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I don't think Grady did anything wrong per se, but logic would tell you he has about as much chance as any of us at landing that job. He gets it, and it's the same old, same old, and no matter who is manager, have a great chance at over 100 loses next year. 

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6 minutes ago, Dick Allen said:

I don't think Grady did anything wrong per se, but logic would tell you he has about as much chance as any of us at landing that job. He gets it, and it's the same old, same old, and no matter who is manager, have a great chance at over 100 loses next year. 

Jesus Christ himself would lose 100+ games with who Getz will put on the field for 2025.

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3 hours ago, southsider2k5 said:

Jesus Christ himself would lose 100+ games with who Getz will put on the field for 2025.

Agreed. I honestly don’t even know what the best move would be here. Since we won’t be competing any time soon, should we just let Grady ride it out? 

Will the young guys at least play hard for Grady? 

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I would hope that those close to Grady advise him against taking this job honestly.  He apparently has aspirations to coach in MLB for a long time and is a young guy with limited experience so being the manager of this dumpster fire will irreparably damage his career prospects.  I sincerely hope that being exposed to the dysfunction within the franchise the last few months of this season has opened his eyes and he almost immediately flees to a job with a competent organization for his own sake.

This is the current state of the White Sox.  They are such trash from top to bottom that you should hope anyone with promise leaves before their career is destroyed.  I’m glad Cease got out, good for Kopech, hope ReyLo and Bummer succeed this post-season.  Hopefully Crochet and Robert can get out while they still have a chance.

We can always make fun of the Tatis trade but honestly it was a good thing.  Hes probably out of the league today if he stays in the White Sox system.  Guys like Moncada, Eloy, TA have their faults but the career arc is drastically different if they are in any other MLB organization.  I am sincerely concerned for guys like Montgomery and Schultz.  If I was their agent, I would be pushing incredibly hard for a trade.

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10 minutes ago, SoxBlanco said:

Agreed. I honestly don’t even know what the best move would be here. Since we won’t be competing any time soon, should we just let Grady ride it out? 

Will the young guys at least play hard for Grady? 

If we are being honest and doing anything other than a temper tantrum, no we shouldn't let Grady ride it out.

Grady is, quite honestly, out of date. He took 6 years out of baseball to raise his kids. While this is an honorable choice, how different were training techniques, pitching techniques, workout techniques back in 2017? The level of digital content, information, the way pitchers fire constant heat, these things are substantially different. 

He has been at most part of 1 spring training, on the outside with the White Sox, since coming back. He might be a great person, he might be a great motivator, but damn a team this young, with this many holes and pitchers to be brought up, needs a coach who at least has some experience with modern player training and development. 

Bring in someone more recently experienced. Whether that's Shoemaker, the guy with the Dodgers, or whoever else, bringing in someone who is fully up to date and who has been a major part of a training and development program recently should be a priority. Even Grady should want this, you can't just jump into some jobs this raw.

Are we throwing a temper tantrum, saying "F*** this Getz is just going to find some more veterans and child abusers so who cares"? Because fine, might as well ride with Grady.

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19 minutes ago, Rusty said:

I would hope that those close to Grady advise him against taking this job honestly.  He apparently has aspirations to coach in MLB for a long time and is a young guy with limited experience so being the manager of this dumpster fire will irreparably damage his career prospects.  I sincerely hope that being exposed to the dysfunction within the franchise the last few months of this season has opened his eyes and he almost immediately flees to a job with a competent organization for his own sake.

This is the current state of the White Sox.  They are such trash from top to bottom that you should hope anyone with promise leaves before their career is destroyed.  I’m glad Cease got out, good for Kopech, hope ReyLo and Bummer succeed this post-season.  Hopefully Crochet and Robert can get out while they still have a chance.

We can always make fun of the Tatis trade but honestly it was a good thing.  Hes probably out of the league today if he stays in the White Sox system.  Guys like Moncada, Eloy, TA have their faults but the career arc is drastically different if they are in any other MLB organization.  I am sincerely concerned for guys like Montgomery and Schultz.  If I was their agent, I would be pushing incredibly hard for a trade.

How is TA's career arc any different? He was good here, and then he fell off a cliff because of injuries or his own personal doing. And yeah, Schultz should absolutely try to leave. It's not like the Sox have a recent history of dominating lefties. Cmon. It's like the only good thing they currently do. 

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1 hour ago, SoxBlanco said:

Agreed. I honestly don’t even know what the best move would be here. Since we won’t be competing any time soon, should we just let Grady ride it out? 

Will the young guys at least play hard for Grady? 

Honestly?  We need to find a Ricky Renteria.  Get these guys ready to play every day.

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It wouldn't surprise me.  How many would  take the job?   There is probably a shortage of fools not named Grifol.

Dysfunctional organization

Having Tony looking over your shoulder

High risk career move if you want to be a manager

Inheriting a questionable coaching staff

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1 hour ago, kitekrazy said:

It wouldn't surprise me.  How many would  take the job?   There is probably a shortage of fools not named Grifol.

Dysfunctional organization

Having Tony looking over your shoulder

High risk career move if you want to be a manager

Inheriting a questionable coaching staff

If you're smart...this is a career building step. Losing for a couple years, gaining experience at truly managing, maybe having a few things you can point to as successes - this can be a bridge elsewhere.

The example continues to be AJ Hinch, who managed the Diamondbacks for less than 2 years, spent a couple of years in a front office, then got the Astros job. In that case, his previous experience with the Diamondbacks was viewed as a positive because he had experience managing a clubhouse, even if the team was not performing well. In the interviews, he was able to describe how his side and the analytics side would interact in what the Astros were building, he was able to put up a few firm walls around things like making the lineup and justify why that should be his responsibility, and Luhnow responded well to the balance that Hinch wanted to create.

AJ Hinch is in the playoffs today, in part, because he lost for a few years with the Diamondbacks. His record there isn't anything to brag about, but it was useful experience for him.

There's only 30 of these jobs, and only about 2/3 of those are worth having. if you want one, and a good one, you have to look at paths to get there. How many years was Dave Martinez a manager in waiting? Brian Snitker managed and coached in the Braves's system for like 30 years before he got the job there. 

Go into this role knowing its a salary boost, knowing it will not turn out well, do your best to set up clear boundaries with this organization, and try to use it as a career building experience. For the guy on the Dodgers, for example, it's a reasonable path.

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  • Heads22 changed the title to Troll account on the managerial opening
39 minutes ago, Balta1701 said:

If you're smart...this is a career building step. Losing for a couple years, gaining experience at truly managing, maybe having a few things you can point to as successes - this can be a bridge elsewhere.

The example continues to be AJ Hinch, who managed the Diamondbacks for less than 2 years, spent a couple of years in a front office, then got the Astros job. In that case, his previous experience with the Diamondbacks was viewed as a positive because he had experience managing a clubhouse, even if the team was not performing well. In the interviews, he was able to describe how his side and the analytics side would interact in what the Astros were building, he was able to put up a few firm walls around things like making the lineup and justify why that should be his responsibility, and Luhnow responded well to the balance that Hinch wanted to create.

AJ Hinch is in the playoffs today, in part, because he lost for a few years with the Diamondbacks. His record there isn't anything to brag about, but it was useful experience for him.

There's only 30 of these jobs, and only about 2/3 of those are worth having. if you want one, and a good one, you have to look at paths to get there. How many years was Dave Martinez a manager in waiting? Brian Snitker managed and coached in the Braves's system for like 30 years before he got the job there. 

Go into this role knowing its a salary boost, knowing it will not turn out well, do your best to set up clear boundaries with this organization, and try to use it as a career building experience. For the guy on the Dodgers, for example, it's a reasonable path.

Let me know if Grifol ever gets hired.

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10 minutes ago, kitekrazy said:

Let me know if Grifol ever gets hired.

Was he very smart about his work? Well prepared? Did he set any clear boundaries with the franchise, did he make sure he had support from the franchise in terms of scouting reports, coaching, resources? Naw, if you believe the reports, he was the perfect Reinsdorf coach, a guy who liked baseball but didn’t want to learn anything new. He fit their prejudices To the letter, which is why things imploded under him so badly.

 

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