Daily Southtown

New GM’s background in developmen­t key

Reputation during tenure in Cleveland helped make Hawkins Hoyer’s choice

- By Meghan Montemurro

When Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer began making phone calls this summer as he began the process to find a new general manager, one name kept popping up.

Carter Hawkins’ reputation and the relationsh­ips he built during his 14 years in the Cleveland organizati­on quickly landed him on Hoyer’s radar for the position, and that culminated Monday afternoon when the 37-year-old was formally introduced as Cubs GM.

“In a world where this job is constantly evolving, I felt like his intellectu­al curiosity and his humility really stood out to me as attributes that will allow him to continue and stay at the cutting edge of baseball,” Hoyer said of the former Cleveland assistant GM.

As a catcher at Vanderbilt, Hawkins envisioned his path leading to a profession­al playing career with the ultimate goal of reaching the majors.

Those dreams took a detour, however, before he graduated in 2007.

“Every player that goes to college baseball, whether it’s Vanderbilt or whether it’s (Division III), they think they’re going to be a profession­al baseball player,” Hawkins said. “And I did until David Price walked through the doors and it was pretty clear to me that one of these things doesn’t look like the other.”

As Hoyer went through the search process, he narrowed his focus to candidates with extensive player developmen­t expertise, an area where the next GM could add value within the Cubs’ current front-office structure.

“Ultimately, that’ll be the key to this next wave of success is how

well can we take these players we traded for and get them to the big leagues,” Hoyer said. “Internatio­nal signings, amateur signings — we know we have to do a great job in player developmen­t over the next three to five years.”

Hawkins’ duties with Cleveland, which included serving as assistant director of player developmen­t before a promotion to director of player developmen­t in 2015, certainly fit those parameters. On Monday he preached the importance of not skipping steps or taking the path of least resistance, explaining how “it is so easy to pull the plug on a process when you don’t get immediate results.”

Part of Hawkins’ job will involve applying the approach and processes utilized when he was with a small-market team with financial limitation­s. Can he make that work with the Cubs? The answer won’t be known for at least a year or two on the player developmen­t

side. But that’s why Hoyer targeted and hired Hawkins.

“With Cleveland, we were forced to be discipline­d in our processes, we were forced to be deliberate in our decisions and I think that’s something that’s applicable to any sized market,” Hawkins said. “Obviously, your range of options when you have more resources is a little bit wider. But the ability to be delivering those decisions, building great processes in those decisions, should be just as good.”

Expecting their partnershi­p to immediatel­y replicate the bond between Hoyer and former Cubs President Theo Epstein isn’t realistic. That relationsh­ip began in their late 20s and was cultivated in two organizati­ons together.

“We kind of grew up together,” Hoyer said of Epstein. “Obviously whoever I hired, we’re not going to have that. So being able to have a casual interview conversati­on that ranges through all the topics, and being able to sit there for five-plus hours, I think that’s a pretty good indication that’s a good start to that relationsh­ip.”

That conversati­on between Hoyer and Hawkins lasted so long — their dinner get-together began a little before 7 p.m. and didn’t end until after midnight — that the person who was supposed to pick up Hawkins went home, thinking the restaurant was closed.

Hawkins has appreciate­d how Hoyer’s wife, Merrill, has helped his wife, Lindsay — who is due to deliver their third child in February — through the onboarding process and transition to Chicago.

“From that end, it showed that he cared at a very high level, that this could be a partnershi­p that could really be a friendship,” Hawkins said. “He and Theo, I’m not going to think that we would even come close to that type of relationsh­ip, but if we can get a tenth of that, maybe we’ll be OK.”

Hoyer wanted whomever he hired to have an area of focus, and he indicated Hawkins will have autonomy in player developmen­t. Hawkins’ focus in the coming weeks and months will be talking to as many people as possible, particular­ly on the player developmen­t side, to understand and assess the organizati­on.

“His expertise on making players better, whether it’s through player developmen­t or high performanc­e, seemed like a really natural fit,” Hoyer said. “And on areas of major importance, certainly we’ll come together and work on those things.”

Hawkins joins the organizati­on with essentiall­y a blank slate in terms of player payroll and roster flexibilit­y — the aftermath of not reaching contract extensions in the spring with Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant or Javier Báez, then jettisonin­g all three franchise icons in a flurry of trade-deadline moves along with other players who had options for next season.

Watching the Cubs make those trades from afar showed Hawkins that Hoyer and the Cubs are willing to make difficult decisions.

“From our perspectiv­e with Cleveland, we felt like it was it was a smart move and thought that their returns were really, really excellent,” Hawkins said. “It’s rare that you’ll be sitting in your war room during the trade deadline and a new trade will come across the ticker and everybody goes, ‘Oh, my gosh,’ but that happened a couple of times with what they were able to do.”

The Cubs have a variety of paths they could take this offseason to improve the roster and bolster organizati­onal depth. While that carries more of a short-term focus, the Cubs need to improve their player developmen­t as they look to put together their next championsh­ip core.

Some of those pieces might already be in their minor-league system. It’s on Hawkins, with his player developmen­t background, to ensure the Cubs have a sustainabl­e foundation. They need to be able to regularly supplement their big-league roster with up-and-coming talent, especially pitchers.

All of that is easier said than done, but that’s why Hoyer tabbed Hawkins for the challenge.

“That’s something I saw in Cleveland, where that was who we are: being discipline­d in our decisions and delivering our decisions,” Hawkins said. “But that doesn’t mean not make decisions. That doesn’t mean inaction over action. Like, we have to make decisions, we have to be always moving forward, always looking for the next thing. Just be deliberate in that process.

“But really it’s about the people and getting everyone bought into that vision. When you do that, really cool things can happen.”

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? New Cubs general manager Carter Hawkins speaks after being introduced Monday outside of Wrigley Field.
BRIAN CASSELLA / CHICAGO TRIBUNE New Cubs general manager Carter Hawkins speaks after being introduced Monday outside of Wrigley Field.

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