Jump to content
Twins Daily
  • Create Account
  • Twins Manager Paul Molitor Fired


    John  Bonnes

    USA Today's Bob Nightengale is reporting that Minnesota Twins manager Paul Molitor has been fired and a press conference this afternoon has been scheduled to announce it. Molitor managed the Twins for four seasons, two of which they exceeded expectations and two of which they did not. They finished this year 78-84, a disappointment after making it to the postseason last year with an 85-77 record.

    Twins Video

    The team's 2017 season earned Paul Molitor Manager Of The Year Award honors, and a winner for this last season has not yet been announced, meaning he is still the reigning Manager of the Year. But his position as the Twins manager has been in doubt each of the last three seasons.

    In 2016, the Twins dismal start led to the dismissal of General Manager Terry Ryan, which would often mean a change in manager as well. But Twins ownership announced that any new GM would need to retain Molitor as manager.

    Which, of course, meant that questions emerged during the 2017 season as to whether new CBO Derek Falvey and GM Thad Levine would retain Molitor after their inaugural season was over, especially since Molitor's contract would also conclude after the 2017 season. A strong finish in 2017 and the resulting Manager of the Year award convinced both sides to extend the contract through 2020, though the amount of the contract was not announced.

    This year's disappointing start led to a trade deadline selloff when the Twins were out of the race by mid-summer, but there had been very little speculation that a coaching change was imminent.

    Comments from the Twins:

    “I would like to thank Paul for his tremendous dedication to the Minnesota Twins over his last four years as manager of this club,” said Twins Executive Vice President, Chief Baseball Officer Derek Falvey. “Paul’s roots here run deep and his commitment to the organization, his staff, and the players is special. I have every hope and desire that he remains a part of this club for many years to come.”

    “The importance and contribution of Paul Molitor to the Twins, our community and Major League Baseball cannot be diminished,” said Twins Owner Jim Pohlad. “On behalf of our family, I offer thanks to Paul for his four years as Twins manager and look forward to the continuation of our relationship with him.”

    Comments from Paul Molitor:

    “I was informed today that the Twins will seek a new manager for the 2019 season and I fully respect that decision. I will forever be grateful for the opportunity they gave me to serve in the role as manager for these past four years. I’m going to consider their genuine offer to serve in a different capacity to positively impact the Twins from a different role. Special thanks to my coaches and players I have had a chance to manage and I certainly appreciate the tremendous support I received from all of Twins Territory.”

    MORE FROM TWINS DAILY
    — Latest Twins coverage from our writers
    — Recent Twins discussion in our forums
    — Follow Twins Daily via Twitter, Facebook or email
    — Become a Twins Daily Caretaker

     Share


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Featured Comments

     

    September was their best month...

    And with that, he should be getting MOY votes.

     

    I hope that's not the roster you want anything to do with going into 2019.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    It's easy to decide to fire a manager. What is really difficult is deciding who takes his place. This hire will be Falvey and Levine's signature move that will make or break the rest of their careers. The high pressure is on them and they know it. I am certain that this matter has been discussed and researched for many months already, and I expect that there's already a very short list.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    And with that, he should be getting MOY votes.

     

    I hope that's not the roster you want anything to do with going into 2019.

    Not the roster I want going into 2019, I just thought it odd to rip the roster composition of their best month.  That's all.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Hope a new manager is named relatively soon. Twins have to look at free agency for Starting Pitchers, Relief Pitchers (closer?), and probably an infielder or two: it's going to be tough signing any top-end free agent to Minnesota anyway, let alone without a manager (and coaching staff) to help sell a team philosophy.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    I consider this a promising start to the off-season for the organization.

     

    As much as his in-game tactical decisions could be baffling, the whole energy and vibe problem concerned me much more. The constant mental mistakes. The lack of palpable joy, the body language of the players some times that made you wonder if their hearts were in it, the stoicism and careful language of Molitor, rarely openly disenchanted. The inklings of clubhouse tension. All of those incalculable things. A team is supposed to sort of take on the character of its leader, but this team couldn't steal bases, couldn't even run the bases smartly, or take smart at bats, or play smart defense, or play hard every play. It may have been partially bad luck for Pauly, but I think he kinda lost the clubhouse until all the fresh faces arrived with their own reasons to play hard.

    This sums it up for me too. I did not see the fire in the belly of the players under Molitor. I would like to see a player benched, if the player doesn't hustle.I did not like the statements of Gardy after a tough loss: "It's a long season." I also thought that was Molitor's feeling. I believe the most important game of the year is the one that is being played today. After a tough loss, I prefer to see the manager turn over the snack tables and throw things. I prefer to see players trying very hard to win. If they loaf, I don't want to see them play for a game or two, in order to get a message across. I don't care if it is Brian Dozier jogging to first on a groundout, or our current favorite Twin, Astudillo forgetting how many outs there were while he was a baserunner, or any pitcher walking the first batter in an inning. I would have a system of fines for mistakes. I would have extra fielding practice after a failure to properly execute a rundown (that was so frustrating to watch over and over on replays). Where is Billy Martin when we need him?

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Can we gut our minor league system as well? I mean half of the issue we have is great looking minor league prospects who are lost at the Big league level. The job of our minor league managers and coaches is to DEVELOP Major League talent. I mean look, Sano, Buxton, and Kepler appears to be busts...Berrios is too inconsistent to be any better than a #3, Romero, Stewart, Littell, and Gonsalves don’t look any but back of the rotation fodder. Since we cannot (and will not) buy the best free agents to make a WS contender we need far better player development in the minors for better Big league players. Sure Molly played a roll in development but it’s as much the staff Molly has and the minor league staffs responsibility to develop MLB ready players. I certainly hope Falvine understands this.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    If they had parted amicably after last season, I'd say make a play for Dougie Baseball.   Managed Buxton and Sano in the minors I believe.  Doubt he'd come here now.  But I've been calling for him since Gardy was fired.

    I suspect Doug may have butted heads with upper management. He is a winner though.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    The FO wanted to rebuild last year. They traded the closer, but the team surprised everyone and made the playoffs. This year at the deadline,they didn't take any chances,and traded all the veterans.

     

    I really hope these guys are as smart as they think they are.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    Can we gut our minor league system as well? I mean half of the issue we have is great looking minor league prospects who are lost at the Big league level. The job of our minor league managers and coaches is to DEVELOP Major League talent. I mean look, Sano, Buxton, and Kepler appears to be busts...Berrios is too inconsistent to be any better than a #3, Romero, Stewart, Littell, and Gonsalves don’t look any but back of the rotation fodder. Since we cannot (and will not) buy the best free agents to make a WS contender we need far better player development in the minors for better Big league players. Sure Molly played a roll in development but it’s as much the staff Molly has and the minor league staffs responsibility to develop MLB ready players. I certainly hope Falvine understands this.

    Exactly. The line that floored me after Buxton came up is that he'd have to change his swing to be successful in the majors. WHAT? That's the whole purpose of the minor leagues! It's not to produce players who can be successful at AAA or AA.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

     

    Silly question: does a player/manager count against the 25 man roster? Perhaps #7 comes back for another season this way?

    Otherwise Falvine's man is waiting "on deck."

     

    Yes, a player/manager counts against the 25. Not sure if there's a loophole around that, like if your manager only played occasionally and you could 'option' the player to the minors while the manager stays with the MLB team...even though it's the same person.

     

    Interestingly enough, the Blue Jays talked about using Molitor as a player/manager in the late 90s. I'd love to see a player/manager in MLB again, but as much as I love Mauer I don't want him on the 2019 team in either role.

    Link to comment
    Share on other sites

    Exactly. The line that floored me after Buxton came up is that he'd have to change his swing to be successful in the majors. WHAT? That's the whole purpose of the minor leagues! It's not to produce players who can be successful at AAA or AA.

    And I look at something like Berrios’ or Romero’s struggles in the Bigs and part of it stems with working with Red Wings pitching coach Stu Clipburn. Back in 2016 while Berrios struggled mightily in the Bigs Berrios still pitched exceptionally well in AAA and when asked why Berrios couldn’t succeed in the Majors Clipburn was dumbfounded. Um if you are the AAA affiliate pitching coach you should be in the business of getting pitching prospects ready for the majors, not wondering why nothing is working. Edited by FormerMinnasotan
    Link to comment
    Share on other sites




    Join the conversation

    You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
    Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

    Guest
    Add a comment...

    ×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

      Only 75 emoji are allowed.

    ×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

    ×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

    ×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

    Loading...

×
×
  • Create New...