Jump to content
Grand Central Mets
  • Create Account

Grading Jerry


Guest Edgy DC

Recommended Posts

Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Grady Little excepted.


Grand Central Contributor
Posted


="John Cougar Lunchbucket":2tdcmpvy]
="Ceetar":2tdcmpvy]Here's my rant on why we need to fire this bum.

http://www.ceetar.com/optimisticmetsfan/2009/05/fire-jerry-manuel/

Easily the worst manager we've had in at least 15 years.[/quote:2tdcmpvy]

Managers rarely get fired for making dumb game decisions. It's when the players tune him out that he has to go.[/quote:2tdcmpvy]

That's only a matter of time. I'd hard to think Murphy and Church, and even Reed and Reyes think he's a good manager.







Gwreck
May 19 2009 10:47 AM


History tells us otherwise. It took an awful long time for Randolph to get fired and he wasn't exactly a master strategist. (And, of course, he wasn't really fired for his game decisions, either).







LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
May 19 2009 12:42 PM


="Benjamin Grimm":1cp3q3jf]Ryan Church is actually fourth on the team in at bats. Only Beltran, Wright, and Reyes have more.[/quote:1cp3q3jf]

Everyone but Beltran, Wright and Reyes has been hurt, 40 years old, or Daniel Murphy.







Benjamin Grimm
May 19 2009 12:51 PM


True, but it's kind of hard to argue that he's been buried when only one outfielder has had more playing time than he has.







Edgy DC
May 19 2009 12:59 PM


Nah, I don't think so.

He played a lot the first three weeks before the trend began.

Since the trend began, he's been (1) frequently bumped in lieu of his apparent lessers, (2) seemingly drawn more lefthanders while Murphy and Reed draw the righties, and (3) slid down the batting order.







Gwreck
May 19 2009 01:03 PM


April ABs
Beltran 80
Murphy 68
Church 67
Sheffield 30
Tatis 23
Reed 11

May ABs
Beltran 67
Church 49
Tatis 47
Sheffield 40
Murphy 40
Reed 18







Benjamin Grimm
May 19 2009 01:03 PM


Okay, but in May, he's fifth in at bats:

Carlos Beltran 67
David Wright 63
Luis Castillo 54
Jos� Reyes 53
Ryan Church 49
Fernando Tatis 47
Gary Sheffield 40
Daniel Murphy 40
Ramon Castro 37
Alex Cora 30







Elster88
May 19 2009 08:27 PM


Pagan had four hits yesterday. Reed threw a ball from the first base position to the backstop.

So naturally Manuel starts Murphy in left and Reed at first. Seriously what the fuck is wrong with him? If you have to play Reed and Murphy (and sit Pagan) than at least switch the positions.

And as I'm typing this I see Murphy commits a two-base error in left. This is comical.







Ashie62
May 19 2009 08:38 PM


Jerry Manuel...I think he's probably not much better or worse than anyone else out there.

In game managing doesn't get people hired or fired.

41-41 at the break could be a breaking point

Personally C-







Edgy DC
May 20 2009 11:15 PM


Letting Murphy start at first. A-. The team was desperate for this. I'd give it a higher grade, but it's so overdue.

Pinch-hitting for Churchie, but not Murphy. D+. If you want to pull one of your lefties, pull the first one, because then Torre can't change pitchers.

Sending Tatis up there instead of Sheffield. D+. Tatis is your last shortstop in a game where pinch-hitting for your struggling current shortstop needs to remain an option and would eventually happen. Sheffield's position is a hitter, and we needed one of those.

Lifting Livan. C-. I suppose it's defensible. But good God. Just once, let a starter at least hint at losing it.







Edgy DC
May 21 2009 08:25 AM


And to clarify, pinching Tatis (the mnorst versatile guy left on the bench) in for Church doesn't have to be a problem, except that he was then double switched out.

Why, oh why, do managers persist in double switching when they have seemingly no intention of letting their relievers pitch beyond the one inning?







Benjamin Grimm
May 21 2009 08:35 AM


This push-button managing gets frustrating to watch.

I yearn for a manager with above-average intelligence. I think the Mets have only had two guys who fit that description: Davey Johnson and Bobby Valentine.

If I was hiring a manager I'd look for a smart guy who dared to be unorthodox.







Edgy DC
May 21 2009 09:20 AM


The problem is that so many of them present as such. And because they are mostly old middle infielders and catchers, they supposedly have a broader understanding of the game.

And as unconventional as they may fancy themselves, they end up under siege and paranoid from day one --- ripped if they do something out of the ordinary and it doesn't work, despite the fact that most moves dont' work and most games are won or lost by players no matter what the manager does. They get one tenth the salaries of their stars and maybe one third the contract length, they are utterly disposeable.

In the end, they all end up like Willie --- acting inperturbable and above it all while inside you're clearly terrified. You bunt like crazy because you know you're one blown rally away from getting fired.

Here's a crazy thought: If I found the guy who fit your description --- smart and daring enough to trust his smarts --- I'd pay him as much as I pay my richest player.

Hopefully, knowing that it would be as hard for me to part with him as with Beltran --- harder, actually, as he would have no trade value --- he would be unafraid to act outside the box or discipline his players.

Of course, then I might get a Tony LaRussa situation --- a detached freak who wears sunglasses at night, moves his pitchers up in the order, and drives drunk after the game.







Benjamin Grimm
May 21 2009 09:32 AM


Yeah, I thought of LaRussa too. As the ugly downside of a guy who, at first glance, might appear to fit my description of the ideal manager.







metirish
May 21 2009 09:50 AM


I'm not liking Jerry a lot this week , that as always is subject to change.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
May 21 2009 09:54 AM


The thing that bothered me most was going to Putz like a kneejerk. Turns out he had a stiff neck ("the elbow is fine" he lied).

I've about had it with Putz and with Jerry leaning on him like he has when it's obvious there may be better choices to be made.







Nymr83
May 21 2009 09:59 AM


]Sending Tatis up there instead of Sheffield. D+. Tatis is your last shortstop in a game where pinch-hitting for your struggling current shortstop needs to remain an option and would eventually happen. Sheffield's position is a hitter, and we needed one of those


Although i wanted him up there for Muphy, no Church, i have no problem using Tatis over Sheff. Tatis is the better hitter to me, especially a pinch-hitter (if the numbers dont back me up on that then maybe i'm wrong, this is just based on my perception)







Edgy DC
May 21 2009 10:24 AM


I understand lifting Murph istead of Church (he could have lifted 'em both), but I'm trying not to make a deal over C decisions.

It's spending his most versatile player that slayed us.







LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
May 21 2009 12:22 PM


="Nymr83":1fs6xos9]
Although i wanted him up there for Muphy, no Church, i have no problem using Tatis over Sheff. Tatis is the better hitter to me, especially a pinch-hitter (if the numbers dont back me up on that then maybe i'm wrong, this is just based on my perception)[/quote:1fs6xos9]

Sadly, the numbers seem to do great violence to you on that (although Tatis, in a teeny-tiny sample size, is doing a touch better, and putting the ball in play more):

Tatis:
2009: 8 PA, 2 H, 1 BB, 2 R, 2 RBI .400a/.500ob/.400ops, 6 balls in play

Career: 57 PA, 49 AB, 5 R, 5 RBI, 1 XBH, .204a/.281ob/.224ops

Sheffield:
2009: 17 PA, 1 H (HR), 6 BB, 3 R, 1 RBI .091/.412/.364, 9 balls in play

Career: 51 PA, 36 AB, 10 R, 11 RBI, 3 XBH, .278/.471/.444



Old-Timey Member
Posted


History tells us otherwise. It took an awful long time for Randolph to get fired and he wasn't exactly a master strategist. (And, of course, he wasn't really fired for his game decisions, either).


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


="Benjamin Grimm":1cp3q3jf]Ryan Church is actually fourth on the team in at bats. Only Beltran, Wright, and Reyes have more.[/quote:1cp3q3jf]

Everyone but Beltran, Wright and Reyes has been hurt, 40 years old, or Daniel Murphy.







Benjamin Grimm
May 19 2009 12:51 PM


True, but it's kind of hard to argue that he's been buried when only one outfielder has had more playing time than he has.







Edgy DC
May 19 2009 12:59 PM


Nah, I don't think so.

He played a lot the first three weeks before the trend began.

Since the trend began, he's been (1) frequently bumped in lieu of his apparent lessers, (2) seemingly drawn more lefthanders while Murphy and Reed draw the righties, and (3) slid down the batting order.







Gwreck
May 19 2009 01:03 PM


April ABs
Beltran 80
Murphy 68
Church 67
Sheffield 30
Tatis 23
Reed 11

May ABs
Beltran 67
Church 49
Tatis 47
Sheffield 40
Murphy 40
Reed 18







Benjamin Grimm
May 19 2009 01:03 PM


Okay, but in May, he's fifth in at bats:

Carlos Beltran 67
David Wright 63
Luis Castillo 54
Jos� Reyes 53
Ryan Church 49
Fernando Tatis 47
Gary Sheffield 40
Daniel Murphy 40
Ramon Castro 37
Alex Cora 30







Elster88
May 19 2009 08:27 PM


Pagan had four hits yesterday. Reed threw a ball from the first base position to the backstop.

So naturally Manuel starts Murphy in left and Reed at first. Seriously what the fuck is wrong with him? If you have to play Reed and Murphy (and sit Pagan) than at least switch the positions.

And as I'm typing this I see Murphy commits a two-base error in left. This is comical.







Ashie62
May 19 2009 08:38 PM


Jerry Manuel...I think he's probably not much better or worse than anyone else out there.

In game managing doesn't get people hired or fired.

41-41 at the break could be a breaking point

Personally C-







Edgy DC
May 20 2009 11:15 PM


Letting Murphy start at first. A-. The team was desperate for this. I'd give it a higher grade, but it's so overdue.

Pinch-hitting for Churchie, but not Murphy. D+. If you want to pull one of your lefties, pull the first one, because then Torre can't change pitchers.

Sending Tatis up there instead of Sheffield. D+. Tatis is your last shortstop in a game where pinch-hitting for your struggling current shortstop needs to remain an option and would eventually happen. Sheffield's position is a hitter, and we needed one of those.

Lifting Livan. C-. I suppose it's defensible. But good God. Just once, let a starter at least hint at losing it.







Edgy DC
May 21 2009 08:25 AM


And to clarify, pinching Tatis (the mnorst versatile guy left on the bench) in for Church doesn't have to be a problem, except that he was then double switched out.

Why, oh why, do managers persist in double switching when they have seemingly no intention of letting their relievers pitch beyond the one inning?







Benjamin Grimm
May 21 2009 08:35 AM


This push-button managing gets frustrating to watch.

I yearn for a manager with above-average intelligence. I think the Mets have only had two guys who fit that description: Davey Johnson and Bobby Valentine.

If I was hiring a manager I'd look for a smart guy who dared to be unorthodox.







Edgy DC
May 21 2009 09:20 AM


The problem is that so many of them present as such. And because they are mostly old middle infielders and catchers, they supposedly have a broader understanding of the game.

And as unconventional as they may fancy themselves, they end up under siege and paranoid from day one --- ripped if they do something out of the ordinary and it doesn't work, despite the fact that most moves dont' work and most games are won or lost by players no matter what the manager does. They get one tenth the salaries of their stars and maybe one third the contract length, they are utterly disposeable.

In the end, they all end up like Willie --- acting inperturbable and above it all while inside you're clearly terrified. You bunt like crazy because you know you're one blown rally away from getting fired.

Here's a crazy thought: If I found the guy who fit your description --- smart and daring enough to trust his smarts --- I'd pay him as much as I pay my richest player.

Hopefully, knowing that it would be as hard for me to part with him as with Beltran --- harder, actually, as he would have no trade value --- he would be unafraid to act outside the box or discipline his players.

Of course, then I might get a Tony LaRussa situation --- a detached freak who wears sunglasses at night, moves his pitchers up in the order, and drives drunk after the game.







Benjamin Grimm
May 21 2009 09:32 AM


Yeah, I thought of LaRussa too. As the ugly downside of a guy who, at first glance, might appear to fit my description of the ideal manager.







metirish
May 21 2009 09:50 AM


I'm not liking Jerry a lot this week , that as always is subject to change.







John Cougar Lunchbucket
May 21 2009 09:54 AM


The thing that bothered me most was going to Putz like a kneejerk. Turns out he had a stiff neck ("the elbow is fine" he lied).

I've about had it with Putz and with Jerry leaning on him like he has when it's obvious there may be better choices to be made.







Nymr83
May 21 2009 09:59 AM


]Sending Tatis up there instead of Sheffield. D+. Tatis is your last shortstop in a game where pinch-hitting for your struggling current shortstop needs to remain an option and would eventually happen. Sheffield's position is a hitter, and we needed one of those


Although i wanted him up there for Muphy, no Church, i have no problem using Tatis over Sheff. Tatis is the better hitter to me, especially a pinch-hitter (if the numbers dont back me up on that then maybe i'm wrong, this is just based on my perception)







Edgy DC
May 21 2009 10:24 AM


I understand lifting Murph istead of Church (he could have lifted 'em both), but I'm trying not to make a deal over C decisions.

It's spending his most versatile player that slayed us.







LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
May 21 2009 12:22 PM


="Nymr83":1fs6xos9]
Although i wanted him up there for Muphy, no Church, i have no problem using Tatis over Sheff. Tatis is the better hitter to me, especially a pinch-hitter (if the numbers dont back me up on that then maybe i'm wrong, this is just based on my perception)[/quote:1fs6xos9]

Sadly, the numbers seem to do great violence to you on that (although Tatis, in a teeny-tiny sample size, is doing a touch better, and putting the ball in play more):

Tatis:
2009: 8 PA, 2 H, 1 BB, 2 R, 2 RBI .400a/.500ob/.400ops, 6 balls in play

Career: 57 PA, 49 AB, 5 R, 5 RBI, 1 XBH, .204a/.281ob/.224ops

Sheffield:
2009: 17 PA, 1 H (HR), 6 BB, 3 R, 1 RBI .091/.412/.364, 9 balls in play

Career: 51 PA, 36 AB, 10 R, 11 RBI, 3 XBH, .278/.471/.444



Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Nah, I don't think so.

He played a lot the first three weeks before the trend began.

Since the trend began, he's been (1) frequently bumped in lieu of his apparent lessers, (2) seemingly drawn more lefthanders while Murphy and Reed draw the righties, and (3) slid down the batting order.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


April ABs
Beltran 80
Murphy 68
Church 67
Sheffield 30
Tatis 23
Reed 11

May ABs
Beltran 67
Church 49
Tatis 47
Sheffield 40
Murphy 40
Reed 18


Posted


Okay, but in May, he's fifth in at bats:

Carlos Beltran 67
David Wright 63
Luis Castillo 54
Jos� Reyes 53
Ryan Church 49
Fernando Tatis 47
Gary Sheffield 40
Daniel Murphy 40
Ramon Castro 37
Alex Cora 30


Posted


Pagan had four hits yesterday. Reed threw a ball from the first base position to the backstop.

So naturally Manuel starts Murphy in left and Reed at first. Seriously what the fuck is wrong with him? If you have to play Reed and Murphy (and sit Pagan) than at least switch the positions.

And as I'm typing this I see Murphy commits a two-base error in left. This is comical.


Posted


Jerry Manuel...I think he's probably not much better or worse than anyone else out there.

In game managing doesn't get people hired or fired.

41-41 at the break could be a breaking point

Personally C-


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


Letting Murphy start at first. A-. The team was desperate for this. I'd give it a higher grade, but it's so overdue.

Pinch-hitting for Churchie, but not Murphy. D+. If you want to pull one of your lefties, pull the first one, because then Torre can't change pitchers.

Sending Tatis up there instead of Sheffield. D+. Tatis is your last shortstop in a game where pinch-hitting for your struggling current shortstop needs to remain an option and would eventually happen. Sheffield's position is a hitter, and we needed one of those.

Lifting Livan. C-. I suppose it's defensible. But good God. Just once, let a starter at least hint at losing it.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


And to clarify, pinching Tatis (the mnorst versatile guy left on the bench) in for Church doesn't have to be a problem, except that he was then double switched out.

Why, oh why, do managers persist in double switching when they have seemingly no intention of letting their relievers pitch beyond the one inning?


Posted


This push-button managing gets frustrating to watch.

I yearn for a manager with above-average intelligence. I think the Mets have only had two guys who fit that description: Davey Johnson and Bobby Valentine.

If I was hiring a manager I'd look for a smart guy who dared to be unorthodox.


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


The problem is that so many of them present as such. And because they are mostly old middle infielders and catchers, they supposedly have a broader understanding of the game.

And as unconventional as they may fancy themselves, they end up under siege and paranoid from day one --- ripped if they do something out of the ordinary and it doesn't work, despite the fact that most moves dont' work and most games are won or lost by players no matter what the manager does. They get one tenth the salaries of their stars and maybe one third the contract length, they are utterly disposeable.

In the end, they all end up like Willie --- acting inperturbable and above it all while inside you're clearly terrified. You bunt like crazy because you know you're one blown rally away from getting fired.

Here's a crazy thought: If I found the guy who fit your description --- smart and daring enough to trust his smarts --- I'd pay him as much as I pay my richest player.

Hopefully, knowing that it would be as hard for me to part with him as with Beltran --- harder, actually, as he would have no trade value --- he would be unafraid to act outside the box or discipline his players.

Of course, then I might get a Tony LaRussa situation --- a detached freak who wears sunglasses at night, moves his pitchers up in the order, and drives drunk after the game.


Guest John Cougar Lunchbucket
Guests
Posted


The thing that bothered me most was going to Putz like a kneejerk. Turns out he had a stiff neck ("the elbow is fine" he lied).

I've about had it with Putz and with Jerry leaning on him like he has when it's obvious there may be better choices to be made.


Old-Timey Member
Posted


]Sending Tatis up there instead of Sheffield. D+. Tatis is your last shortstop in a game where pinch-hitting for your struggling current shortstop needs to remain an option and would eventually happen. Sheffield's position is a hitter, and we needed one of those


Although i wanted him up there for Muphy, no Church, i have no problem using Tatis over Sheff. Tatis is the better hitter to me, especially a pinch-hitter (if the numbers dont back me up on that then maybe i'm wrong, this is just based on my perception)


Guest Edgy DC
Guests
Posted


I understand lifting Murph istead of Church (he could have lifted 'em both), but I'm trying not to make a deal over C decisions.

It's spending his most versatile player that slayed us.


Guest LeiterWagnerFasterStrongr
Guests
Posted


="Nymr83":1fs6xos9]
Although i wanted him up there for Muphy, no Church, i have no problem using Tatis over Sheff. Tatis is the better hitter to me, especially a pinch-hitter (if the numbers dont back me up on that then maybe i'm wrong, this is just based on my perception)[/quote:1fs6xos9]

Sadly, the numbers seem to do great violence to you on that (although Tatis, in a teeny-tiny sample size, is doing a touch better, and putting the ball in play more):

Tatis:
2009: 8 PA, 2 H, 1 BB, 2 R, 2 RBI .400a/.500ob/.400ops, 6 balls in play

Career: 57 PA, 49 AB, 5 R, 5 RBI, 1 XBH, .204a/.281ob/.224ops

Sheffield:
2009: 17 PA, 1 H (HR), 6 BB, 3 R, 1 RBI .091/.412/.364, 9 balls in play

Career: 51 PA, 36 AB, 10 R, 11 RBI, 3 XBH, .278/.471/.444



Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund
The Grand Central Mets Caretaker Fund

You all care about this site. The next step is caring for it. We’re asking you to caretake this site so it can remain the premier Mets community on the internet.

×
×
  • Create New...