The Record (Troy, NY)

Padres fire manger Jayce Tingler after second-half collapse

- By BERNIE WILSON AP Sports Writer

SAN DIEGO (AP) » The San Diego Padres have fired Jayce Tingler, who presided over the biggest collapse in franchise history just a season after finishing second in voting for NL Manager of the Year.

General manager A.J. Preller announced the move Wednesday, three days after the Padres finished 7983 and in third place in the NL West, 28 games behind San Francisco. Preller said Tingler will be given the opportunit­y to remain in the organizati­on.

Tingler’s fate was sealed during a brutal freefall that saw the Padres go from a one-game lead for the NL’s second wild-card spot on Sept. 9 to being eliminated from playoff contention with seven games left. The Padres clinched their 10th losing record in 11 seasons.

Tingler was 116-106 overall in two seasons.

Tingler had no previous managerial experience above rookie-level ball and stints in various Dominican leagues before being hired on Oct. 28, 2019, by Preller, a friend from their time together in the Texas Rangers organizati­on.

Tingler guided the Padres to a 37-23 record in the pandemic-shortened 2020 season and their first playoff appearance in 13 years. They beat the St. Louis Cardinals in a wild-card series before being swept in the division series by the eventual World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

Led by superstars Fernando

Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado, and with a payroll of $175 million, the Padres entered this season with World Series aspiration­s and played with swagger until a number of problems surfaced during the second half, on the field and in the clubhouse.

Although Tatis remains one of the frontrunne­rs for NL MVP, he was bothered by a recurring left shoulder injury and was even moved to the outfield for a time in an attempt to lessen his exposure to injury.

The Padres failed to land a starting pitcher at the trade deadline and then saw their rotation decimated by injuries to Yu Darvish, Blake Snell and Chris Paddack,

with no depth available to fill in.

There were reports that some players were unhappy that the Padres tried to trade first baseman Eric Hosmer at the deadline. Later, reports surfaced that some players had gone to Preller to voice their displeasur­e with the job Tingler was doing.

In a stunning dugout dustup on Sept. 18, Machado cursed and yelled at Tatis and had to be separated by teammates and a coach. The spat came after Tatis struck out looking and then argued the call by umpire Phil Cuzzi. Tingler had been ejected when he came out to argue on Tatis’ behalf and wasn’t in the dugout

when the superstars clashed.

Tingler is the fourth manager Preller has fired in his seven-plus seasons. He fired veteran skipper Bud Black in June 2015 and replaced him with interim manager Pat Murphy, who was not retained. Preller then hired relatively unknown Andy Green, who had no big league managerial experience, although he had been third base coach of the Arizona Diamondbac­ks for one season after managing for four seasons in their farm system.

Green was fired with eight games left in the 2019 season after the team collapsed in the second half. He was 274-366 overall.

 ?? JEFF CHIU - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? San Diego Padres manager Jayce Tingler walks to the dugout after making a pitching change during the sixth inning of the team’s baseball game against the San Francisco Giants in San Francisco, Thursday, Sept. 16, 2021.
JEFF CHIU - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS San Diego Padres manager Jayce Tingler walks to the dugout after making a pitching change during the sixth inning of the team’s baseball game against the San Francisco Giants in San Francisco, Thursday, Sept. 16, 2021.

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