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Seven years after it began, the Eric Wedge era of
Indians baseball is over.
The Indians are in the early stages of what general
manager Mark Shapiro referred to as a "reloading" period, and the reload will
extend to the managerial position and the coaching staff.
Cleveland announced on Wednesday that Wedge and his
coaches were all relieved of their duties. Wedge and his staff will stay aboard
for the season's final six games, including the four-game set in Boston this
weekend.
According to a team source, Wedge had known his fate for
several days, while the coaches -- including pitching coach Carl Willis, hitting
coach Derek Shelton, bench coach Jeff Datz, first-base coach Luis Rivera,
third-base coach Joel Skinner and bullpen coach Chuck Hernandez -- were informed
of the moves following Tuesday's rainout against the White Sox.
The Indians, who will be on the hook to pay Wedge in the
neighborhood of $1.3 million in 2010, are in the midst of an organizational
review. Team owner Larry Dolan, team president Paul Dolan, Shapiro and assistant
GM Chris Antonetti have been meeting to discuss, among other things, the
managerial situation. It had been speculated for weeks that ownership might push
the front office to make a change in the dugout.
Once the season is over, the Indians will formally begin
the search to replace Wedge. An internal hire is considered unlikely. If that's
the case, then the Tribe will go outside the organization to hire its manager
for the first time since John McNamara took over in 1990.
It is possible that some members of Wedge's staff will
stay on, if the new manager sees fit.
With a 64-92 record entering Wednesday's doubleheader
against the White Sox, the Indians are wrapping up their worst season since
going 68-94 in 2003, which was Wedge's first year at the helm. The club is in
danger of finishing in last place in an American League Central, which it had
high hopes of winning coming into the season. The Indians have never finished
last in the history of the Central. The last Tribe team to finish last in its
division was the 1991 club that finished seventh in the AL East.
Regardless of where the Indians finish, '09 can safely
be labeled one of the most disappointing seasons in club history. And the
fallout of that disappointment has been a major upheaval in player personnel.
The dismissal of the 41-year-old Wedge is the first
major change among the organization's higher-ups, and it serves as the Tribe's
mea culpa, of sorts, to a fan base frustrated by the recent trades of star
players Cliff Lee and Victor Martinez. Wedge, the 2007 AL Manager of the Year,
had been a frequent target of fan criticism throughout his tenure, and that
criticism became even more pointed this year.
At one time, Shapiro and Wedge were seemingly joined at
the hip. Shapiro picked Wedge, a former catcher with the Red Sox and Rockies, to
be the club's skipper after Wedge spent five years managing in the Tribe's farm
system. Shapiro often referred to Wedge as his "partner."
That partnership, however, began to erode over the past
two years, as the Indians entered the '08 and '09 seasons with high hopes, only
to find themselves out of contention by the All-Star break. Slow starts, in
general, have been a major knock on Wedge. His Tribe teams went a combined 73-96
in April.
Still, when the heat on Wedge was particularly scorching
at midseason this year, Shapiro doused the flames by announcing that Wedge and
his coaching staff would remain aboard for the second half and be evaluated at
season's end.
But whereas the '08 club rebounded with a strong second
half to reach the .500 mark, this year's team has floundered in September,
sealing Wedge's fate. The Indians recently ended an 11-game losing streak that
fell one loss shy of tying a club record.
In seven seasons, Wedge has compiled a record of
560-568, with one division title and playoff appearance in 2007, when the
Indians finished one win shy of the World Series. Among the 39 full-time
managers in Tribe history, Wedge ranks fifth in wins, third in losses and fourth
in games managed.
When it comes to candidates to replace Wedge, former
Tribe pitcher and farm director and current Red Sox pitching coach John Farrell
has been a popular possibility listed by fans and the media, though he has no
managerial experience at any level. But according to a recent report in
FoxSports.com, Farrell has a clause in his contract that prevents him from
accepting a managerial job with another team until after the 2010 season.
However, a subsequent report in The Boston Globe indicated that the clause could
be removed if the Red Sox received some sort of compensation.