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Yankees interview former Indians, Mariners manager Wedge

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK » Eric Wedge promises a touchy-feely approach if hired as New York Yankees manager, rejecting the old-school method of publicly challengin­g players to motivate them.

“If something like that happens today, especially with social media and everything else that’s involved with it, it’s going to have legs, it’s going to be misinterpr­eted, there’s going to be a lot more opinion about it and it’s going to be one hell of the distractio­n,” the former Cleveland and Seattle manager said Friday after his interview with the Yankees. “I’d say that that day has probably passed by.”

Joe Girardi criticized Gary Sanchez last August and benched him for a game, saying: “Bottom line, he needs to improve. He’s late getting down.” Sanchez tied for the big league lead with 16 passed balls and was behind the plate for 53 wild pitches, second-most in the majors.

Wedge spoke of a generic player receiving a rebuke from his manager through the media.

“You’re going to have to have one tough cookie to be able to do that and make it work for you,” he

said. “For him to get something out of that, he’s going to have to be really tough to be able to handle that and actually digest it to see it’s in his best interest.”

After a decade managing the Yankees, Girardi was told last month that he was not being offered a contract. Wedge became the second person to interview for the job following New York bench coach Rob Thomson on Wednesday.

Sanchez, who turns 25 next month, was an All-Star in his first full big league season.

“He’s still young. He’s still learning. He’s still going through things that he needs to go through and he will continue to go through, but he’ll get better,” said Wedge, a former catcher. “It’s just a maturation process that young players with his type of ability have to go through.”

Now 49, Wedge was a “cup of coffee” player in the majors, getting 86 atbats over four seasons with Boston (1991-92, 1995) and Colorado (1994) and making 23 appearance­s behind the plate.

“I believe you can have a personal relationsh­ip with your players as well as a profession­al relationsh­ip,” he said. “It takes a little bit more time. It takes a little bit more effort. But I think that it’s something that’s imperative, something I’ve always done, something I’ll continue to do. And as long as they understand where you’re coming from, that you care about them, and you care about them for the right reasons, which quite frankly is for them and their family, then when it is time to turn that page to a more profession­al conversati­on of maybe an even more edgy conversati­on, we’ll be in a good position to do that.”

Wedge managed in Cleveland’s minor league system in 1998 and was promoted to big league manager before the 2003 season. He was voted AL Manager in the Year in 2007, when the Indians won the AL Central, beat the Yankees in the Division Series — the one with the Joba Chamberlai­n midge game — and lost to Boston in a seven-game Championsh­ip Series after holding a 3-1 lead. He was fired in 2009 after seven seasons with a 561-573 record.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this Sept. 25, 2013 photo, then-Seattle Mariners manager Eric Wedge smiles before a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, in Seattle. Former Cleveland and Seattle manager Eric Wedge has become the second person to interview with the New York...
ELAINE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this Sept. 25, 2013 photo, then-Seattle Mariners manager Eric Wedge smiles before a baseball game against the Kansas City Royals, in Seattle. Former Cleveland and Seattle manager Eric Wedge has become the second person to interview with the New York...
 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN II — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this May 23, 2009 photo, New York Yankees third base coach Rob Thompson celebrates as the Yankees score against the Philadelph­ia Phillies during the ninth inning of a baseball game in New York.
FRANK FRANKLIN II — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this May 23, 2009 photo, New York Yankees third base coach Rob Thompson celebrates as the Yankees score against the Philadelph­ia Phillies during the ninth inning of a baseball game in New York.

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