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Manny makes his case
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I know, I know….it’s less than 12 hours since I called Manny out in this very space (see An Open Letter to Manny Ramirez) and he’s already making me feel a little regretful for my stance.
I won’t take back anything that I wrote and I’ll stand by it. Manny took my relationship with him as a fan and disregarded it, irreparably tearing it apart with his ambivalence towards us all in his pre-game comments.
“Enough is enough. I’m tired of them, they’re tired of me.”
Even as statements like this lead every local newspaper, sports report, blog, etc and took up what seemed like half of Baseball Tonight’s pregame coverage, Manny could muster the following with a straight face;
I don’t want to be a problem and a distraction to the Red Sox in such a critical moment of the season. I want to help the team, even if that means I have to go.
Ummm…Manny, you and not the organization or the media, are the root of this entire “problem” or “distraction”. I can only read this and call bull****.
But at least one thing that he mentioned to the media last night rang as true as the ropes he would hit later than night as he went he lead the Red Sox offense to a 9-2 win going 3-5 with two doubles and two RBI,
“They’re not stupid. Boston is not stupid. They’re not going to do it, they can say whatever they want. But when it comes to making a deal they’re not going to pull the trigger because they know what they’ve got here.
All you had to do was watch last night to know that the David Ortiz/Manny Ramirez combination is a duo that World Championships are born out of. Whether to prove the point to potential suitors (both via trade or via free agency next year) or to stick it in the eye of his doubters, Manny Ramirez was locked in. At the same time, David Ortiz looked like he hadn’t missed a beat in front of him.
While I think Theo Epstein should (and will) investigate every possible option to deal the disgruntled slugger as he has done many times over the year with hopes that he can repeat the feats of his 2004 “Nomar” trade in pursuit of a better “team”, I don’t think that there is an easy solution out there.
Any potential replacement from Matt Holiday to Mark Teixeira, Pat Burrell to Raul Ibanez and down the line are ripe with issues that span how would you acquire them to could they even approximate Manny in the lineup.
I do think the Red Sox will walk away from Manny this offseason and that they have a “master plan” in place to fill his shoes in a variety of scenarios and I think that walking away after this season is the right move given where we all sit today.
And while I would love for the Red Sox to make Manny’s dreams come true and deal him away while still improving the squad they put on the field both this year and for years to come, I don’t see how that is possible.
Manny’s right about one thing, the Boston is not stupid.
Rest assured, Theo Epstein is investigating every option (and no matter what my current take on Manny is, Barry Bonds will never be an acceptable conversation to enter into in any earnest) to make this club better while granting Manny’s wish. Also rest assured that Theo is very good at his job. If the opportunity to improve his club arises, he will.
You can also rest assured, however, that just because Manny Ramirez and the Red Sox are having what may their final lover’s quarrel before they ultimately break up, Theo won’t prematurely pull the plug on the relationship if holding Manny’s hand along the road to the World Series brings home the hardware.
This will be a long week…and at the end of it, Manny Ramirez may once again get a standing ovation the day after the deadline passes for remaining in his baggy home whites. But at the same time, even the thought that Manny’s name is on the market makes this week ripe with anticipation of what may be in store for this franchise come trade deadline 2008.











5 Responses to “Manny makes his case”
July 28th, 2008 at 10:59 am
People are forgetting that Manny recently had a meeting with Scott Boras.Did the agent from hell encourage the episodes of feigned illness from his client in hopes that he could negotiate a better contract than the 20 mil option the Sox have? I think Manny the drama queen has a coach on the sidelines and its not Tito.
July 28th, 2008 at 12:18 pm
I agree with you Bob, if Manny’s options are picked up the agent who negotiated those options will get the commission and Boras will not make any $$ until Manny is 38…significantly hindering his ability to earn off Manny. I have thought that Boras has probably been telling manny that he can get 4 years 80 mil as a free agent rather then two years/40 mil on the options and then a 2 year contract at 38 that won’t touch anywhere near 20 mil/year in all likelihood. I imagine Manny is pretty easy fodder with a puppeteer like Boras dangling the strings. Bottom line is Manny would probably do just as well if his 2 20 mil options were exercised and then was able to get 2 years/30 mil at 38…..not sure he will clear four years/70 mil as a free agent considering his actions and the fact he will likely have to be a DH if he is not playing in Fenway
July 28th, 2008 at 1:15 pm
The question is, whose DH problems can Manny with his Hammy, Knees, etc. resolve for 3 - 4 years? I can think of several, but this eliminates the Mets and other NL teams.
July 28th, 2008 at 1:33 pm
I have a feeling that a new contract and new environment would be the best medicine for all that ails Manny…I think he will be miraculously healthy, at least for a little while. He can still play the field (albeit poorly, outside of Fenway), I agree that if a team is going to give him four years it is going to be an AL team, or Omar Minaya…because he has the budget and seems to let his infatuations cloud his decision making.
July 28th, 2008 at 4:08 pm
No one is getting any commission from Manny’s options because the agent who negotiated them (Jeff Moorad) is now Diamondbacks President. This all seems like a moot point, I don’t see him getting traded because there’s no way that Theo is dealing him to an AL contender and all of the NL teams who would be interested have nothing that would entice the Red Sox. Unless Theo can grab a bunch of prospects for Ramirez and also secure another deal for Teixeira (then move Youk to LF) or possibly Jason Bay, then forget it.
If the Red Sox have decided that this is Manny’s last season here then let him play out this year and move on, here’s two interesting options I can think of.
1. (not sure if this one is kosher) Pick up Manny’s option and trade him. With the ridiculous free agent contracts that happen these days Manny at $20 mil is a bargain and someone will be willing to give up some value for him.
2. Sign Teixeira or Bay. Neither of them will ever hit like Manny in his prime, but they could reasonably duplicate what he did last year and this year and both bring more than a bat to the table. Bay would be an upgrade defensively over Ramirez in Left and with Tex you can move Youk to Left Field, knowing his work ethic he can probably be solid. I’d prefer Tex to Bay simply cause I’m always a little weary of NL hitter switching leagues and Tex has already performed in the AL. Your lineup next year then looks like this
1.Ellsbury (he will break out of this slump and regain the leadoff spot)
2. Dustin
3. Papi
4. Tex/Bay
5. Drew
6. Lowell
7. Youk
8. Lowire (yeah!)
9. Whoever is catching
That’s a very good lineup that will definitely wear out pitchers..
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