November 25, 2005
Joe's Youngsters
Joe Girardi is not upset by the Marlins moves:
"My coaches are excited about the players they're getting," Girardi said. "They knew the team was going to change a little bit.... I do know that if they don't get the people they want in return, they're not gonna make the trade. "
Girardi laughed at the suggestion that the Marlins hired him, then gutted the nucleus of his team.
"I'm not ticked off," he said. "I'm excited. I love being around young ballplayers because they are very easily influenced and full of energy."
If nothing else, Girardi is going to get a chance to develop a number of young players into a winner. That's a pretty good challenge for a first time manager. I like the way he's holding off on some coaching hires until the team takes better shape:
Girardi said he'll probably hire a batting coach, bullpen coach and bench coach next month after the Marlins continue to mold their 2006 team.
"I want to know exactly a sense of what the landscape of the team is. Then I'm going to pursue some coaches just because I want to know the type of coaches I'll need to fit the personality of the team. But I know I can't wait forever to fill my coaching staff," he said.
Different coaches have different strengths, and some may be better teachers, which is what you probably want with a young team. It's pretty cool that Joe wants to tailor his staff to the team, rather than the other way around.
Posted by David Pinto at
02:07 PM
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It is most unfortunate that the MLB organization has not supported the Florida Marlins. We have had completely uninterested owners since the inception of the team and the current management couldn't do anything in Montreal. We won the world series, NOT because of them, but in spite of them. Now we will lose the team because Jeb Bush has squashed all chances for a new stadium.
In all fairness to Jeb, it's difficult to use public funding in S. Florida right now after the Hurricanes. Whether it's right or wrong (and it's wrong) people feel that tax plans used to derive money for new stadiums would somehow be used for other social issues. That doesn't apply here, as people in Florida will be unwilling to subsidize a stadium AND pay for Hurricane reconstruction, but funding a new stadium and let's say, ending homelessness, aren't all one in the same when it comes to taxpayer funding.
Some mlb owners have more money than they could
ever possibly spend (according to Forbes). MLB itself
has hundreds of millions of dollars in rights fees from
its recent satellite radio deal. Finally, what if all baseball
fans across the country put in $1 on their income tax
for a domed Florida stadium, just as a start. The problem
is that most billionaires want to take it with them to the
grave.
baseball should never have put teams in florida or in colorado.
I still think baseball would have worked in montreal if they had a good owner and not such a crappy stadium, which is still being paid for.
yeah
jeb bush is a real monster for wanting to rebuild all the damage done from all the hurricanes instead of giving milions of tax dollars to a bilionaire who should just finance his own *** stadium.
yeah, it's all bush's fault.
yep. all the other politicians said - yeah, let's give all this money to loria and ONLY bush said no give it for schools and roads and housing.
wow
i'm happy with something a bush did. how about THAT?
I'm no Jeb Bush fan either but his priorities are right in this case. State and local governments should be expected to improve local roads and access as necessary. Beyond that, these baseball entrepreneurs should be financing their own stadiums and charging what the market will bear for tickets, parking and concessions. Local govt's should not not be expected to underwrite the cost by raising taxes. This corporate welfare culture needs to end.
Mac