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General manager Larry Beinfest introduced Fredi Gonzalez as the Marlins' new manager hours after cutting ties with Joe Girardi.
Marlins dump Girardi, hire Braves third base coach
Posted: Tuesday October 3, 2006 10:12AM; Updated: Tuesday October 3, 2006 8:25PM
MIAMI (AP) -- Thanks to a managerial shuffle Tuesday, Florida Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria can now yell at umpires with the skipper's approval.
The Marlins fired Joe Girardi, and five hours later introduced as his replacement Fredi Gonzalez, third-base coach for the Atlanta Braves
the past four years. Girardi's departure after only one season had been
expected after his rift with Loria boiled over two months ago in an
on-field confrontation over the owner's heckling of an umpire.
Gonzalez, 42, interviewed with the Marlins a year ago after Jack McKeon
resigned but finished runner-up to Girardi. Born in Cuba and raised in
Miami, Gonzalez became the first manager in the Marlins' organization
when they hired him to run their first minor league team in Erie, Pa.,
in 1992.
"It's a long way from Erie, man," a smiling Gonzalez said at a news conference. "I hope I'm here for a lot of years."
Gonzalez said he has no problem with the owner razzing umps.
"If he wants to yell, he can yell," he said. "He paid for the team. He has the most expensive seat in the stadium."
The Marlins decided to fire Girardi not because of the umpire incident,
but because he failed to mesh with others in the organization, general
manager Larry Beinfest said.
"Joe is not returning because it
was not a good fit," Beinfest said. "I will take some of that blame.
I'm in charge, and it's my job to make sure everything runs as smoothly
and efficiently as possible."
The cost-conscious Marlins wanted
Girardi out so badly they were willing to let him go with two years
left on a guaranteed three-year contract, which may cost them as much
as $1.5 million. Florida made the move even though Girardi's considered
a strong candidate for NL manager of the year.
The Marlins had
baseball's youngest team and lowest payroll at $15 million, but Girardi
led them to a 78-84 record, and they were in contention for a playoff
berth until a late-September fade.
Girardi said he was fired
during a short, unemotional meeting in his office with general manager
Larry Beinfest, assistant general manager Mike Hill and team president
David Samson.
"They came in and said, `We're going to make a change,"' Girardi said. He said no reason was given, and he didn't ask for one.
Loria did not attend the meeting but later spoke to Girardi by phone, a
spokesman for the owner said. Several of Girardi's coaches will be
considered for Gonzalez's staff, Beinfest said.
Girardi, an Illinois native, Northwestern graduate and former Chicago Cubs
catcher, becomes a potential candidate to replace Dusty Baker, whose
four-year tenure with the Cubs ended Monday. Two other teams are also
looking for managers -- Washington parted with Frank Robinson, and San
Francisco cut ties with Felipe Alou.
Girardi said he has no
idea what he'll do next season, and plans to discuss options with his
wife. His voice broke when he began discussing his dismissal with
reporters in his office, but he was soon smiling and cracking jokes.
"I'll land on my feet," he said. "I talked to one of my mentors last
night and I said, `I've never been fired before.' And he said, `Welcome
to the club."'
Girardi declined to identify the mentor.
Beinfest said the decision to fire Girardi was cemented two weeks ago.
Aware that other managing jobs would likely come open, the Marlins
first contacted Gonzalez on Sept. 25 and had an agreement with him by
midweek last week, Beinfest said.
"We knew Fredi was our guy,
and we wanted to beat our competition to him," Beinfest said.
"Interviewing while you have a sitting manager probably isn't the
greatest thing, but we went through proper channels with the
commissioner's office and the Atlanta Braves."
Gonzalez becomes
the fourth manager hired by the Marlins since Loria bought the team in
2002. The latest change seemed inevitable after the rift between
Girardi and Loria erupted at a game Aug. 6.
The owner berated an umpire while sitting behind the plate. From the dugout, Girardi asked Loria to stop.
"The gist of the conversation to Jeffrey was, 'I preach to my players
about not arguing with umpires, and this is not going to help us,'"
Girardi said.
Loria angrily left his seat and confronted
Girardi after the game during a 90-minute clubhouse meeting. The owner
has refused to comment on the episode or respond to published reports
that he fired Girardi that day, then changed his mind.
Girardi declined to elaborate on what happened, or discuss his differences with Loria and Beinfest.
"Obviously, the things I did, whether they were perfect or not, the players responded. We won," Girardi said.
Beginning in spring training, Beinfest clashed with Girardi over
personnel decisions, and during the second half of the season the
general manager was rarely seen in the clubhouse or manager's office.
New York Yankees manager Joe Torre, who served as a mentor to Girardi, said he talked to his former catcher Monday.
"There was no anger," Torre said. "He understood that managing is not
always based on how well you do. There are certain things you need to
do, and people you need to please."
The Marlins' power struggle
had no apparent effect on the team. Widely projected to lose more than
100 games, Florida instead rallied from an 11-31 start and trailed in
the NL wild-card race by only two games on Sept. 12 before fading.
The Marlins became the first team to climb above .500 from 20 games
under. They also became the first team to have four rookie pitchers win
10 games, and they set a record for most home runs by rookies with 112.
"People thought we were going to lose more games than any team in
baseball, and we didn't," Girardi said. "And that's because of the
players."
Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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