased) is what happened. . whatever word or term you want to use to describe it is fine by me. But the basic truth of it is that it is not what Doubleday intended to have take place. The greater, and more important, truth is that the result of it has had a severe negative impact on the team's ability to succeed.

Doubleday made things better via means of passive noninterference. Wilpon then attempted to re-invent a wheel that had already produced a World Champion.

Which brings me back to my original point. Despite everything, I am still holding out hope that they can learn from their mistakes. Methinks that there is a jumble at the top right now. If one of the two Wilpons were to excuse himself from the stage voluntarily, and if authority was then properly shifted down the chain a bit (for real this time), then perhaps we can get back on the right track. By every account, in spite of the rather ruthless business tactic of 24 years ago, these are good men with noble intentions. But another "Apology Day" media blitz one day after the season ends ain't gonna cut the mustard this time. Fundamental change is needed.

These could have been proofread a little better for grammar mistakes here and there (sorry, Healy, but it's true), but I don't think that the content was pulled out of the sky just for grins and giggles.

http://www.baseballdigest.com/2009/07/0 ... il-part-i/
http://www.baseballdigest.com/2009/07/0 ... il-part-i/
http://www.baseballdigest.com/2009/10/0 ... il-part-3/

Zvon
Aug 18 2010 05:41 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I think an apt way to put it is that Wilpon elbowed his way in, and possibly elbowed Doubleday out.

I need to read more about the 2003 bidness.

Ashie62
Aug 18 2010 05:47 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Zvon wrote:
I think an apt way to put it is that Wilpon elbowed his way in, and possibly elbowed Doubleday out.

I need to read more about the 2003 bidness.


Buckethead for owner!

Frayed Knot
Aug 18 2010 05:54 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
What Zvon posted (and Frayed Knot paraphrased) is what happened. . whatever word or term you want to use to describe it is fine by me. But the basic truth of it is that it is not what Doubleday intended to have take place.


I never claimed it was what Doubleday had in mind, but that hardly makes it a "swindle" or even something remotely underhanded. Rights of first refusal aren't uncommon business practices and that Nelson was blind-sided by it is his fault not Fred's.



The greater, and more important, truth is that the result of it has had a severe negative impact on the team's ability to succeed.
Doubleday made things better via means of passive noninterference. Wilpon then attempted to re-invent a wheel that had already produced a World Champion.


That's a whole lotta speculation because it all pre-supposes that the winning was destined to continue if only laid-back Nelson had stayed in charge and meddling Fred never bought a bigger share. But no team wins forever and nothing was going to keep Hernandez & Carter from getting old (or Cashen for that matter), or Gooden & Straw on the straight & narrow, or guarantee that the next generation is going to be as good as the last one. And, make no mistake, if/when the team started going downhill there'd be screams for the owner to 'Don't Just Stand There - Do Something' . IOW, a more activist ownership would be seen as the solution in that case and not the problem.



Which brings me back to my original point. Despite everything, I am still holding out hope that they can learn from their mistakes. Methinks that there is a jumble at the top right now. If one of the two Wilpons were to excuse himself from the stage voluntarily, and if authority was then properly shifted down the chain a bit (for real this time), then perhaps we can get back on the right track. By every account, in spite of the rather ruthless business tactic of 24 years ago, these are good men with noble intentions. But another "Apology Day" media blitz one day after the season ends ain't gonna cut the mustard this time. Fundamental change is needed.


No one - least of all me - is trying to claim that the Wilpons are running a glitch-free empire here or that their interference (some might call it simply running the team they own) is always for the best. My only point earlier is that I just don't think having Fred maintain titular control even as Jeff becomes more the public face as opposed to bestowing the crown on Jeff's head while Fred does little more than sit in the background whispering things like 'remember, whoever comes to you about the Barzini meeting is the traitor" in his ear amounts to a hill of beans in this crazy world. [mixed classic movie metaphor alert]. Real change isn't going to come merely by shuffling title acronyms around.

Zvon
Aug 18 2010 05:58 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
What Zvon posted (and Frayed Knot paraphrased) is what happened. . whatever word or term you want to use to describe it is fine by me. But the basic truth of it is that it is not what Doubleday intended to have take place. The greater, and more important, truth is that the result of it has had a severe negative impact on the team's ability to succeed.

Doubleday made things better via means of passive noninterference. Wilpon then attempted to re-invent a wheel that had already produced a World Champion.

Which brings me back to my original point. Despite everything, I am still holding out hope that they can learn from their mistakes. Methinks that there is a jumble at the top right now. If one of the two Wilpons were to excuse himself from the stage voluntarily, and if authority was then properly shifted down the chain a bit (for real this time), then perhaps we can get back on the right track. By every account, in spite of the rather ruthless business tactic of 24 years ago, these are good men with noble intentions. But another "Apology Day" media blitz one day after the season ends ain't gonna cut the mustard this time. Fundamental change is needed.

These could have been proofread a little better for grammar mistakes here and there (sorry, Healy, but it's true), but I don't think that the content was pulled out of the sky just for grins and giggles.

http://www.baseballdigest.com/2009/07/0 ... il-part-i/
http://www.baseballdigest.com/2009/07/0 ... il-part-i/
http://www.baseballdigest.com/2009/10/0 ... il-part-3/


ty for these articles Mex.
Can you possibly fix that so part two is available?
There are two Pt. 1s and a 3.

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 06:16 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Part II:
http://www.gothambaseball.com/2009/09/t ... il-part-2/

Zvon
Aug 18 2010 06:23 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Part II:
http://www.gothambaseball.com/2009/09/t ... il-part-2/


ty sir

I don't read the end of books before I read the beginning and middle as well.

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 06:59 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Frayed Knot wrote:
But no team wins forever and nothing was going to keep Hernandez & Carter from getting old (or Cashen for that matter), or Gooden & Straw on the straight & narrow, or guarantee that the next generation is going to be as good as the last one.


A true enough statement. But to force a 180-degree shift immediately after what you are shifting from resulted in what it resulted in seems a little. . .what?

Arrogant?
Out of touch?
Completely insane?

Edgy DC
Aug 18 2010 07:09 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

What 180-degree shift?

What force?

What what?

There's nothing there!

Edgy DC
Aug 18 2010 07:11 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

And you're again attackign people's character based on absloutely nothing.

Arrogant? Insane? What the hell?

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 07:25 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 18 2010 07:31 PM

Edgy, I think your desire for a perfect Met world, possibly combined with your disdain of the "evil media", has completely blinded you from what we have been talking about here. There have been several references (and not just by me) in this thread that Wilpon promptly got his hands in the operations that dealt with the on-the-field product as soon as he attained the 50% ownership. If you don't believe me, ask others. I am arguing that doing so was ridiculous in the aftermath of a world championship that was attained by the completely opposite type of arrangement between ownership and the "baseball department".

And nobody is slandering anyone here. This is a casual internet message board, it's not the New York Times or anything (even it it was, language like this could easily appear in an Op-Ed piece without much of a problem I would think).

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 07:28 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

And I'm not attacking the man's character. I'm attacking his judgement.

Edgy DC
Aug 18 2010 07:37 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
Edgy, I think your desire for a perfect Met world, possibly combined with your disdain of the "evil media" has completely blinded you from what we have been talking about here.

Your amateur mental health applied to Fred Wilpon is outrageous enough. Please don't pretend to psychoanalize me. I ask you for facts. Very specific facts. I even ask you what specifically you are referring to, and you give me quotes of words that I haven't typed. Seriously.

There have been several references (and not just by me) in this thread that Wilpon promptly got his hands in the operations that dealt with the on-the-field product as soon as he attained the 50% ownership.


What? What? What are you talking about? Name one deal and cite Wilpon's connection to it and we're dealing in something resembling the real word.

If you don't believe me, ask others.

Who?

I am arguing that doing so was ridiculous in the aftermath of a world championship that was attained by the completely opposite type of arrangement between ownership and the "baseball department".

So doing what? In particlar, what? Please don't tell me I'm blind.

And nobody is slandering anyone here.

Wow, words in my mouth again. What you're are doing here is making a baseless smear.

This is a casual internet message board, it's not the New York Times or anything (even it it was, language like this could easily appear in an Op-Ed piece without much of a problem I would think).

On better days, it's a rational forum. Not today though.

And I'm not attacking the man's character. I'm attacking his judgement.

"Arrogant" speaks to character. "Swindle" speaks to character. "Insane" speaks to mental health. Words mean things. Give me a break.

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 07:47 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 18 2010 07:57 PM

I never realized that the words "slander" and "smear" had such disparate definitions.

Why don't you start reading the links that I provided? Or are you not going to believe of word of them because they didn't pass through Jay Horowitz's desk? Or that they are someone's daydreams that were written down and published just for the hell of it?

I like rational, but I can do without "pollyanna".

Nymr83
Aug 18 2010 07:50 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
Or are you not going to believe of word of them because they didn't pass through Jay Horowitz's desk?


welcome back Sal/Bret, we've missed you!!

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 07:51 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

You complain about the other place but you are creating that very problem here and now.

Edgy DC
Aug 18 2010 08:06 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
I never realized that the words "slander" and "smear" had such disparate definitions.

You don't realize a lot of things.

Mex17 wrote:
Why don't you start reading the links that I provided?


Yeah, great, sentence fragments and innuendo. Whoop-de-do.

I'm really not going to ask again. Please name one deal and cite Fred Wilpon's connection.

Or are you not going to believe of word of them because they didn't pass through Jay Horowitz's desk?

Have I quoted Jay Horwitiz? (One O, people!) I haven't. So stick that sarcasm right back up your ass where it came from.

Or that they are someone's daydreams that were written down and published just for the hell of it?

It's Mark Fucking Healy! He's writing like an eighth-grader and putting a black hat on one guy and a white hat on the other. It offers no evidence of the damn question I'm asking you.

I like rational, but I can do without "pollyanna".

What the fuck!? What have I said that qualifies that?

If you really want to resort to playground namecalling, you can take it to some forum where they invite that sort of thing. All I'm inviiting is answer to a question.

Kong76
Aug 18 2010 08:09 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 18 2010 08:09 PM

Mex17 wrote:
You complain about the other place but you are creating that very problem here and now.


You one of those Grand Slam Single bitches now Mex :-)?

Zvon
Aug 18 2010 08:09 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 08:10 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I DON"T want to do that. You are the one making this an arcimonious exchange.

And "Mitchell for McReynolds" (if you insist).

Healy might not win a Pulitzer anytime soon but, again, I highly doubt that he pulled all of that out of his ass.

Edgy DC
Aug 18 2010 08:25 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Mex17 wrote:
You complain about the other place but you are creating that very problem here and now.

I don't know what other place you are talking about. You keep putting these words in my mouth.

You are the one making this an arcimonious exchange.

Stop it. I've challenged you to back up these ridiculous attacks.

And "Mitchell for McReynolds" (if you insist).

"If you insist." I asked failry for you to back up your account multiple times.

Of course you name that. Only two real deals in the 1986-1987 offseason and Ed Hearn and Rick Anderson for David Cone doesn't dovetail with the thesis.

And the whole thing of showing Wilpon's fingerprints on it, I won't insist on that. I'm done asking.

Mex17
Aug 18 2010 08:39 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

What do you want, notarized affadavits? Sorry I can't provide those.

I'd probably have to re-read "Worst Team Money Can Buy" (or browse through it) for more ammo but I have a life to live.

I think that you are more pissed at me then I am at you (over something that is not worth it). I can't be bothered with it.

Zvon
Aug 19 2010 11:40 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Very interesting stuff in those articles. I wasn't as much interested in Healys spin as I was in the facts, and there are many mentioned.

But I have to wonder if somebody types this stuff up for Healy like 5 minutes before lunch and is in a rush to get it done.
How could a man in his position write that awful, lol? That's pretty wacky.

From all the info I have read so far I do think a Walternate universe where Doubleday was not elbowed around by Wilpon would have made for a much different Met past, for some stretches better, for they surely could not have been worse. I do believe the Mets took a turn south when Fred took the reins and began pulling on them.

In spite of that we (or he) did eventually field the great teams of 1999-2000 and that whole time with Steve Phillips as GM is not touched on here.
If Healy is going to go there, he's got to keep going. This was written in 2009 and he has not brought the entire picture into focus.

This article about McIlvane/out,Phillips/in was very interesting.

[url]http://www.nytimes.com/1997/07/17/sports/despite-a-dose-of-success-mets-replace-mcilvaine.html

As was this one about Art Howe. And these two articles are written by people who know how to write and
if someone types up their stuff for them they have them do it way before lunch.

[url]http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/16/sports/baseball/16mets.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2

As Rorschach used to say : "...must investigate further."

Hey, Mex and Edge, you guys should....I wanted to say get a room but that's not right.
Whats the opposite of a room?
You guys should get a big open field and each go to opposite sides of the field and turn your backs on each other.;)

Edgy DC
Aug 20 2010 05:54 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Which specific facts are you referring to?

Because if you look at the 1986-1987 offseason, the facts do not support the assertion that the Mets failed to win aother championship because Wilpon immediatedly insisted, after winning one, to remake the team by getting rid of the troublemakers. It doesnt' hold up.

Zvon
Aug 20 2010 10:04 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edgy DC wrote:
Which specific facts are you referring to?

Because if you look at the 1986-1987 offseason, the facts do not support the assertion that the Mets failed to win aother championship because Wilpon immediatedly insisted, after winning one, to remake the team by getting rid of the troublemakers. It doesnt' hold up.

If you are talking to me:
That's not my assertion. My assertion is that I think the team might have been in better hands had things gone the other way around, and Doubleday was left to run the team the way he was doing it up til '86, when Fred gained more control.

And the facts are all the things in those articles that are in fact true, not spins or opinions.
Things that happened.

At this point in my readings the picture is incomplete.
I must learn more. From Steve Phillips up to Minaya.

Edgy DC
Aug 20 2010 11:09 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Those articles are clearly loaded with opinion disguised as fact. Clearly. He cites sources where people take issue with Cashen and then says that Wilpon is really the one who is being fingered.

I don't want to be too hard on Healy. Much of what's on the internet is opinion disguised as fact. But come on. He's got nothing everybody on this forum doesn't have. He's watched a whole lot of baseball, has his favorites, and has his opinions.

Are you really buying this? Isn't it OK to just accept that Frank Cashen made some really deft moves, but made some mistakes also and his success wasn't sustainable. Isn't it OK to lament the failure to win more than one championship with the knowledge and perspective that unfortunately four of their starters were out for at least two months in 1987, that in 1988 Johnson rolled the dice and left Gooden in for one more batter and lost on that roll. Even in 1985, they were one break away --- Strawberry's injury, Sisk's injury, Chapman sucking his way out of the majors, Johnson vetoing Cashen's attempted deal to re-acquire Seaver. Do we really have to find a hidden conspiracy of Wilpon frustrating Doubleday and driving Cashen toward counterproductive moves? Sustaining a peak is always hard.

Even looking at that 1986-1987 offseason --- the one where Wilpon took over in in a fit of "insanity" and began a "180-degree" turn --- was one (a) of modest transactional activity, and (b) that the Mets profited from on the whole, when the losses of the Mitchell/McReynolds deal are held up against the gains of Cone/Hearn-Anderson deal.

And for the love of Joan Payson, most "troublemakers" on the Mets stuck around for years. Hernandez was named captain!

Frayed Knot
Aug 20 2010 11:59 AM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Aug 20 2010 06:57 PM

In particular, the McReynolds/Mitchell trade - which has been entered as evidence of one of the destructive or at least meddling acts of the newly empowered Sir Fred of Wilponia - wasn't anything of the sort.

Joe McIlvane, long-time ML scout, head NYM scout since 1981, and asst GM by 1985, told the story more than once about how he LOVED Kevin McReynolds, thought he was the best amateur player he ever scouted (JMc joined the Mets right after Strawberry did) was sorry he never got the chance to draft him and wasn't about to miss out on a chance to trade for him if available.
So with him in the #2 chair of player personnel decisions and Cashen not only still ensconced as #1 but also having all the power of a WS-winning GM who turned the club around inside 5 years to the most dominant team the NL has seen since the Big Red Machine of the mid-'70s and hasn't seen since, does anyone really think that the reason this trade was made was strictly because Fred was fraidy-scared of having Kevin Mitchell in the locker room?

btw, that trade was almost universally lauded at the time (a case of the rich getting richer was the main take) and, while I know McReynolds has his detractors among NYM fans, I liked the deal then and still like it now. The larger point being that if this is what's being used to show that Wilpon's more hands-on approach was the key to the downfall of the mid-'80s dominance I think it's being done by those who are starting with their conclusion and then attempting to retro-fit whatever evidence they find into their "proof".

Zvon
Aug 20 2010 12:28 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

Those articles are clearly loaded with opinion disguised as fact. Clearly. He cites sources where people take issue with Cashen and then says that Wilpon is really the one who is being fingered.

By facts I mean what happened. Who was hired. Who was fired. Etc.
I am not interested in the mans personal opinions, which are pretty clearly laid out.
Are you really buying this?

I'm not buying anything. :)
I'm reading up and making my own assessment.

I've never really been a fan who was all into what the front office did.
I was into the team on the field in front of me.
I was aware that people behind the scenes put this team together.
The team they put together was the team I followed.
Pure and simple.

I had nothing good or bad to say about the Mets front office until Grant let Seaver go.
Peripherally I was aware of good Met GMs like Johnny Murphy and Frank Cashen but I just
figured these were people who were very good at their jobs, nothing more.

Frayed Knot wrote:
In particular, the McReynolds/Mitchell trace - which has been mentioned as evidence of one of the destructive or at least meddling acts of the newly empowered Sir Fred of Wilponia - wasn't anything of the sort.

I also liked McReynolds and thought that as a good move at the time.
What happened in retrospect is simply what happened.
I see no evidence that Wilpon being afraid of Mitchell was a fact.
So I discount that.

Vic Sage
Aug 20 2010 01:42 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

that trade was almost universally lauded at the time


McReynolds...
Chainsaw...
long, slow strokes...

ahhh, that's better.
What were you saying?

Frayed Knot
Aug 20 2010 02:13 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I bet EVEN YOU didn't dislike that trade at the time!

Edgy DC
Aug 20 2010 02:17 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I'm rooting for you here, knottie. But I ain't bettin' on you.

Zvon
Aug 20 2010 02:40 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

After the trade, after a bit of time, I thought of McReynolds as a quiet guy who may not fit in NY, but who put up more than adequate numbers his first 3 or 4 years here. I thought Bay would be that kind of player too.
What I would give right now to have Bay posting McReynolds like numbers.

Didn't see enough of Mitchell to think he would have done any better.

Even with all Mitchell did afterward and that great year he had in '89 I never regretted that trade.

From wiki:

Later years
A two-time All-Star with the Giants, later years saw his play decline due to an often indifferent attitude as well as various other distractions. Traded to the Mariners after the 1991 season, he arrived at spring training the following year 30 pounds (14 kg) overweight. He had a resurgence in 1994 with the Reds, batting .326 with 30 HRs and 77 RBI in just 310 at-bats in the strike-shortened season; but he opted to play for the Fukuoka Daiei Hawks in Japan the following year, where he became the highest-paid player in Japanese history.[citation needed] In Japan, he incurred the displeasure of team management when he chose to travel to the U.S. in mid-season for treatment of knee problems against the team's wishes.

In the next two years, he played for four major league teams (Cincinnati, Boston, Cleveland, Oakland), rarely showing his former ability.

Today, Mitchell lives in San Diego and plays in the San Diego Adult Baseball League for the championship team, the San Diego Black Sox, run by Mike Micheli.

Mitchell is listed as one of California's top delinquent taxpayers, with a $5,184,641.51 debt from a lien filed on July 6, 2000.

Arrests and suspension
After being released for the last time, he was arrested in 1999 for assaulting his father during an argument.[4] Back in the minor leagues as manager of the Sonoma County Crushers in 2000, he was suspended for nine games after punching the opposing team's owner in the mouth during a brawl.[5]

In 2010, Mitchell was arrested for alleged misdemeanor battery at the Bonita Golf Club in Bonita, California.[6] He is dating Wedo.

Records
In his 13-season career with eight teams, Mitchell batted .284, with 234 home runs, 760 runs batted in, 630 runs scored, 1,173 hits, 224 doubles and 25 triples in 1,223 games.


Who the hell is Wedo?

Edgy DC
Aug 20 2010 02:44 PM
Re: Shuffling the deck upstairs

I think that means he's dating an East Coast radio station.

There should be more brawls involving managers.