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  • Who Will Be The Next Twins Manager?


    Seth Stohs

    Late Monday morning, the news came out that the Minnesota Twins had fired manager Ron Gardenhire. Gardenhire has been offered a job in the organization, but he says that he wants to manage again and believes that he will.

    So the next question naturally becomes; who will be the next manager of the Minnesota Twins?

    Image courtesy of Rick Osentoski, USA Today

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    Here is a quick look at some of the potential candidates, though it is always important to note that a surprise candidate could come out of nowhere. There are several qualified internal candidates, though Terry Ryan insists that they will do their due diligence and look outside the organization as well.

    Internal Candidates

    Terry Steinbach – In my mind, he became the possible front-runner within the last week. I believe he may also be a top candidate for the Arizona Diamondbacks. His former Oakland A’s manager Tony Larussa is in charge of baseball operations and his former rotation-mate Dave Stewart was just named as the General Manager. However, there are a lot in the Twins organization that really like him as a managerial candidate. The 52-year-old from New Ulm played for the University of Minnesota before being drafted by the Oakland A’s. He spent parts of 14 seasons in the big leagues, the final three with the Twins. He has been Gardenhire’s bench coach the last two seasons.

    Paul Molitor – Of course, most have believed that Molitor would be the next Twins manager for a couple of years already. He was added to the Twins staff a year ago after being a roving minor league instructor for several seasons. He has been a hitting coach in the big leagues, though that didn’t go so well. The 58-year-old from St. Paul has worked with the minor leaguers that are likely to be part of the next Twins core. Molitor was elected to baseball’s Hall of Fame in 2004 following a 21-year big league career during which he had over 3,300 hits and played in seven All Star games.

    Gene Glynn – Glynn was named Minnesota’s first Mr. Basketball in 1975 when he was the top hoops player in the state while playing at Waseca high school. He never played in the big leagues after seven seasons of playing minor league ball, including three years at AAA. He has had a variety of roles in baseball. He was a long-time manager and coach in the minor leagues. He was a base coach for the Rockies, the Expos, the Cubs and the Giants over the course of a dozen years. Before becoming the Twins AAA manager, he spent six years as a scout in the Tampa Bay Rays. He has done a great job in Rochester taking a revolving door of players and making them playoff contenders.

    Doug Mientkiewicz – “Dougie Baseball” was drafted by the Twins in the fifth round of the 1995 draft and stayed in the organization until he was traded to the Red Sox and won a World Series championship in 2004. He spent time with the Mets, Royals, Yankees, Pirates and Dodgers from 2005 through 2009. His best years were clearly with the Twins. Known for his fire and his glove, Mientkiewicz won a Gold Glove at first base in 2001 and was a big part of the group that came up in the late ‘90s and the early playoff teams last decade. He returned to the organization a year ago as the manager of the Ft. Myers Miracle. In his first year, he went to the playoffs, but he also got into a fight with the opposing manager in a game. He has worked with most of the Twins top prospects and led this year’s squad to the Florida State League title. If you believe being able to relate to today’s players is important, Mientkiewicz is just 40 years old and only been retired for five years.

    Jake Mauer – Some will laugh that this name is on the list, but Mauer should manage in the big leagues. If not now, someday. For those that choose to look only at that last name and not the qualifications, it’s just too bad. Mauer is a very good baseball person. He was a leader on that St. Thomas baseball teams that won Division III titles. He spent five seasons playing the minor leagues, peaking at Double-A, and playing a variety of positions. After spring training of 2006, he retired and immediately became a coach. He managed in the GCL for a couple of years before becoming the manager at Ft. Myers. In 2013, the organization made the decision to move him to Cedar Rapids to lead the group of young, very talented prospects. Known for having a very high baseball IQ and being three or four batters ahead of the game, Mauer protects his players while maintaining a calm about him. He is also known to be

    External Candidates

    Chip Hale – 49-year-old Hale was one of the better pinch hitters for the Twins in the ‘90s. The Twins drafted him in the 17th round in 1987 out of the University of Arizona. He spent time with the Twins in 1989 and 1990, and then he returned to the Twins in 1993 and stayed through 1996. He never played more than 85 games in a season or had more than 186 plate appearances. He was a second baseman who became a utility player but mainly was a pinch hitter. He got 12 at bats with the Dodgers in 1997. Since 2006, he has spent time in the big leagues as a coach with the Diamondbacks and Mets. He has been the third base coach for the A’s the last four seasons. He has been a managerial candidate for many positions over the last four or five offseasons.

    Dave Martinez – Martinez had a terrific 16 season big league career as an outfielder for the Cubs, Expos and seven other teams. He was a starter for several years and became a valued bench bat later in his career. The 50-year-old has been the bench coach for the Tampa Bay Rays since the 2008 season. Martinez was always known as a smart ball player, but much of the interest in Martinez would appear to be his association with Rays manager Joe Maddon who is generally considered one of baseball’s best. Martinez has put in his time and deserves to see what he can do on his own.

    Torey Lovullo – Lovullo was a Tigers prospect in the late 80s. He hit .381 as a 22-year-old in a September call up in 1988, but he was never able to become the player many thought he would. He spent big league time with seven teams over eight seasons from 1988 through 1999. He became a minor league coach in 2001 and was a manager in the Clevelend system. He was John Farrell’s bench coach in Toronto in 2011 and 2012 and followed him to the Red Sox in 2013 in the same capacity. He is 49 years old and has no major league managerial experience, though he has interviewed for several managerial jobs, including the Cubs job a year ago.

    Joe McEwing – The 41-year-old McEwing spent nine seasons in the big leagues. In that time, he played over 45 games at seven different positions, all but pitcher and catcher. In 2008, he entered the world of coaching. He became a manager in 2009 in A-Ball and then moved up to AAA in 2011 (he coached Eduardo Escobar in 2010 and 2011) Following that season, he was the manager of the Mesa Solar Sox in the Arizona Fall League where he coached Brian Dozier, Aaron Hicks and Chris Herrmann. Dozier gave McEwing a lot of credit for helping him learn second base. After the AFL, he was added to Robin Ventura’s White Sox coaching staff as the third base coach after Ozzie Guillen was fired.

    Ozzie Guillen – His name keeps coming up, and we know that he wants to get back into managing. He has had managerial experience and won a World Series title with the White Sox in 2005. He was the Rookie of the Year in 1985 and a three-time All Star in his 13 seasons with the White Sox as a player. He has had a lot of controversy surrounding him since his departure from the White Sox. His run in Miami was just one, long year. All that said, he’s a smart baseball man who would have the energy and fire that maybe this team needs. He is from Venezuela and diversity is one piece of the equation.

    Manny Acta – He is seen now on ESPN’s baseball coverage, but the 45-year-old has already had two big league managerial positions. The Dominican-born Acta spent six years in the minor leagues before going to scouting school. He spent time coaching in the minor leagues before getting MLB coaching jobs with the Expos and Mets. In 2007, he became the Nationals manager as a 38-year-old. He lost his job in July of 2009, and in 2010, he was named Cleveland’s manager. He kept his surprise team in the AL Central race until late in the 2011 season before finishing two games under .500. He was fired after the 2012 season. His career MLB managerial record is 372-518.

    Mike Redmond – The 43 year old was the Twins backup catcher from 2005 through 2009. He was a popular player known for his leadership skills. So it was no surprise that he quickly became a manager following his retirement from playing. Just two years later, the Miami Marlins offered him their job and he has spent the last two years as their manager. Last weekend, he signed an extension through the 2017 season with the Marlins. Though not impossible, it is highly improbable that he would even be interviewed for the Twins job at this time.

    As I said earlier, this is just a starting point for potential managerial options to replace Ron Gardenhire? The question you need to ask yourself is this; what qualities are most important to you in a manager? Being bilingual? High-level baseball IQ? Experience? Big League Experience? Statistical Lean? Fundamentals and teaching? How will they use the bullpen? How do they feel about bunting or base stealing?

    As I sit here on Monday afternoon, six hours since the announcement first came out, here is how I would rank the likelihood of the managerial choice:

    1.) Terry Steinbach, 2.) Doug Mientkiewicz, 3.) Paul Molitor, 4.) Chip Hale, 5.) Gene Glynn

    Who would I like to see as the next Twins manager is likely a different ranking. Mine would be (with admittedly limited knowledge on the candidates other than reading and research):

    1.) Doug Mientkiewicz, 2.) Jake Mauer, 3.) Chip Hale, 4.) Joe McEwing, 5.) Dave Martinez

    As you can see, I tend to lean toward the younger manager, a guy who can relate to the younger players and hopefully be here for a decade or more.

    What do you think? What direction would your managerial look go?

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    People assume Dave Martinez speaks Spanish fluently and that he will automatically relate better to Latin American players but do we know for sure this is true? He was born in New York, played high school baseball in Florida and was drafted like any other American-born player.

     

    This isn't to knock him, strikes me as a very strong candidate, perhaps my personal favorite from outside the organization.

    I'm not sure its safe to assume the difference between NY culture and Puerto Rican culture is any greater than the difference between Venezueland culture and Puerto Rican culture, for example.
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    I got the impression that Rick Anderson was let go then Gardy followed him and this was reframed that Gardy was let go....Any ways, My 3 choices are Dave Martinez, Stienbach, and Dougie.  anyway you look at it, this will take some getting used to.

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    As an old guy who has been going to games for almost 50 years new mgr must be under 50 years old to relate to Sano,Buxton and the rest. Go with Dougie baseball who has managed them in the minors.

     

    If its Molitar with his drug issues as a player and being too old now, I will consider switching allegiance.

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    It may be a good idea to get a young manager because a younger guy can relate to young ballplayers.  Look at Gardenhire and Kelly: both were young when they were picked to manage.  In fact, Kelly was very young.  And look how well they relate to young ballplayers: famous for it.

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    Jake Mauer – Some will laugh that this name is on the list, but Mauer should manage in the big leagues. If not now, someday. For those that choose to look only at that last name and not the qualifications, it’s just too bad. Mauer is a very good baseball person. He was a leader on that St. Thomas baseball teams that won Division III titles.

    Minor nitpick, but Jake Mauer only played on one DIII title-winning St Thomas team (2001).   They lost in the title game in both 1999 and 2000.  The school's second DIII title came long after Jake had left, in 2009.

     

    Actually, maybe less playoff success would make him a better candidate to replace Gardy. :)

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    If they stay in-house, my choice would be Steinbach.

     

    That said, I know that TR said that familiarity with the organization is something he'll consider, but at this point I'm inclined to believe that familiarity is one of the main culprits that the Twins are in the situation they're in.  They shouldn't be afraid to bring in a manager who has no Minnesota connections.  To me, guys like Molitor, Mientkiewicz, Glynn, Mauer, and even the aforementioned Steinbach's organizational ties should be considered a net zero.

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    I think Martinez would be my first choice.  Working for Maddon for a few years is a great place to start with for a new Twins manager.  I would be OK with Mientkiewicz.  Others on the list seem fine as well.

     

    I don't want Steinbach.  That seems like perpetuating the "Twins Way" to me, nothing about him indicates anything but old school and same old same old.

     

    Ozzie seems like a disaster waiting to happen.  He had that little bromance going with Twins fans for a while which made him seem charming, but his personality seemed to get out of control eventually.  Once upon a time he would've seemed like the obvious choice, but that was probably 10 years ago.

     

    I don't doubt Jake Mauer would theoretically make a great candidate and manager, but I think it would be a PR disaster for this team right now.  Joe is massively polarizing already, why would you want to double down on that?  It might not be fair to Jake, but we all know life isn't always fair.

    Concur.

     

    I strongly think Mauer would be a disaster waiting to happen.

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    As an old guy who has been going to games for almost 50 years new mgr must be under 50 years old to relate to Sano,Buxton and the rest. Go with Dougie baseball who has managed them in the minors.If its Molitar with his drug issues as a player and being too old now, I will consider switching allegiance.

    Given your screen name I'm not sure if you are local or not, but Jim Souhan, Strib columnist, wrote this again yesterday, and I wonder if this would soften your feelings against Molitor:

     

     

    ' This summer, I asked Buxton and Sano who they rely on in the Twins’ organization. Both said, “Molitor.”

     

    ' I asked, “Who else?”

     

    ' Both said, “Molitor.” '

     

    http://m.startribune.com/sports/twins/277536121.html

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    Given your screen name I'm not sure if you are local or not, but Jim Souhan, Strib columnist, wrote this again yesterday, and I wonder if this would soften your feelings against Molitor:

     

     

    ' This summer, I asked Buxton and Sano who they rely on in the Twins’ organization. Both said, “Molitor.”

     

    ' I asked, “Who else?”

     

    ' Both said, “Molitor.” '

     

    http://m.startribune.com/sports/twins/277536121.html

    Nice anecdote.  Great to have on the staff.  Not sure that it translates to being a manager.  Their views might change the first time he has to tell them "No" and make it stick.

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    Things I'm looking for in a new manager:

     

    1. Outside the organization. This franchise needs some fresh blood.

    2. Players manager. I don't want to see a bobby valentine fiasco here.

    3. Young.

    4. Big league manager experience. Any form of it would do.

    5. Speaks Spanish

    6. Played professional ball. I would prefer big league experience but minor league experience would do.

     

    Dave Martinez and mike Maddox would be my preferred targets.

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    Being old does not mean you cannot relate to younger people.......so I'd not automatically preclude an older person.

    Agreed, and that's not my objection.  Actually I don't have a specific objection, except that almost nobody gets their first managerial job at age 58.  Terry Ryan could probably explain why that is, and maybe finding the exceptional person is some kind of market inefficiency we should be exploiting. :)  But since there are a lot of good candidates out there, I'm not inclined to buck the trend.

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    As much as I want him to, I doubt Terry Ryan would hire from outside the organization.  I feel like we need a totally fresh set of eyes on this thing (and unfortunately, Ryan being retained makes this more difficult).  

     

    So of the internal guys, my preference would go:

    1. Mientkiewicz

    2. Molitor

    3. Glynn 

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    4 brief comments...

     

    1. Martinez is my first choice, and primarily because he played on several teams, both AL and NL, and has worked with Maddon. I have no idea if he speaks Spanish. I suspect we all know people with Spanish surnames who don't speak Spanish. 

     

    2. I don't think an older manager would be that big a deal. Nowhere is it written that the next manager has to keep his job for 10 to 15 years.

     

    3. I cannot get behind bringing back any of the coaches except Bruno & Cuellar. Maybe I'm missing something, but those are the only two that look to me that they are making players better.

     

    4. People ask, "Could another manager have lost fewer than 90 games with the rosters Gardy was given?"

    I say yes. Gardy could have, too. Get better coaches to work with these players. That is a way to make a team better.

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    I have no doubt in my mind that Dave St Peter is touting Paul Molitor as the next Twins manager even trying to swing some influence on this deal. Dave should stick to marketing and try to improve the TV and radio advertising because it sure has not been very good the last two years. Especially the pres-season whiney kid egging on his dad, were Twins fans and we should go to Twins games because the Twins advertisement and past loyalty says so.

    Molitor has primary responsiblity for baserunning, and If you look at the Twins base running this year and all of the pick offs, making bad turns, and getting caught in run downs by not paying attention, this was the primary point of having Molitor on staff, to try and improve the base running and base stealing. Base running this year and the mistakes by the players was bordering on the putrid level of mistakes for the 2014 season.

    To me the Twins seemed to turn backwards and were worse off with Molitors influence and coaching on the base paths than they were in other years. For me this does not bode well or fortell that

    he would be any good at being the next Twins manager. In fact I am of the opinion that Molitor on staff was a detriment to this years record and that Molitor should move on to coaching somewhere else. We were hearing the chest thumping for years how Twins base running and agessiveness would get better with Molitor on staff and for the most part it really didn' get better.

    Here is hopin Meatsauce's source is wrong and that the Twins really do go outside he organization and bring in a new managerial influence to this clubhouse. Count me as a fan that suggests that Terry Ryan run as far away from Jim Souans friend Molitor as possible. Let him go manage in Toronto or elsewhere.

     

    Without looking at all the stats I would caution that this critique is more anecdotal than reality.

     

    Twins were 4th best team at taking the extra base and 2nd at percent time taking the extra base. This was balanced by being 12th in most outs on the bases. It seems with raw numbers they are more aggressive while also being successful more often than failures. I take this as a success not a failure.

     

    http://www.baseball-reference.com/leagues/MLB/2014-baserunning-batting.shtml

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    I have no doubt in my mind that Dave St Peter is touting Paul Molitor as the next Twins manager even trying to swing some influence on this deal. Dave should stick to marketing and try to improve the TV and radio advertising because it sure has not been very good the last two years. Especially the pres-season whiney kid egging on his dad, were Twins fans and we should go to Twins games because the Twins advertisement and past loyalty says so.

    Molitor has primary responsiblity for baserunning, and If you look at the Twins base running this year and all of the pick offs, making bad turns, and getting caught in run downs by not paying attention, this was the primary point of having Molitor on staff, to try and improve the base running and base stealing. Base running this year and the mistakes by the players was bordering on the putrid level of mistakes for the 2014 season.

    To me the Twins seemed to turn backwards and were worse off with Molitors influence and coaching on the base paths than they were in other years. For me this does not bode well or fortell that

    he would be any good at being the next Twins manager. In fact I am of the opinion that Molitor on staff was a detriment to this years record and that Molitor should move on to coaching somewhere else. We were hearing the chest thumping for years how Twins base running and agessiveness would get better with Molitor on staff and for the most part it really didn' get better.

    Here is hopin Meatsauce's source is wrong and that the Twins really do go outside he organization and bring in a new managerial influence to this clubhouse. Count me as a fan that suggests that Terry Ryan run as far away from Jim Souans friend Molitor as possible. Let him go manage in Toronto or elsewhere.

    And as long as we are talking anecdotal, I will suggest that many of the baserunning mistakes that form your opinion can be attributed to Chris Parmelee. He looked clueless out there several times, including that bad one in the final week against the White Sox where he didn't pick up the third base coach and ran up Hicksies backside at third base. Hicks incidentally took the blame for that one, but it was all on Parms. Also the third base coach probably won't be back next year.

     

    Many other base running outs came from Dozier being overly aggressive, which was actually a good thing. This was a good year for him to test some limits. 

     

    Also, Dozier and Plouffe give credit to Molitor for their improved defense. Gee whiz jamie dude, give Molly some credit!

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    I have no doubt in my mind that Dave St Peter is touting Paul Molitor as the next Twins manager even trying to swing some influence on this deal. Dave should stick to marketing and try to improve the TV and radio advertising because it sure has not been very good the last two years. Especially the pres-season whiney kid egging on his dad, were Twins fans and we should go to Twins games because the Twins advertisement and past loyalty says so.

    Molitor has primary responsiblity for baserunning, and If you look at the Twins base running this year and all of the pick offs, making bad turns, and getting caught in run downs by not paying attention, this was the primary point of having Molitor on staff, to try and improve the base running and base stealing. Base running this year and the mistakes by the players was bordering on the putrid level of mistakes for the 2014 season.

    To me the Twins seemed to turn backwards and were worse off with Molitors influence and coaching on the base paths than they were in other years. For me this does not bode well or fortell that

    he would be any good at being the next Twins manager. In fact I am of the opinion that Molitor on staff was a detriment to this years record and that Molitor should move on to coaching somewhere else. We were hearing the chest thumping for years how Twins base running and agessiveness would get better with Molitor on staff and for the most part it really didn' get better.

    Here is hopin Meatsauce's source is wrong and that the Twins really do go outside he organization and bring in a new managerial influence to this clubhouse. Count me as a fan that suggests that Terry Ryan run as far away from Jim Souans friend Molitor as possible. Let him go manage in Toronto or elsewhere.

     

    Minnesota Twins 2014: SB 99, CS 36 (rank 11th in MLB)

    Minnesota Twins 2013: SB 52, CS 33 (rank 25th in MLB)

     

    Molitor is one of the best baseball minds anywhere. The Twins would be lucky to have him as their new manager.

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    From fangraphs:

     

    Twins ranked 4th in Bsr......

    Twins ranked 8th in wRC+....

     

    So on offense and baserunning, they are darn good this last year....

     

    Twins ranked 4th worst in defense

    2nd worst ERA, 2nd worst xFIP, 

     

    Sounds like Molitor did his job ok to me.....and like TR did not (given he signed 3 FA starters). The issue with this team is pretty obvious (and begs the question, why not try Meyer, instead of say, Swarzak, or most anyone).

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