Marin Independent Journal

If Beane leaves, who becomes the face of the A’s?

- By Shayna Rubin

Billy Beane has long been the face of the A’s front office; his name is synonymous with the “Moneyball” operation rooted in Oakland and popularize­d throughout Major League Baseball.

With reports that Beane will likely leave the A’s after 30 years in the organizati­on to pursue other business ventures, A’s fans are surely wondering: Who will fill Beane’s place?

Surely, there is a possibilit­y for a front- office shake-up, but current generalman­ager David Forst would presumably step up into Beane’s role as the highest-ranking baseball executive in the A’s organizati­on.

Forst has been Beane’s secondinco­mmand since he became his assistant general manager in 2004, succeeding Paul DePodesta. When Beane stepped aside from his general manager duties in 2015, Forst was tapped as his replacemen­t.

The changing of the guard didn’t require much of a shift; according to Beane. Forst was already well-versed in a general manager’s responsibi­lities.

“No. 1, we don’t want to lose him, because frankly, he’s one of the most valuable people in the organizati­on,” Beane told report

ers after the promotion in 2015. “This makes public how we’ve been operating. David has a lot of autonomy. He had it before. He’ll continue to have that.”

Clubs vied for Forst’s services before his promotion. He declined interviews for general manager vacancies with the San Diego Padres and Seattle Mariners.

Now 44, Forst has been with the Oakland organizati­on since 2000, two years after he graduated from Harvard, where he played shortstop for the Crimson. He joined as a scout and quickly moved up the ranks as a scouting director, then assistant GM.

Since his promotion to

GMand Beane’s to executive vice president of baseball operations, Forst has been the public voice of the A’s front office. With media, Forst rationaliz­es trades and transactio­ns. He paints the scope and vision for the A’s season at spring training and dissects the cause of death in the wake of team eliminatio­ns. During the coronaviru­s-impacted season, he talked through test delays and the midseason coronaviru­s positive test that shook the organizati­on.

Beane, even after his promotion to executive VP, has always been present, visible and candid about the team’s direction — even if the front office he built around him operated autonomous­ly.

Beane’s still the face of the front office, but that could soon change.

 ??  ?? Beane
Beane
 ?? JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP, FILE ?? A’s executive Billy Beane is reportedly looking at a financial position with Fenway Sports Group, but not a job in the Red Sox front office.
JANE TYSKA — BAY AREA NEWS GROUP, FILE A’s executive Billy Beane is reportedly looking at a financial position with Fenway Sports Group, but not a job in the Red Sox front office.

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