The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Master planner: Friedman built Rays, then left to build Dodgers

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ARLINGTON, Texas — Andrew Friedman isn’t quite torn.

The Dodgers’ president of baseball operations since October 2014, he helped build Los Angeles into a power that reached the World Series for the third time in four seasons.

He had been Tampa Bay’s executive vice president of baseball operations since 2006, building a team that reached the World Series in 2008 and overseeing the acquisitio­n of Kevin Kiermaier, Blake Snell and Diego Castillo and a staff with many holdovers still in place.

With the Dodgers, he oversaw the acquisitio­n of Mookie Betts and Brusdar Graterol, the drafting of Walker Buehler and the signing of A. J. Pollock, Max Muncy and Blake Treinen.

“It kind of hit me today waking up and processing all the text messages and questions about it,” Friedman said Monday, a day before the Dodgers and Rays face each other in the World Series opener. “It’s definitely surreal. Some of my best friends in life are there. And we joked when I left the team that we were going to meet up in the World Series one day. And for it actually to happen is surreal.”

Erik Neander, promoted to Tampa Bay’s vice president of baseball operations when Friedman left, joined the Rays as an intern in January 2007 and learned from his boss. The Rays succeeded despite resources limited by an attendance perenniall­y among the major leagues’ lowest.

They won their first pennant in 2008 with a $ 51 million payroll that was 28th in a season the Yankees topped spending at $ 222.5 million, according to Major League Baseball’s figures, and won the AL Championsh­ip Series over Boston, second at $ 147 million.

Tampa Bay is 28th again in this pandemic- shortened season at $ 29 million, yet it upset the Yankees ($ 83 million) and Houston ($ 81 million), earning a berth for the title against the top- spending Dodgers ($ 95.6 million).

His boyish face now slightly obscured by a short beard of gray and white, Friedman roots for the Rays from afar, watching a large amount of their games because of the time difference from California. But he does not feel split loyalties along the lines of Truffaldin­o Battochio, the title character of Carlo Goldoni’s “The Servant of Two Masters.”

“Payrolls don’t decide the standings, and I think we see evidence of that every year,” Friedman said. “Having a really deep and talented roster regardless of what your payroll is is the key to winning games, and that’s what they have. And it’s been through a lot of very shrewd moves, some through the draft, some through trades and all kinds of different creative ways of player procuremen­t.“

An outfielder who attended Tulane on a baseball scholarshi­p, Friedman graduated with a bachelor’s degree in management with a concentrat­ion in finance and went to work with Bear Stearns Cos. Inc. for two years followed by three years with MidMark Capital.

Friedman was hired by the Tampa Bay in 2004 at the behest of Stuart Sternberg, a retired Goldman Sachs managing director who bought the Rays. As Sternberg assumed operating control of the team in October 2005, he expanded Friedman’s role to general manager in practice, if not title, following the firing of Chuck LeMar.

Friedman valued versatile players with plate discipline and defensive abilities, and pitchers with flexibilit­y to fill various roles. Culture establishe­d atop the team by Sternberg and in the baseball operations department by Friedman lives on with Neander and his staff.

“I hope we’re not too much of a surprise, but we’ve had some success here and feel like we’re where we should be,” Neander said.

 ?? Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press ?? Dodgers President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman celebrates with the trophy after Los Angeles beat the Braves in Game 7 of the NLCS.
Tony Gutierrez / Associated Press Dodgers President of Baseball Operations Andrew Friedman celebrates with the trophy after Los Angeles beat the Braves in Game 7 of the NLCS.

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