IrishJayhawk
Rock Chalk
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Hits: Won world series
Misses: Who cares?
*An exaggeration, but you get the point.
Misses: Who cares?
*An exaggeration, but you get the point.
Hits: Won world series 2X.
Misses: Who cares?
*An exaggeration, but you get the point.![]()
I believe the reason Sandberg chose Philly is he felt he would be much closer to the big league role considering Charlie Manual's age. Quade is done, you must not live in Chciago if you think Cubs fans will tolerate him again. The Tribune did a poll and something like 96% of fans wanted Quade fired. He did nothing develop Castro, Barney, Soto and he killed Colvin. He is one and done and he brought down Jim Hendry with him.
Trying to pick a starting point....Ok here goes. Quade did what he could with the team that he had. He was dealt a horrible hand. Didn't develop Castro? Dude had 207 hits and batted .307 and he's what, 21? Didn't develop Soto? You kidding me? Soto had a good rookie year. That's it. Quade isn't the hitting coach. He's not the reason Colvin can't hit a beach ball. Darwin Barney was a rookie. What did you expect from him? Not his fault that Soriano, Zambrano, Pena, and Fukudome didn't live up to their contracts. He had to deal with injuries to the pitching staff, an aging Dempster that won't best a 4.00 era again, a sh*tty pitching staff, sh*tty closer...list just keeps going on and on. Quade did what he could with what he had. I doubt Sandberg would have done any better.
As for fan's opinions, well, I hate to say this being a Cubs fan...we have some of the dumbest fans in professional sports. I'm not singling any of you out, but if you've sat in the bleachers at Wrigley, you know what I'm talking about. People go to Wrigley for the atmosphere, beer, and to party. Some go to watch the games but it's getting fewer and fewer.
Anyone who expected the Cubs to be compete for a playoff spot this year needs a reality check. How quickly are Cubs fans going to turn on Epstein when he doesn't win a World Series next year? I love my Cubs more than anything (even ND), but we need to let Epstein and Quade do their jobs. Not going to win a WS next year. A lot of work needs to be done and a lot of people need to go, but it's not going to happen overnight. This is definitely a step in the right direction though.
Colvin had 206 at-bats and hit .150. Why should he have been playing? Because he hit 20 home runs last year? As terrible as Soriano and Fukudome were, they weren't as bad as Colvin. Like it or not, he's not the future of the Cubs. Soto's 2010 stats were good. 2011 weren't. That's Quade's fault? He wasn't supposed to develop Castro's hitting but was Soto's? Hmm..ok. Quade also kicked Zambrano off the team and benched Castro after he turned his back on the field...exactly what your hero would have done. I loved Sandberg as a player too, but my loyalty is with the Cubs, not number 23. But hey, he wouldn't have given his players nicknames so clearly he's the better choice.
You say what real Cubs fan sits in the bleachers? What real Cubs fan "boycotts Wrigley" because they were upset with who was hired as coach? How many Irish fans boycotted Notre Dame because they wanted someone other than Kelly? None.
You can't fire the players, but you can fire the manager and coaches, and that's a crucial decision Epstein has to make.
Bobby Dernier and Pat Listach could stay, I suppose, but the new manager needs better coaches. Ivan DeJesus can do anything in the organization, but he can't coach third base anymore. A new pitching coach is vital. Quade got shafted when Larry Rothschild bolted for the Yankees.
A new manager can't have a new pitching coach. As a young Cubs pitcher said to me late in the season, Rothschild's replacement, Mark Riggins, did as much as he could, but "He's just not Larry, you know."
Epstein needs to figure out if Carlos Pena and Aramis Ramirez are still options at first and third -- the team needs someone to hit with power -- and he's got to spin off Marlon Byrd for a hitter with more pop.
He also might want to trade Geovany Soto and Carlos Marmol, two pieces who could bring back valuable returns. Then, of course, there's the Carlos Zambrano situation. I'm guessing Zambrano and his agent deliver an ultimatum: Trade him to Florida or keep him or release him.
Not sold on him. Cubs are screwed until Soriano is gone. No pitching.
As a Red Sox fan, I'm ready for a fresh start next year. New GM, new Manager, and a new mindset. Go Sox!
... but same old second place.
So,
I wonder if Theo (who is now with the CUBS) will try and get to Ryno before St. Louis does...
Yes. I was just assuming that anyone reading this thread knew that Theo was with the Cubs and that I was saying the Cubs should consider bringing in DeMarlo Hale. I brought up the Red Sox because I am a Sox fan and would have liked to see Hale hired here, but that doesn't seem possible in light of September. In light of that, and since Theo knows Hale well, and because Sandberg is not a candidate, I think Hale is someone to watch in connection to the Cubs managerial job.
This makes me sick. I would hate to see sandberg in a cards uni.
I don't think Theo can bring in Tito Francona, politcally, but Tito's right hand man, DeMarlo Hale, might be a candidate in Chicago. A lot of people around the Red Sox want the Sox to hire him, but since he was in the clubhouse this September I don't think they can do that.
Sidenote on the Sox: would not be shocked to see Dale Sveum become the next manager in Boston. Was with the team's 3rd base coach under Tito when the team won the World Series in 2004. As could only happen in Boston, Sveum was actually an unpopular third base coach (got a few guys thrown out at home), but he is their kind of guy. He's my dark horse candidate.
BOSTON -- It's impossible to consider Dale Sveum's candidacy to be the next manager of the Boston Red Sox without first acknowledging that he was not just another third-base coach during his two seasons in Boston (2004 and 2005).
In a city famous for shredding its third-base coaches, ever since former Boston Globe columnist Mike Barnicle wrote that if Sox coach Rene Lachemann had been an air traffic controller at Logan Airport, Boston Harbor would have been littered with fuselage, Sveum's notoriety may have eclipsed them all.
How many third-base coaches of World Series-bound teams hear boos when introduced at home before a postseason game? Most get ignored, or are lucky to hear polite applause.
How many third-base coaches are the subject of a profile in the Sunday magazine of that city's biggest newspaper? Sveum was, with the headline, "He's Safe … For Now."
How many third-base coaches start getting second-guessed in their first weeks on the job after an often inattentive Manny Ramirez proves to have better judgment than the coach, stopping at third while the coach was waving him home on a throw that would have caught Ramirez not by inches but by yards?
How many third-base coaches provoke rants that last two weeks by sending a runner (Dave Roberts) who gets thrown out at the plate by Tampa Bay's Rocco Baldelli with no outs in the ninth and the Sox down a run in Tropicana Field, then a week later at Fenway Park sends two more runners to their demise -- on back-to-back plays! -- again cut down at the plate by Baldelli?
Following up on my post from yesterday, from Gordon Edes article on Sveum today on ESPNBoston.com:
Boston is a weird place.