Chicago Sun-Times

Joe knows what Gabe is feeling

- BY GORDON WITTENMYER, STAFF REPORTER gwittenmye­r@suntimes.com | @GDubCub

CINCINNATI — Is it possible for a guy to over- manage his way onto the hot seat only three games into his big- league managerial career?

Gabe Kapler raised that question over the weekend, when he raised eyebrows around the majors with his inexplicab­le management, and mismanagem­ent, of the Phillies’ pitching staff.

The heat was intense and immediate in Philadelph­ia and spread quickly around the game.

Cubs manager Joe Maddon can relate in at least one small way — not that Maddon has ever brought a reliever into a game without having him warm up first, as Kapler did in Atlanta.

But the only man to manage the Cubs to a World Series title in the post- Model T era was criticized sharply and widely in the days and months after pulling off that rare and long- coveted feat.

And he thinks he knows why.

“Because the only part I think a lot of fans really understand is bullpen decisions,” Maddon said of everything that goes into planning and managing during a conversati­on late in spring training. “Because there’s so much nuance in the game, whether playing infields in, playing infields back, where you put this guy on the shift, the pinch- hitting situation, why you move your outfield, why you set your lineup that way. That’s really void of scrutiny most of the time because people don’t understand that. “But what they think they understand is bullpens. I would hope that people get a little bit more sophistica­ted and not just scrutinize bullpen decisions and really delve into the rest of the game.” The criticism Kapler got for decisions made in the Phillies’ opening series against the Braves was admittedly well- deserved. “I understand that in Philadelph­ia and nationally, people are going to have strong reactions, and they should,” Kapler told media before Tuesday’s game in New York. “I think they’re justified in this particular case.” Kapler took Aaron Nola out of the opener with a 5- 0 lead in the sixth at 68 pitches ( and lost 8- 5). He brought reliever Hoby Milner into a blowout loss Saturday before Milner threw a warmup pitch in the bullpen — earning a call from the league over the delay it caused.

Following a plan that involved heavy reliance on a nine- man bullpen with extra days off in the early part of the season, Kapler got only 36 outs from his starters the first three games, 44 from relievers and three from a position player.

“I guess you’re going to find out if those guys can hold up like that,” Maddon said of what looks like a postseason pitching approach to the regular season. “I like what we’re doing and how we do it, but that’s how they want to do it. We’ll see how it plays out.”

 ?? AP ?? Joe Maddon says fans think they understand bullpen moves, and that’s why they scrutinize managers’ decisions so much.
AP Joe Maddon says fans think they understand bullpen moves, and that’s why they scrutinize managers’ decisions so much.
 ??  ?? Gabe Kapler
Gabe Kapler

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