The Ozzie Guillen era is over in Chicago but appears to be
starting over in Miami.
Earlier today, the Chicago White Sox
formally released Guillen from his contract after eight seasons
at the helm of the Chisox and managed his final game with the club
last night. He could be named the next manager of the Florida
Marlins (or should I say Miami Marlins) as early as tomorrow. Jack
McKeon, who took over managerial duties with the Marlins after the
abrupt resignation of Edwin Rodriguez in June,
indicated yesterday he would not be back with the team next
season. Guillen is not a stranger to the Marlins. He was the third
base coach under McKeon when they won the 2003 World Series and
would be hired by the White Sox the following season.
In 2005, Guillen guided the Chisox to their first World Series
title in 88 years sweeping the Houston Astros in four games. That
season I had a chance to see the White Sox in action both here in
Boston and in Toronto. Prior to one of the games in Toronto, I saw
a most remarkable thing from Guillen - he threw batting practice. I
had never seen a manager throw batting practice. That’s the sort of
duty usually left to a member of the coaching staff. But if a
manager throws batting practice he has a chance to see how his
hitters are swinging in a way he wouldn’t if he was watching from
the dugout. But even more remarkably once batting practice was
over, Guillen picked up all the baseballs off the field. Again,
that’s something usually the bat boy might do. But the fact that
Guillen was doing it made the point that no task is too small in
the pursuit of victory.
The White Sox would only reach the post-season one other time
under Guillen and that was in 2008 when they bested the Minnesota
Twins in a one game playoff to win the AL Central. But they were
quickly swept in the ALDS by the upstart Tampa Bay Rays.
Guillen’s greatest asset is also his greatest liability. He is
not shy about giving his opinion nor does he sugarcoat things. He’s
honest but in being that honest one can rub some people the wrong
way. It’s a trait that is also more difficult to tolerate when the
team is mediocre as the Chisox were in 2011.
But Guillen certainly made a sports reporter’s job easy. He
made good copy. Guillen would talk about anything and would
occasionally talk politics. It is hard to pigeonhole him. One on
hand, Guillen threatened to
boycott the 2011 All-Star Game in Phoenix because of the
Arizona immigration law. Well, he needn’t have worried because Ron
Washington didn’t name him to his coaching staff. On the other
hand, Guillen did
refer to Sean Penn as a “izquierdista estupido” for his defense
of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. BTW, izquierdista estupido
translated into English means “stupid leftist.”
The truth is Guillen needs a change of scenery and the White Sox
need a slightly more laid back manager. The Marlins open their new
ballpark next season and they need someone who can attract people
there night after night. The Marlins are also a young team that has
underachieved. It will be interesting to see how the likes of
Hanley Ramirez, Mike Stanton and Logan Morrison respond to Ozzie in
2012. I wonder also if Ozzie might not bring one or two Chisox
along with him like, say, Mark Buehrle and/or A.J. Pierzynski. The
South Side meets South Beach.
Sean| 9.27.11 @ 10:54AM
I think I remember seeing Tommy Lasorda throwing BP all the time.
Steve A| 9.27.11 @ 11:01AM
Sean, You may want to think again. Lasorda was lucky if he could throw out the trash, never mind BP. I was a minor leaguer in Dodgertown back in 1991 & all he did was drive around in his golf cart flapping his mouth.
Aaron Goldstein| 9.27.11 @ 11:12AM
Sean is right. Lasorda, who was a minor league pitcher in the Dodgers organization, did throw batting practice when he was Dodgers manager although I believe he relinquished those duties in his latter years with the team. But Guillen was the first manager I actually saw throw batting practice in person.
PattyMor| 9.27.11 @ 11:13AM
Well notice that a lot of the "big" talents are gravitating to low tax state of Florida? I don't think this is coincidence. People vote with their feet; notwithstanding his mouth.
Sean| 9.27.11 @ 11:22AM
I always wondered the effect on state income taxes and even Canadian taxes in sports contracts. I would assume New York would have to pay more for a player than Texas. In sports with a salary cap that could come into play as a player would need to be paid a premium to cover taxes.
J.C.Eaton| 9.27.11 @ 12:41PM
Guillen had his moments,but I predicted[correctly, as it happened] that once he started producing lousy clubs, his schtick would get very old, very fast. He is not a temperate man, he is a good baseball man, but not as good as he thinks. He stuck with two intergallactic losers all season to the utter detriment of his team: Rios and Dunn. Finally, his team was shoddy. I saw how he prepared them to come north out of spring training; they WEREN"T prepared to come north out of spring training. Time to go, Poco Amigo.
J.C.Eaton| 9.27.11 @ 12:43PM
By "not a temperate man" I only mean his emotional disposition. He has difficulty with self-control IMHO.
yisong| 10.26.11 @ 9:50PM
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