Daily Southtown

INTO THE DEEP END

Franchise-altering roster decisions await Hoyer as the Cubs’ new boss

- By Mark Gonzales

When the Chicago Cubs were negotiatin­g with fivestar free-agent manager Joe Maddon six years ago, Jed Hoyer performed the ominous task of flying to San Diego County to inform incumbent RickRenter­ia he was about to be replaced despite the team’s sevengame improvemen­t in his first season.

But that assignment seems inconseque­ntial now compared to what awaits Hoyer inhisnewpo­sition as Cubs president of baseball operations.

“Jed is going to put his fingerprin­ts on this team, and Theo Epstein’s departure has allowed him to do this,” said a source who has worked with Hoyer and Epstein with the Cubs and Boston Red Sox.

“But he has to choose which players to build around. He can’t keep them all. And rebuilding while still competing is tough to do.”

It’s especially tough in theCOVID-19 era, when it’s still unclear whether fans will be admitted to home ballparks to boost revenues. And that’s likely to impact thenumbero­f teams willing to give up prospects for only oneguarant­eed year of service for Javier Baez, Kris Bryant, Anthony Rizzo and Kyle Schwarber — who all can become free agents after 2021.

There is also a Dec. 2 tender date looming by whichHoyer and his assistants must decide whether to offer a contract to arbitratio­n-eligible players such as Schwarber, who is coming off a rough 60-game season — if he’s not traded before that deadline.

Hoyer, 46, handled many duties in his previous role as

Cubs general manager and must select a successorw­ho will not serve exclusivel­y as a yes man. Hoyer had input in the retooling of the baseball operations department last year, and his successor must be receptive to keeping that transition cohesive.

But in the end, Hoyer will be judged on the results of his decisions.

“When he took over (as Padres GM in 2009), he said, ‘Bud, I’m an open book,’ ” said now-Colorado Rockies manager Bud Black of their first meetings in San Diego. “This is my first (GM) gig. I’m open to discussion.

“The talks were collaborat­ive. But yes, he definitely can pull the trigger.”

Black recalledho­wdetermine­dHoyerwas to acquire Anthony Rizzo from the Red Sox as the centerpiec­e of a trade forAdrian Gonzalez.

“Of course, when Jed rejoined Theo in Chicago, he made sure they’d get Rizzo back,” Black smirked.

For the Cubs now, the reservoir of resources is considerab­ly shallower after massive layoffs in the baseball operations department that might cause Hoyer to lean more heavily on analytics than the scouting and player developmen­t

department­s.

That is expected to be clarified early next week whenHoyer meets with the media.

There already is an analytic lean to the team, and the next assistant hitting coach is expected to process data while working with head hitting coach Anthony Iapoce.

That doesn’t necessaril­y mean Hoyer will downplay the significan­ce of the general manager position. Jared Porter worked with Hoyer with theRed Sox and Cubs before completing his fourth season as senior vice president and assistant general manager of the Arizona Diamondbac­ks. Amiel Sawdaye, who holds the same title with the Diamondbac­ks, also worked with Hoyer in Boston, with an emphasison­amateursco­uting. They were two of six finalists for the Los Angeles AngelsGMjo­b.

Within the organizati­on, Jason McLeod, the senior vice president of player personnel, has interviewe­d with several teams for GM positions over the years. One source viewed Jeff Greenberg, the director of pro scouting and baseball operations, as a viable GM candidate.

“He’s sharp, yet he’s not afraid to ask what needs to be done,” the source said. “He doesn’t pretend to knoweveryt­hing.”

On the roster front, there will be plenty of ramificati­ons should Hoyer trade any of his four potential 2021 free agents. Many of the Cubs top prospects, led by left- hander Brailyn Marquez, outfielder Brennen Davis and catcher MiguelAmay­a, missed a full season of developmen­t because ofCOVID-19 shutting things down and likely will need a full year of minorleagu­e seasoning before they’re strongly considered for full-time roles in the majors.

Even if the Cubs acquire at least one major-leagueread­y starting pitcher and position player through a trade, they’ll still need to add upper-minor-league depth to bridge the gap between the major-league roster and top prospects who haven’t played at the Double-A level.

Hoyer ultimately could decide whether the organizati­on will fully shift away its method of drafting and developing position players and signing free- agent pitchers to compose the bulk of its major-league roster.

The developmen­t of Marquez, Ryan Jensen, Cory Abbott, Riley Thompson, Tyson Miller and Kohl Franklin could help that transition.

“Jed has a nice balance,” Black said. “He knows whentocome­downstairs to discuss a baseball move or talk baseball. He also knows howimporta­nt it is to not be overbearin­g, which is always good to see.”

Hoyer has a strong relationsh­ip with manager David Ross.

But faced with the Cubs’ gradual decline since the 2016 World Series title, Hoyer has the task of replacing pillars on the field and repairing a foundation that has cracked through layoffs and a lack of results.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Jed Hoyer was named the Cubs’ president of baseball operations after Theo Epstein’s resignatio­n on Tuesday.
BRIAN CASSELLA / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Jed Hoyer was named the Cubs’ president of baseball operations after Theo Epstein’s resignatio­n on Tuesday.

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