In an unbelievable move, G.M. Doug Melvin fired Manager Ned Yost on Monday the 15th. The Brewers had let a 5.5 Wild Card lead vanish in a disgusting start to September, and Yost was not allowed to manage two late season collapses in a row. Never in memory has a team fired their manager this late in a season, and it will be interesting to see how the players react. Many of them are shocked, but those who are glad to see the laid-back Yost go are hiding it for now. Dale Sveum, a former Brewer player, and a fan-favorite during the 1987 season, in which he hit a memorable home-run on Easter Sunday to keep their 13 game winning streak alive, has been named interim manager. Robin Yount has come back to fill the bench-coach void left by Ted Simmons, who was also let go.
Alex’s Take:
Wow. I have never been a huge supporter of Ned Yost. I can not say that I am sad to see him go, because his laid-back, “we’ll get ‘em next time,” approach to the game was really hindering the Brewers.
Some other questionable things that he did in 2008:
Constantly use burned-out reliever Eric Gagne late in close games
Start Rickie Weeks, probably the worst second baseman in baseball defensively, and certainly not great offensively either,
Start Bill Hall, an undeniable strikeout machine who has shown nothing of his solid 2005 or 2006 seasons, use Weeks (hitting under .230 most of the year) as the leadoff hitter,
Refusing to use small ball in almost any situation
Failing to pull the plug on pitchers at the proper times.
I will admit, the 2008 Milwaukee Brewers do not have many small ball-compatible players, save Craig Counsell and Jason Kendall, but there were far too many times in which a Brewer would obviously be trying to hit a home-run instead of simply advancing runners in critical situations with no outs, and would end up grounding into a double play or striking out. Yost should take a good portion of the heat for failing to get his players prepared for big games or failing to take big series seriously, but it was not really all him. The players fundamentally have been awful all year, and Yost did in fact bring winning baseball back to Wisconsin. He deserves HUGE credit for that, but it is unlikely he was capable of taking them to the next plateau: the postseason. As for Sveum, I know little about him other than he was not the greatest 3rd base coach in the league and that he was a popular Brewer back in his day.
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