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Mar 26, 2008 Oct 14, 2008 2 123
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The next Bucs Dugout contest?
In honor of Matt Morris being released, is it time for a Worst Dave Littlefield Transaction poll? Or would that be laying the schadenfreude on a bit thick right on the heels of the Worst GM poll? We can at least toss out some nominees. The Leo Nunez for Benito Santiago trade sticks out most in my mind, because it literally almost caused Charlie's head to explode. Others include the Aramis Ramirez trade, the drafting of low-upside pitchers in the first round, the failure to protect Chris Shelton in the Rule 5 draft. Some moves were egregious at the time they were made, but did not backfire (or haven't yet) as badly as they could have; some looked okay at the time, but turned out badly. Which is worse?
This could get out of hand quickly. Maybe a Best Dave Littlefield Transaction poll would be more managable. It would certainly be shorter.
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The Closer
You know those historical practices, like bleeding or most uses of medicinal leeches, we look back on and say "what were they thinking"? I often wonder what current practices people will look back on a hundred years from now and ask the same question. One thing which is definitely on my list is managerial usage patterns of the modern closer.
Two nights ago, Cleveland manage-bot Eric Wedge removed his best reliever, who had just blown through three Yankees in the eighth inning in about five pitches, in favor of a man with an ERA above five. He happened to get away with it, as Joe Borowski allowed only a single upper-deck homerun to Bobby Abreu and an extremely long foul fly to Jorge Posada before escaping the inning. What a "save."
What is it going to take before managers decide that winning championships are worth the risk of bruising the egos of a few relief pitchers? The evening before, Joe Torre had probably ended the career of the best pitcher of the past fifty years by removing him after 2 1/3 innings because he just didn't have his stuff anymore. I'm sure it was a difficult move for Torre personally, but he had a series to prolong, and the move worked. Is it going to take the loss of a pennant or World Series clinching game before managers start using their best relief pitchers when the season is on the line? It might, and stay tuned because it could happen this year. Joe Borowski, the Indians medicinal leech, isn't done sucking.
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