Two MLB Managers Already Whacked...Who's Next?

Search

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2005
Messages
15,486
Tokens
i was already wrong with my two guesses...

leyland was my 1st choice...

verlander and the rook porcello have saved him...

eric wedge...

i think he is next...

sizemore's injury...

haffner's 'barking' shoulder...

&

carmona cannot throw strikes...

they may start trading off players in a 'firesale'...

trouble brewing in cleveland.
 

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2005
Messages
15,486
Tokens
What about Cooper ? with Houston
Or are the Astros where they should be ?

good call...:toast:

just found this on foxsports.com...



Four more managers on the firing line

<!-- // Writer Attribution// --><!-- Meta Tag For Search --><!-- meta name="author" content="Tracy Ringolsby"--><!-- meta name="source" content="Special to FOXSports.com"--><!-- meta name="eventId" content=""--><!-- meta name="contentTypeCode" content="1"--><!-- meta name="editorContentCode" content="1"--><!-- meta name="blurb" content="Two down and who knows how many managers to go. Tracy Ringolsby puts four more on the hot seat, starting with Eric Wedge."--><!-- meta name="modDate" content="June 1, 2009 21:27:28 GMT"-->by Tracy Ringolsby, Special to FOXSports.com




<!-- // Story Tools // --><LINK href="/fe/css/story/story_tools.css" type=text/css rel=stylesheet><!-- printtracker start --><LINK media=print href="/fe/js/printtracker/fdprint.css" type=text/css rel=stylesheet><SCRIPT src="http://foxsports.cleanprint.net/js/2275/pd.js?ps=38" type=text/javascript name="cleanprintloader"></SCRIPT><!-- printtracker end --><SCRIPT type=text/javascript>addthis_pub = 'foxSports';</SCRIPT><SCRIPT src="http://s7.addthis.com/js/152/addthis_widget.js" type=text/javascript></SCRIPT><SCRIPT> function BlogThisStoryTools() { var headline = "Four more managers on the firing line"; var url = document.location.href; var destination = "http://blogs.foxsports.com/BlogThis.aspx?r_title=" + escape(headline) + "&r_url=" + url; window.location.href = destination; } </SCRIPT>add this RSS blog email print
Updated: June 1, 2009, 5:27 PM EDT
10 comments

<SCRIPT type=text/javascript> //document.getElementById('number_of_comments').innerHTML = commentCount+" Comments"; </SCRIPT><!-- // Story Content // --><SCRIPT> if(fanid.length > 0 && typeof(nflDefaultLeague)!= "undefined") { leagueId = nflDefaultLeague; //find teamId of default league (if exists) for(var i=0; i < teamsInfo.length; i++){ if(teamsInfo[4] == leagueId){ defaultTeamId = teamsInfo[0]; } } var fantasyLeaguePlayerJsPath = 'http://msn.foxsports.com' + '/nugget/200002_' + leagueId + '|||' + fanid; } </SCRIPT>
First, Bob Melvin was fired as manager in Arizona, and A.J. Hinch, who had never managed or coached a game at any level, replaced him. Then Clint Hurdle was fired in Colorado, and Jim Tracy, who has managed both the Dodgers and Pirates, got the job.

Next?
Here's a look at four managers on the bubble and four guys who deserve a shot to fill out lineup cards on a regular basis.
Hot seat


<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=3 width=280 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>
9632938_36_2.jpg
</TD></TR><TR><TD class=caption>The Nationals are just plain bad, and coach Manny Acta is on the hot seat. (Al Messerschmidt / Getty Images)</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Manny Acta, Washington: Is an explanation needed? The Nationals are just plain bad, and there is nothing Acta can do about it. He figures to get another chance, but there's no chance in Washington, where the Nationals were 13-36 going into the week, having lost 18 of their last 21. In his third year on the job, Acta's managerial résumé is 145-227.
Cecil Cooper, Houston: In his second full season on the job, he was given a guarantee for next season before this season began, but that hasn't provided him a grace period among the Houston media and fans. A seven-game losing streak began grumblings about his lack of communication and respect from players because of his public berating of right-hander Roy Oswalt. Of course, about this time last year there was speculation Cooper was on his way out, but the Astros won 45 of their final 70 games.
Eric Wedge, Cleveland: Strong relationship with GM Mark Shapiro helps, but remember, this is a team that promoted itself as a favorite in the AL Central and finds itself in last place. Wedge, meanwhile, was the 2007 AL Manager of the Year, but that was only the second time in the last six years that he has guided the Indians to a winning record. Bob Geren, Oakland: How much time can being a childhood buddy of general manager Billy Beane buy Geren? He is 170-201 in his career, including a 19-29 beginning to 2009 when the A's were supposed to contend after an offseason that centered on re-signing Jason Giambi and trading for OF Matt Holliday.
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2007
Messages
99,709
Tokens
LOL, I said that to myself the other day when I was looking at the Standings.

Not that this is a Great team and they are on the Bottom, but because I thought they would at least be in the Hunt.
They do have some Hitters on that team.

Maybe they make a come back in the 2nd half of the Season, like last Year ??
 

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2005
Messages
15,486
Tokens
i agree b.a.

they have some guys that can rake...

berkman hasnt even gone on a tear yet...

should be alot of value in betting on the 'stros down the stretch.
 

Member
Joined
Dec 12, 2006
Messages
16,073
Tokens
The Astros are the oldest team in baseball I believe. Their sp is also something that's not very good. Does anyone think Tejada is going to hit .350 all year?

They should trade Oswalt for some young prospects and get what they can for Tejada right now imo. They have no farm system to speak of either.
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2007
Messages
99,709
Tokens
Sources: Acta out as Nats' skip soon, Riggleman in

Sources: Acta out as Nats' skip soon, Riggleman in....

Manny Acta's time as manager of the Washington Nationals is just about over, according to major-league sources.


Acta will be by replaced bench coach Jim Riggleman, as originally reported on FOX Saturday Baseball. The only question is when. It could be a matter of days.
The Nats have an off-day on Monday before starting a series at the Yankees on Tuesday. They return home on Friday to face the Blue Jays.
Acta, who at 40 is the youngest active manager in the majors, was hired by the Nats in November of 2006. He's gone 147-231 in two and a half seasons. The Nats have the league's worst record this season at 15-42.
Riggleman has managed for the Padres, Cubs and Mariners. The Nats added him as bench coach this past offseason. He went from bench coach to interim manager last season for the Mariners after John McLaren's firing last June. Riggleman's record as a manager is 522-652.
 

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2005
Messages
15,486
Tokens
15 wins...:>(

they could play 8 vs 9 and still win more than 15 games at this point
 

New member
Joined
May 15, 2007
Messages
6,900
Tokens
who was the 2nd manager that got fired? I know the guy from arizona did, but who else.
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2007
Messages
99,709
Tokens
Acta out as Nationals manager

Acta out as Nationals manager

<!-- // Writer Attribution// -->Associated Press

Manny Acta is out as manager of the Washington Nationals.

Acting general manager Mike Rizzo confirmed the firing Monday morning in an e-mail to The Associated Press.


The Nationals went into the All-Star break with the worst record in the majors at 26-61.
Acta told ESPNdeportes.com on Sunday that he'd been let go.
"I thank the Nationals for giving me this opportunity and I'm sorry that things didn't work out as expected. It's normal for the manager to pay the price when the team is not doing well," Acta said. Acta is the third manager in the major leagues to be let go this season. Colorado's Clint Hurdle and Arizona's Bob Melvin were previously fired.


According to The Washington Times, bench coach Jim Riggleman will replace Acta. Riggleman has managed the Padres, Cubs and Mariners.
Acta was 158-252 in 2 1/2 seasons, and the team's winning percentage dropped progressively from Year 1 until now. From the outset of spring training in February, he called the current team the most talented he's had, but significant problems in the bullpen, an untested starting rotation and the worst defense in the majors were part of a series of miscues in 2009.


The Nationals started 0-7 and never came close to approaching .500. When the team was hitting well, the pitching was a mess, and the team kept shuffling its bullpen with little change. Once the pitching became serviceable, the hitters suddenly became less productive.

This was Acta's first major league managerial job, and he always preached patience and emphasized the importance of keeping an even keel - so much so that some wondered whether he needed to be a bit less willing to publicly abide his players' mistakes. From the outset, working for a franchise he knew was undertaking a rebuilding process, Acta repeatedly said he would rather be an optimist than a realist, refusing to acknowledge that his team wasn't ready to be competitive.

In 2007, Acta's first season as Frank Robinson's replacement, Washington finished 73-89, fourth in the NL East but a two-win improvement over 2006 and better than was expected. Acta even received votes for NL Manager of the Year.

Full Story Here : http://msn.foxsports.com/mlb/story/9801674/Acta-out-as-Nationals-manager


<!-- Meta Tag For Search --><!-- meta name="author" content=""--><!-- meta name="source" content="Associated Press"--><!-- meta name="eventId" content=""--><!-- meta name="contentTypeCode" content="1"--><!-- meta name="editorContentCode" content="1"--><!-- meta name="blurb" content="Manny Acta says he has been fired as manager of the Washington Nationals.Acta told ESPNdeportes.com on Sunday that he'd been let go.The Nationals went into the All-Star break with the worst record in the majors at 26-61."I thank the Nationals for giving me this opportunity and I'm sorry that things didn't work out as expected. It's normal for the manager to pay the price when the team is not doing well," Acta said."--><!-- meta name="modDate" content="July 13, 2009 14:02:44 GMT"--><!-- // Story Tools // -->
 

Member
Joined
Feb 24, 2005
Messages
2,757
Tokens
seems like riggleman always ends up being an interim manager. guy gets wacked, and there's riggleman, ready to take over. don't hire this guy to watch your back.
 

"Here we go again"
Joined
Jul 1, 2006
Messages
4,507
Tokens
Not sure what everyone sees in the Astros. Their starting pitching aside from Oswalt is subpar, and their bullpen is doing good lately, but most likely will slow down. Berkman is having a down year and will pick it up in the 2ndH, but Bourn and Tejada are sure to slow down. Not sure how anyone can blame Cecil Cooper, the Astros are doing solid for their standards and only .500, they simply aren't that good.
 

New member
Joined
Jul 3, 2009
Messages
309
Tokens
Well I live in cleveland, and the GM has stated in the local paper that wedge is safe this season, so I think he'll get fired once the season is over
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2007
Messages
99,709
Tokens
Astros Fire Manager Cecil Cooper 9/21/09

HOUSTON -- The Houston Astros fired manager Cecil Cooper on Monday with 13 games left in another disappointing season.
Third-base coach Dave Clark was named interim manager and things didn't change much Monday night as the Astros lost their eighth straight, 7-3 to the St. Louis Cardinals, to drop to 70-80.

General manager Ed Wade said the change couldn't wait until the end of the season. He added that more changes could be coming for a franchise just four years removed from its only World Series appearance.
"We're tasked with evaluating all aspects of our situation," Wade said. "At the end of the day, we're going to try to address those off-field issues that exist. We're not walking away from it. The issue we had to address here, in the short term, was the managerial issue and that's why we moved forward today."
The 59-year-old Cooper was hired on Aug. 27, 2007, to replace Phil Garner. Houston went 171-170 under Cooper, who was the bench coach under Garner between 2005-07.
Cooper became the fourth manager to get fired this season, all of them in the National League. Arizona dismissed Bob Melvin on May 7, Colorado replaced Clint Hurdle on May 29 and Washington fired Manny Acta on July 13.

Wade said Clark would be considered a candidate during the search for a new manager. Cooper did not answer calls to his cell phone and his voicemail was full.
Wade, owner Drayton McLane and president of baseball operations Tal Smith met with Cooper in his office on Monday afternoon to give him the news.
While Cooper took the blame, he could not be blamed for all the Astros' shortcomings in 2009.
A number of offseason moves fizzled and All-Star first baseman Lance Berkman and pitching ace Roy Oswalt have had subpar seasons.
"It stinks when you know that your performance, that you're responsible for somebody else's job security," Berkman said. "Say what you want, we didn't get it done on the field. The players have to take the full responsibility. Coop never threw a pitch or batted with runners in scoring position."
McLane pointed out that the Astros' payroll -- almost $103 million -- is among the highest in baseball and that he thought the assembled roster was capable of having a better season.

"We felt, at the time, and with the investment we made, that there was the potential to have a winning team here," McLane said. "We'd love to have had different things occur with the players we selected. It's just a very complicated process. It's not easy to say the manager, the coaches or the players or management [can be blamed]. It all weaves toegther."
Cooper's initial contract ran through the 2009 season and the Astros picked up his option for 2010. Houston won 86 games in 2008, a 13-game turnaround from 2007. But this season, the Astros are almost guaranteed their second losing record in three seasons and only the third since 1991.
Wade said the extension was the right decision at the time, but "things changed" as the season unraveled.
"You don't have control over a lot of things that changed," Wade said. "We felt, at the time, that exercising the option sent the right message to our club, and to Coop about how we viewed our overall situation at that particular time."
Cooper was a first-time major league manager and the first black manager in Astros history. He played 11 seasons for the Milwaukee Brewers and his hiring as Houston's manager got the personal blessing of commissioner Bud Selig, who owned the Brewers from 1977-87.
Houston scored only 15 runs during their latest losing streak. The Astros are 28-46 away from Minute Maid Park this season and the problems went beyond Cooper.

Oswalt (8-6, 4.12 ERA) has been hampered by back and hip pain most of the season and won't pitch again in 2009. His ERA is a career high and his win total a career low.
Berkman is hitting .270 with 22 home runs and 73 RBIs, but he came into the season with a career average of .302 and had reached 100 RBIs the past three seasons.
The Astros hoped Russ Ortiz and Mike Hampton would bolster the pitching staff, but Ortiz was released on July 30 and Hampton's season was cut short by more injuries.
Houston is 311-323 since winning the NL in 2005, and Berkman feels the franchise has been heading in the wrong direction.
"We haven't been to the playoffs in four years and it seems like we've been on a gradual downward spiral," he said. "You can't just point to one thing, I think there are several factors involved in that. But, if there was an environment for sweeping change or reform, this would be it."
Clark became a major league manager for the first time. He managed the Astros' Triple-A affiliate in Round Rock in 2008 and was in his first season as Houston's third-base coach.
"The main thing is to finish the season on a strong note, bring out the best in these players and get back to that winning-type attitude," Clark said.
 

www.youtubecom/hubbardsmusic
Joined
Aug 21, 2003
Messages
11,679
Tokens
The Astros are the oldest team in baseball I believe. Their sp is also something that's not very good. Does anyone think Tejada is going to hit .350 all year?

They should trade Oswalt for some young prospects and get what they can for Tejada right now imo. They have no farm system to speak of either.
should've traded oswalt any of the last 3 years....won't ever get what they could've got from him now. could've cashed in big time w/him last year.^<<^
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,119,949
Messages
13,575,546
Members
100,888
Latest member
bj88gameslife
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com