azdad1978
Championship!!!!
The Arizona Republic
Nov. 19, 2004 12:00 AM
Wally Backman, who lost his job as Diamondbacks manager following revelations of prior criminal and financial problems, said in an interview Thursday with ESPN that the media distorted his past and he wished the team would have stood behind him.
Backman, who had managed in the Diamondbacks minor league system, was hired as major league manager and fired within five days earlier this month. The team learned about his problems from media reports after failing to conduct its own background check.
Backman, from his Prineville, Ore., home, told the sports network that mistakes from his past were not brought up during the interview process.
"The facts were very misleading what the media had, the way the media used it, which was crushing to me," Backman said. "Some of the things that happened, it wasn't all true."
Backman said he did have a DUI in 1999 as manager of a minor league baseball team in Washington state, and his ex-wife did have a restraining order placed on him in 1995.
"No divorce is pretty," Backman told ESPN. "Nobody wants to have to go through one. The fact is, when I went to court over the restraining order, the judge threw it out of court, so the restraining order was in place only until I could go to court. . . . I made mistakes. I am going to admit that. I didn't ever let it affect my job"
The team had pledged to support him despite the media reports, Backman said.
"The Diamondbacks told me day after day when everything was coming out in the media that they were going to stand behind me 100 percent," he said. "And unfortunately they had a change in thought."
The Diamondbacks announced the hiring of Bob Melvin the same day Backman was dismissed.
"I hope Wally can move forward with his life and at some future time he can have an opportunity with baseball," Diamondbacks General Partner Ken Kendrick said Thursday.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/diamondbacks/articles/1119backman1119.html
Nov. 19, 2004 12:00 AM
Wally Backman, who lost his job as Diamondbacks manager following revelations of prior criminal and financial problems, said in an interview Thursday with ESPN that the media distorted his past and he wished the team would have stood behind him.
Backman, who had managed in the Diamondbacks minor league system, was hired as major league manager and fired within five days earlier this month. The team learned about his problems from media reports after failing to conduct its own background check.
Backman, from his Prineville, Ore., home, told the sports network that mistakes from his past were not brought up during the interview process.
"The facts were very misleading what the media had, the way the media used it, which was crushing to me," Backman said. "Some of the things that happened, it wasn't all true."
Backman said he did have a DUI in 1999 as manager of a minor league baseball team in Washington state, and his ex-wife did have a restraining order placed on him in 1995.
"No divorce is pretty," Backman told ESPN. "Nobody wants to have to go through one. The fact is, when I went to court over the restraining order, the judge threw it out of court, so the restraining order was in place only until I could go to court. . . . I made mistakes. I am going to admit that. I didn't ever let it affect my job"
The team had pledged to support him despite the media reports, Backman said.
"The Diamondbacks told me day after day when everything was coming out in the media that they were going to stand behind me 100 percent," he said. "And unfortunately they had a change in thought."
The Diamondbacks announced the hiring of Bob Melvin the same day Backman was dismissed.
"I hope Wally can move forward with his life and at some future time he can have an opportunity with baseball," Diamondbacks General Partner Ken Kendrick said Thursday.
http://www.azcentral.com/sports/diamondbacks/articles/1119backman1119.html