Lethbridge Herald

Dombrowski out with Sox

DEFENDING WORLD SERIES CHAMPIONS PART WAYS WITH BASEBALL BOSS

- Jimmy Golen THE ASSOCIATED PRESS — BOSTON

Dave Dombrowski built World Series champions in Florida and Boston in a 40-year career in baseball and also helped the Detroit Tigers reach the Series twice.

He’s also pretty experience­d at what happens after that.

The Red Sox parted ways with Dombrowski shortly after midnight Monday, less than a year after winning the World Series. In three years as the team’s president of baseball operations, he took the team from back-to-back last-place finishes to three straight AL East titles.

“Four years ago, we were faced with a critical decision about the direction of the franchise,” Red Sox owner John Henry said in a statement Monday. “With a World Series championsh­ip and three consecutiv­e American League East titles, he has cemented what was already a Hall of Fame career.”

The news was first announced after a 10-5 loss to the Yankees while most of the city’s attention was focused on the New England Patriots’ season-opening victory over Pittsburgh and the unveiling of a sixth Super Bowl banner.

A statement emailed to reporters later Monday quoted the team’s top brass but said there would be “no formal media availabili­ty” to discuss the move less than a year after the team won the World Series.

It was nothing new to Dombrowski, who has also been fired from the White Sox and Tigers. He did not immediatel­y respond to a text message seeking comment.

“Dave will hold a special place in franchise history as a key architect of one of the greatest Red Sox teams ever assembled,” co-owner Tom Werner was quoted as saying. “His willingnes­s to make bold moves helped deliver our fourth World Series championsh­ip in the 21st century.”

A veteran baseball executive who worked in front offices in Chicago and Montreal before winning a championsh­ip in Miami and helping the Tigers win two AL pennants, the 63-yearold Dombrowski was brought in to steady the Red Sox front office in 2015 while the team stumbled.

The Red Sox followed with three straight AL East titles — a first in franchise history — and won a club-record 108 games last season en route to their fourth World Series championsh­ip since 2004.

But this year’s team — with largely the same roster as last year’s — has gone 76-67, losing five of their first six games and never really getting back into contention. While Dombrowski stood pat at the trade deadline, with a wild-card berth still in reach, the club went on an eight-game losing streak.

The Red Sox finished Sunday trailing the Yankees by 17 1/2 games in the AL East with 19 games to play.

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