The Province

So long, grouchy old skippers

Today’s MLB managers are friendlier, more thoughtful — and younger

- DAVE SHEININ

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — When the 15 American League and 15 National League managers, clad in designer sport coats and expensive shoes, assembled Wednesday afternoon for group pictures at the baseball winter meetings, someone who didn’t know any better might have wondered if they were actually players gathering for their team pictures, with all those youthful faces and bodies interspers­ed with a few older ones.

Some familiar faces were absent from the photo lineups this year, among them Dusty Baker, John Farrell and Joe Girardi, all of whom were fired by teams — the Washington Nationals, Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees, respective­ly — that made the playoffs this fall, and replaced by managers who are, on average, 12 years younger.

All told, six teams changed managers this off-season, and all but one hired someone significan­tly younger than his predecesso­r.

As a result, the fraternity of big league managers is younger than perhaps at any other time in recent memory. Seven managers, including four of the new hires, are the same age or younger than Ichiro Suzuki, the free agent outfielder who intends to play next season at age 44, and an eighth, Dave Roberts of the Los Angeles Dodgers, is just a year older.

These new managers don’t sound much like the older ones they replaced. Sometimes they say things like: “All of the various department­s around a baseball organizati­on are the soil, and our players are the plants and the trees that are going to grow in that soil. So as I think about managing a ball club, I think about being really nutrient-dense soil.”

That was Gabe Kapler of the Philadelph­ia Phillies, a 42-year-old first-time manager who replaced 66-year-old Pete Mackanin. Two of the Phillies’ rivals in the NL East also changed managers, with the Nationals going from the 68-year-old Baker to 53-year-old Dave Martinez, and the New York Mets pivoting from Terry Collins, who is 68, to Mickey Callaway, who is 42.

Two AL East titans, the Red Sox and Yankees, both replaced their veteran managers with untested rookies — Alex Cora, 42, and Aaron Boone, 44, respective­ly — whose primary post-playing careers had been as television announcers (Cora did, however, spend 2017 as the Houston Astros’ bench coach).

“There’s a saying in the industry that you have to pay your dues to get to the big leagues. Maybe we pay our dues through (working in) the media,” Cora said. “People think that’s an easy job, (that) it’s just, ‘Get behind that desk and put that tie on and just talk baseball.’ It doesn’t work that way, man. The way I see it, that prepares us for (managing). You had to be prepared. You only have an hour to let the (viewers) know what you know about the game, how you feel about certain situations. “I think it was good school for us.” The new wave of managers this off-season has also altered the sport’s racial makeup in the dugout. Four of the six new hires were white, but the hiring of Cora and Martinez has tripled the number of Latino managers (they join Rick Renteria of the Chicago White Sox). Meanwhile, the dismissal of Baker by the Nationals leaves the Dodgers’ Roberts as the sport’s only African-American manager.

Cleveland Indians skipper Terry Francona, 58, said some of the freshfaced managers — including Boston’s Cora and the Tampa Bay Rays’ Kevin Cash, 41, who played under him and who count him as a mentor, are “shortcutti­ng” the traditiona­l pathways to getting those jobs, but he doesn’t hold a grudge about it.

“You know, it’s not necessaril­y the route that some of us took,” said Francona, who managed in the minors for five years and spent one season as the Detroit Tigers’ third base coach before getting his first big-league managing job in 1997. “But it doesn’t mean they won’t be really good, because they’re obviously really qualified.”

It’s no coincidenc­e that so many teams this off-season sought younger managers from non-traditiona­l pathways. It has been an industry trend for several years now, fuelled by front offices that are increasing­ly led by analytics-driven general managers — and one that undoubtedl­y accelerate­d after 43-yearold A.J. Hinch led the Astros to the World Series title this season, beating the Dodgers.

Hinch, a former catcher with a psychology degree from Stanford, may have been the prototype for this trend, when he was named manager of the Arizona Diamondbac­ks in 2009 at the age of 35. The move was criticized at the time because Hinch, who had been working in the Diamondbac­ks’ front office but who had no coaching or managing experience, was seen as someone who hadn’t paid his dues.

“(The job) now is looked at as you’ve got to have good relationsh­ips with the players.” — Bob Melvin

The trend toward younger, less traditiona­lly groomed managers has been fuelled by a fundamenta­l change in the way front offices view that job.

With more teams’ baseball operations now headed by analytics-driven general managers, strategic decisions that once belonged to the field manager — such as making out the lineup, shifting the defence and even deciding when to lift the starting pitcher — have been taken over by the quants in the analytics department.

As a result, the job of manager is increasing­ly viewed as that of a clubhouse custodian — some in the industry deride the role as middle management — whose primary attributes are a sunny personalit­y, a natural manner with the media and a knack for relationsh­ip-building, and whose primary duty is to receive the front office’s strategic initiative­s and sell them to the players. If the idea is to be relatable to the players, it stands to reason a younger manager would be better at that.

“I think that’s one of the reasons that you’re seeing some younger managers — that maybe some of the older school guys (were) reluctant to adapt to some of the analytics,” said Oakland A’s manager Bob Melvin, 56. “And now, I think maybe some of the organizati­ons are bringing in some younger guys that they can (mould) along those lines. (The job) now is looked at as you’ve got to have good relationsh­ips with the players.”

Indeed, the days of the crusty, iron-fisted old skipper, holed up in his office amid a cloud of cigarette smoke, are long gone. In Melvin’s rookie year as a player, with the 1985 Detroit Tigers, his manager was the late Sparky Anderson, perhaps the purest distillati­on of the nearly extinct old school skipper.

“When I was a rookie, I didn’t go up to Sparky and sit down next to him and talk to him for 15 or 20 minutes before the game,” Melvin said. “He was kind of a guy that I kind of stayed away from.”

It’s difficult to imagine someone like Anderson speaking openly with his players about “loving and sharing and feelings,” as Arizona’s Torey Lovullo said he does, or making a point of visiting with all 25 players on his team before every game, as Roberts does with the Dodgers.

At the same time, one can only wonder what Anderson would have said to a youthful, Ivy League-educated general manager who tried to dictate his batting order or tell him when to pull his starting pitcher. But it is fun to imagine.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Gabe Kapler, 42, has succeeded 66-year-old Pete Mackanin as manager of the Philadelph­ia Phillies.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Gabe Kapler, 42, has succeeded 66-year-old Pete Mackanin as manager of the Philadelph­ia Phillies.
 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Rather than work his way up through minor-league dugouts, 44-year-old Aaron Boone spent his post-playing career in broadcasti­ng before he was hired as a manager.
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Rather than work his way up through minor-league dugouts, 44-year-old Aaron Boone spent his post-playing career in broadcasti­ng before he was hired as a manager.

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