Joe Maddon of the Tampa Bay Rays and Kirk Gibson of the Arizona
Diamondbacks were named AL and NL Managers of the Year,
respectively.
This is the second time Maddon has won AL Manager of the Year.
He was previously given the honor in 2008 when he took the Rays
from worst to first en route to the AL pennant and first World
Series appearance. But this season’s AL Wild Card berth was
arguably more improbable than their rise in 2008. With the loss of
Carl Crawford, Matt Garza, Jason Bartlett, Carlos Pena, Rafael
Soriano and the entire Rays bullpen I thought the Rays
were a shell of their former selves. I picked
them to finish at the bottom of the ladder in the AL East. It
looked my prediction might come to fruition when they
began the season 1-8.
But then Rays promptly went 8-1 to get back to the .500 mark.
And they kept clawing all season. Their clawing paid off on the
last day of the regular season when they came back from a 7-0
deficit against the New York Yankees in the 7th inning and won the
game 8-7 in extra innings on a homerun by Evan Longoria. The win
earned them an AL Wild Card spot. A month earlier they were 9½
games back of the Red Sox.
For his part, Maddon did unconventional things to motivate the
team such as
grow out his hair and have theme road trips which included
a
pajama party,
grunge night and letterman
sweaters. This is the second time Maddon has won AL Manager of
the Year. He was previously given the honor in 2008 when he took
the Rays from worst to first en route to the AL pennant and first
World Series appearance in franchise history.
I think the likelihood of the Arizona Diamondbacks wearing
sweaters, pajamas, flannel on road trips is slim to none. Kirk
Gibson is a no nonsense baseball man who led the team to a near 30
win improvement over last season to a NL West title and their first
post-season appearance since 2007. I thought the D’Backs would be
better in 2011 but I didn’t think they were playoff bound. Gibby
actually took over from A.J. Hinch just before the All-Star Break
in 2010. It took him awhile to evaluate what he had but once he did
the D’Backs quickly started winning. A strong second half propelled
them over the 2010 World Series champion San Francisco Giants. It
would come as no surprise to me to see Gibson triumph in the World
Series as a manager as he did as player both with the Detroit
Tigers and the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
JimH| 11.17.11 @ 9:23AM
Congrats to both managers. As an old Mets fan it is probably almost as tough to say something nice to Kirk Gibson as it is for a Bosox fan to be nice to Bucky Fn Dent. Joe as manager of my adopted team, the Rays has done more with less than any manager I can recall with the possible exception of Gil Hodges. Its fun to listen to the sports radio here in Tampa and here him be alternately described as a genius or an idiot. He is the perfect manager for a young team such as the Rays. I don’t think his style would work as well with a team of established vets such as the Yankees or Bosox, though I suspect that he would be able to adapt.
astorian| 11.17.11 @ 10:05AM
I mean absolutely no disrespect to the winners, but let's face it: Coach of the Year and Manager of the Year tend to be what one wag called "Oops Awards."
That is, the winner is almost always the coach or manager of a team that performed better than the writers expected at the beginning of a season. If the writers picked a team to finish last and that team ends up winning a wild card, the writers will decide, "We COULDN'T have been utterly wrong about the team's talent level, so... the coach/manager must have done a brilliant job."