Managerial Security: Look No Further Than Twins
In some major league baseball towns a
losing record fuels speculation that the manager will be fired. Not in
Minneapolis, though, where the Twins have stuck with two managers since
1986 after
Tom
Kelly took over for Ray Miller during that season. There have been championship
seasons and last place finishes but team ownership and management have
employed just
Kelly from 1986-2001 and Ron Gardenhire starting
with the 2002 season.
Gardenhire has won four Central Division
titles in six years. Last year was his worst record, 79-83, and now
with a starting pitching staff that could disappoint the
2008 season might be even darker. Won’t matter, though; in good times
and bad, the Twins stand by their man.
Gardenhire is second in seniority among
American League managers to Mike Scioscia of the Angels,
according to
www.wikipedia.org. Only Bobby Cox of the Braves and Tony
La Russa of the Cardinals have managed teams in the National League
longer than Gardenhire has been leading the Twins.
Team president Dave St. Peter told
Sports Headliners it’s the philosophy of the Pohlad family
ownership and top management to hire “good people,” provide support, and
let individuals like Gardenhire do their jobs in successful and not so
successful times. Part of the mantra, too, is to hire and promote from
within. St. Peter said all the present Twins coaches, and Gardenhire,
came up through the minor league system.
Gardenhire, headed into his seventh
season, is tied for second in Twins’ managerial longevity with Sam
Mele. Gardenhire is already second in all-time wins with 534.
Kelly managed for part or all of 16 seasons under Pohlad ownership. His
overall record was 1,140 wins, 1240 losses. Although he won two World
Series championships, he lost more total games than he won, an indication
of the organization’s patience.
St.
Peter expressed admiration for what Gardenhire has accomplished
since replacing Kelly who no longer wanted to manage. “He has in a very
short amount of time developed a reputation I think as one of the game’s
best managers,” he said.
An outsider is immediately impressed with
Gardenhire’s upbeat and friendly personality, but there is a will
and determination to win and do things correctly that is equally
evident. “I think his personality is...certainly somewhat fun loving, but
at the same time he can be tough when he needs to be tough,” St. Peter
said. “And he certainly demands that his players respect the game and
play the game the right way. And those are things that the Twins’
organization are known for throughout the game.”