By Rod Lakin courtesy of AZ Gameday:
There is some solace, this spring, that in the ever-changing landscape of professional baseball certain things have remained the same. After all, it wouldn’t quite be baseball without Buck Showalter bringing his infielders in during the early portion of the Texas Rangers second game or, with runners in scoring position, Arizona Diamondbacks manager Bob Brenly leaving a left-handed relief pitcher in to face baseball’s top right-handed RBI producer.
Indeed these two situations represent the absurdity of the only two managers that the Diamondbacks have employed. On one extreme you have the blundering Brenly unable to anticipate one batter ahead let alone one inning. On the other, there is the high-handed Showalter, unable to overlook even the slightest of details.
In the case of Showalter, someone couldn’t have played as big a part in two world championship clubs without having one ring to show for it. Given that, one shouldn’t underestimate the type of self-detrimental qualities that it would take to wrestle such a legacy away. But alas, Showalter shouldn’t fret much longer. It appears as if his authoritarianism wasn’t wretched enough to send a second manager to the hall of fame.
http://www.azgameday.com/news_gameday.shtml#newsitem1083256415,60276,
There is some solace, this spring, that in the ever-changing landscape of professional baseball certain things have remained the same. After all, it wouldn’t quite be baseball without Buck Showalter bringing his infielders in during the early portion of the Texas Rangers second game or, with runners in scoring position, Arizona Diamondbacks manager Bob Brenly leaving a left-handed relief pitcher in to face baseball’s top right-handed RBI producer.
Indeed these two situations represent the absurdity of the only two managers that the Diamondbacks have employed. On one extreme you have the blundering Brenly unable to anticipate one batter ahead let alone one inning. On the other, there is the high-handed Showalter, unable to overlook even the slightest of details.
In the case of Showalter, someone couldn’t have played as big a part in two world championship clubs without having one ring to show for it. Given that, one shouldn’t underestimate the type of self-detrimental qualities that it would take to wrestle such a legacy away. But alas, Showalter shouldn’t fret much longer. It appears as if his authoritarianism wasn’t wretched enough to send a second manager to the hall of fame.
http://www.azgameday.com/news_gameday.shtml#newsitem1083256415,60276,