[情報] Brian Sabean拿下BA年度經理人獎

作者: abc12812   2012-12-06 08:29:07
http://tinyurl.com/cbvrpc7
SAN FRANCISCO—They are not leprechauns, unicorns or the Easter Bunny. They
really do exist, and their names are Jeremy Shelley and Yeshayah Goldfarb.
They are the quantitative analysts in the Giants front office, which if you
believe the prevailing opinion among baseball's Internet Illuminati, still
gathers most of its information from gut feel and tobacco-spattered scouting
reports.
The Giants, and Brian Sabean, the longest-tenured general manager in the
game, have long been an easy mark for what acronym-inclined bloggers
perceived as old-school methods. Now that the Giants are checking to see if
their ring sizes have changed in 24 months, analysts, both recreational and
professional, are trying to figure out how the heck the franchise they love
to lampoon has pulled off the nearest thing to a dynasty by a National League
club since the Big Red Machine.
There's the pitching, of course. There's a dash of serendipity. And a whole
lot of Buster Posey doesn't hurt, either.
But if the Giants' World Series title in 2010 was a happy accident of sorts,
won by a waiver-wire band of misfits, their second championship in three
seasons had less ad-lib and more script. Those six elimination games against
the Reds and Cardinals notwithstanding, this was by design.
This was a team that featured smooth infield defense and speed in the
outfield, a team that traded home run trots for frenetic doubles and triples,
a team of tough, contact-oriented hitters who stayed in the middle of the
field with two outs and kept the line moving.
This was the team that Sabean always talked about creating during all those
years in the ownership-dictated Barry Bonds era, and the rough transition
that followed: a pitching-and-defense driven approach and younger, more
athletic position players who ran the bases with aplomb, created their own
breaks and didn't give away extra outs.
And hey, it doesn't hurt to have Posey, either.
Just two years after winning the first World Series in the Giants' five-plus
decades in San Francisco, they've done it again. And there is a feeling this
time that they weren't lucky. They were just that good.
For that, Sabean was selected as the Baseball America Major League Executive
of the year.
"I think we're old school and new school at the same time," Sabean said after
the Giants' World Series sweep of the Tigers, his eyes stinging from the
champagne celebration. "You have to understand it's still a game played by
human beings, and you have to put human beings in a position where they
believe they can have success.
"The whole organization has been built around continuity and mutual respect,
and we enjoy pulling on the same rope. We have a great working relationship
with the manager and the coaches. And the players are at ease because they
know they'll be put in a position to have success."
Sticking Together
No front office has more continuity than the Giants. Sabean is entering his
17th season, and many of his most trusted advisers go back with him further
than that. He has known pitching architect Dick Tidrow and lieutentants Lee
Elder and Paul Turco since his days coming up the scouting ranks in the
Yankees organization, and he goes all the way back to high school in Concord,
N.H., with hitting assistant Joe Lefebvre and advance scout Steve Balboni.
Pitching coach Dave Righetti, bullpen coach (more like pitching coach 1-A)
Mark Gardner and bench coach Ron Wotus are on their third manager, not
vice-versa.
And Bruce Bochy, hired prior to the 2007 season, might have been the best
decision that Sabean has made since he traded for Jeff Kent as a rookie GM.
"He's a Hall of Fame manager, enough said," Sabean said of Bochy, who has won
six NL West titles in 18 seasons with the Giants and before that with the
Padres. "Understated, undervalued, maybe. With what he's done, and the
relationship we have, this is a just, just reward for someone who is a
lifelong baseball name and a great person."
Whether it's Bochy, Felipe Alou or Dusty Baker in the manager's office,
Sabean does not believe in settling into a leather chair with the door open.
He doesn't lean on the cage during batting practice. He'll watch from the
stands, even after the gates open. He is riveted to every pitch once the game
starts and fills his scoresheet with shorthand, so he'll be able to discuss
any and every pitch sequence with coaches afterward.
He believes in letting his manager run the clubhouse, a strategy of trust and
delegation that extends to his chief negotiator, vice president Bobby Evans,
to scouting director John Barr, to Tidrow, who remains a master mechanic when
it comes to pitching.
Sabean likes to tell the story of how he sent former farm director and big
league catcher Jack Hiatt down to Tallahassee, Fla., to see a converted
shortstop by the name of Gerald Posey. When Hiatt signed off on Posey's
receiving skills, Sabean nodded his approval to take the Florida State
catcher with the fifth overall pick in 2008.
"I'd trust Jack with my life," Sabean said at the time.
Just four years later, Posey became the first player in history to win a
Golden Spikes Award as the best amateur player in the country, and go on to
win a league MVP award.
Posey is just one instance of what was an incredible run of draft success:
The Giants hit on first-round picks with Matt Cain, Tim Lincecum and Madison
Bumgarner, who became the core of both World Series championship teams, even
if it took some imagination to turn Lincecum from a struggling former Cy
Young Award-winning starter into a dominant weapon as a long reliever in the
postseason.
Thinking Broadly
Perhaps that is the greatest strength of a Sabean front office: a willingness
to explore opportunities and think broadly when it comes to acquiring talent,
analyzing talent and determining how to get the most production out of that
talent.
Ryan Vogelsong, who had the lowest ERA by a starting pitcher in a postseason
since Orel Hershiser in 1988, was a former Giants prospect who hadn't pitched
in the majors in six years before the Giants welcomed him back on a minor
league contract in 2011. Gregor Blanco, whose catch saved Matt Cain's perfect
game and who contributed as many hits in the World Series as Prince Fielder
and Miguel Cabrera combined, was a find from the Venezuelan League that
Sabean's scouts had highlighted in Triple-A the previous season.
Sabean turned over his outfield last winter by giving up spare parts in
trades for Angel Pagan and Melky Cabrera, the latter of whom was the All-Star
Game MVP before his drug suspension on Aug. 15 cost him the remainder of the
season. The Giants farm system isn't as deep these days, but they had the
chips to get Hunter Pence from the Phillies at the trade deadline.
And while the Dodgers' new, deep-pocketed ownership made like a casino whale
and took on hundreds of millions in salary to get Adrian Gonzalez et al from
the Red Sox, Sabean made a much quieter and much more impactful deal when he
dealt fringe prospect Charlie Culberson to the Rockies for Marco Scutaro.
No, the Giants didn't envision Scutaro hitting .362 and then going 14-for-28
against the Cardinals to win NLCS MVP honors. But they did know his 94
percent contact rate was the best in the major leagues, which made him a
perfect fit as the No. 2 man in a lineup that hit the fewest home runs in the
major leagues.
That stat didn't come from a unicorn or a leprechaun. The Giants use plenty
of advanced metrics to inform or challenge their opinions, including some of
their own formulas that they decline to disclose. It's one of the reasons the
front office implored Bochy to remain patient with first baseman Brandon
Belt, even when his at-bats looked rough through long stretches during the
season. It's a reason the Giants have resisted overtures to trade Belt this
offseason, too.
Not that Sabean is eager to publicize his methods. He cares less about how
he's perceived. He'd rather wave his flag for his manager and his players,
all the while keeping an eye out for the next piece to improve his roster.
"Hopefully we'll be able to bear down and keep our heads down like we always
do," Sabean said. "I don't think we're going to change our mantra of pitching
and defense. Pitching is going to be our celebrity. It's not the
all-eggs-in-one-basket with one player approach. This is what works. It's
what is conducive to our ballpark and our division."
作者: hit10116 (今生)   2012-02-06 08:32:00
傻人有傻福
作者: jacky77437 (遺憾~)   2012-02-06 08:33:00
傻賓!
作者: yeah8466 (小揚董)   2012-02-06 08:57:00
傻賓耶!
作者: pennix ((っ・ω・)っ)   2012-02-06 09:36:00
傻賓!
作者: didilala (強風吹拂)   2012-02-06 10:00:00
傻賓出頭天!
作者: huso (胡說大爺)   2012-02-06 10:02:00
傻賓!!!
作者: KOSHON (我在,故我思。)   2012-02-06 10:06:00
傻人有傻福
作者: alex710707 (PonWei)   2012-02-06 10:22:00
傻賓: 我最近三年幫球隊拿了兩次冠軍 有意見嗎??
作者: chordate (封侯事在)   2012-02-06 13:01:00
天公疼傻人
作者: ckntu0922 (helloboss)   2012-02-06 14:24:00
不管做甚麼決策 拿下冠軍就是實績
作者: TheVerve (TheVerve)   2012-02-12 21:51:00
傻賓出頭天XDDDD

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