msstate7
Well-known member
Who is Herschelpony? A writer? A poster on their web boards?
Probably a poster like msstate7 or Southcack77
Who is Herschelpony? A writer? A poster on their web boards?
Did you know that the street that Sun Trust Park is built on is simply titled, 'Braves Way'? Did you know that, BeanieAntics?
Speaking of Shanks, this is a bit from his column drooling on Dayton Moore.
The sad part about all of this was the turmoil was unnecessary. Coppolella created a great talent base for the future, but the methods with which he built that foundation obviously were not in the spirit of the heralded “Braves Way.”
http://www.macon.com/sports/spt-columns-blogs/bill-shanks/article176793871.html
As if it's any surprise what his cro-magnon take is (for those who wish to avoid giving Bill Shanks clicks, it boils down to Dayton Moore is our sole savior and suspenders was not involved in the infractions).
WTF is a western crosschecker? I misread At first and thought you said cross dresser.
That twitter rant about Coppy and McDaniel being drinking buddies may have some truth and not just sour grapes
On the plus side, the Braves are once again front page news in October.
Hard to speak against Glavine. He delivered our only World Series ring.
But at the same time the old guard needs to realize we are a mid market payroll team. We need to be efficient and take all routes with scouting and saber combined to have a chance.
I'm certain that Glavine isn't qualified to be making personnel decisions.
No but he, Cox, Chipper all have Special Assistant to the GM titles.
I’m sure they put Glav in the war room because they want him At some point to be in the FO. And Glav does have experience as former Union head of the MLBPA. So he has dealt with negotiations before. That’s a lot more executive experience than most former players. What I think needs to happen is the Old Guard need to get off their Braves Way high horse. We haven’t been to a World Series in 18 years but made the playoffs 9 times since then. Haven’t been to the NLCS since 2001. We are not a top 3 payroll team like we were in 90s. We’d not be able to afford to buy someone like Maddux in today’s inflated contract market. We wouldn’t be able to offer nice extensions to key core players here after their arb years.
Glavine, like Chipper, I assume was originally hired to mainly assist in player development. That's where both of those guys would come in handy, and at least for now, that's where they should stay. If Glavine wants to work his way up and learn the ropes of being a FO executive, then let him do that. I'm just not sure why Glavine should have any input on what scouts should be getting hired/fired at the moment.
ding ding ding
12:32
seth: Is the Braves fiasco a shot across the bow to all MLB teams? especially after the Red Sox ‘punishment’ didn’t seem to have any effect?
12:33
Eric A Longenhagen: No, this is less about practices in Latin America and more about the individual involved.
I personally don't really care about the departure of Coppy as a person. I thought he came off as a smug b*astard who thought he was way smarter than he really was.
I do have concern about the potential death of a change in philosophy in effort to bring the Braves into the 21st century.
JS has always been overrated. Without Bobby Cox he wouldn't be anywhere near as revered as he has become. Cox built the early 90's team when he was GM then kept it going by creating a clubhouse environment where players wanted to play, many that signed for less dollars to play for the Braves. I think JS was always much too close to the commissioners office and probably wanted to be commissioner at one time. When other teams were pushing the envelope in the draft (over slot spending) JS and the Braves staunchly held the mark and suffered from it.
Hart also was a bit overrated but probably a better GM than JS in his day.
But, I don't think it was JS and Hart who generated the exodus of Coppy. After all, if they wanted him gone for any reason they could just fire him.
I think Coppy pissed off so many people, outside but especially inside the organization, that this whole thing likely started "whistle blower" style from some of the scouts. JS and Hart, never completely sold on Coppy with confidence fading, seized on this opportunity to go ahead and make the move.
I've been very critical of this whole rebuild/reload from the beginning. I said at the start it wouldn't work the way they were going about it, that no matter what they wanted it would still be a minimum 5 years from start to end of any rebuild and that getting good isn't the issue. It's establishing a foundation to be good for a long time.
Now, the long term foundation likely is further eroded because there will be some punishment. Add to that the expected "panic moves" of the coming offseason and we may see a very quick high water mark with a slower decline into an inevitable round two of rebuild.
If Coppy goes but is replaced with the better, nicer, wiser Coppy then it's probably a net positive in the long run.
If he is replaced by another member of the good old boy club with a room full of harrumph, harrumph, harrumph (Blazing Saddles reference) decision making then welcome to my nightmare.
I personally don't really care about the departure of Coppy as a person. I thought he came off as a smug b*astard who thought he was way smarter than he really was.
I do have concern about the potential death of a change in philosophy in effort to bring the Braves into the 21st century.
JS has always been overrated. Without Bobby Cox he wouldn't be anywhere near as revered as he has become. Cox built the early 90's team when he was GM then kept it going by creating a clubhouse environment where players wanted to play, many that signed for less dollars to play for the Braves. I think JS was always much too close to the commissioners office and probably wanted to be commissioner at one time. When other teams were pushing the envelope in the draft (over slot spending) JS and the Braves staunchly held the mark and suffered from it.
Hart also was a bit overrated but probably a better GM than JS in his day.
But, I don't think it was JS and Hart who generated the exodus of Coppy. After all, if they wanted him gone for any reason they could just fire him.
I think Coppy pissed off so many people, outside but especially inside the organization, that this whole thing likely started "whistle blower" style from some of the scouts. JS and Hart, never completely sold on Coppy with confidence fading, seized on this opportunity to go ahead and make the move.
I've been very critical of this whole rebuild/reload from the beginning. I said at the start it wouldn't work the way they were going about it, that no matter what they wanted it would still be a minimum 5 years from start to end of any rebuild and that getting good isn't the issue. It's establishing a foundation to be good for a long time.
Now, the long term foundation likely is further eroded because there will be some punishment. Add to that the expected "panic moves" of the coming offseason and we may see a very quick high water mark with a slower decline into an inevitable round two of rebuild.
If Coppy goes but is replaced with the better, nicer, wiser Coppy then it's probably a net positive in the long run.
If he is replaced by another member of the good old boy club with a room full of harrumph, harrumph, harrumph (Blazing Saddles reference) decision making then welcome to my nightmare.
I personally don't really care about the departure of Coppy as a person. I thought he came off as a smug b*astard who thought he was way smarter than he really was.
I do have concern about the potential death of a change in philosophy in effort to bring the Braves into the 21st century.
JS has always been overrated. Without Bobby Cox he wouldn't be anywhere near as revered as he has become. Cox built the early 90's team when he was GM then kept it going by creating a clubhouse environment where players wanted to play, many that signed for less dollars to play for the Braves. I think JS was always much too close to the commissioners office and probably wanted to be commissioner at one time. When other teams were pushing the envelope in the draft (over slot spending) JS and the Braves staunchly held the mark and suffered from it.
Hart also was a bit overrated but probably a better GM than JS in his day.
But, I don't think it was JS and Hart who generated the exodus of Coppy. After all, if they wanted him gone for any reason they could just fire him.
I think Coppy pissed off so many people, outside but especially inside the organization, that this whole thing likely started "whistle blower" style from some of the scouts. JS and Hart, never completely sold on Coppy with confidence fading, seized on this opportunity to go ahead and make the move.
I've been very critical of this whole rebuild/reload from the beginning. I said at the start it wouldn't work the way they were going about it, that no matter what they wanted it would still be a minimum 5 years from start to end of any rebuild and that getting good isn't the issue. It's establishing a foundation to be good for a long time.
Now, the long term foundation likely is further eroded because there will be some punishment. Add to that the expected "panic moves" of the coming offseason and we may see a very quick high water mark with a slower decline into an inevitable round two of rebuild.
If Coppy goes but is replaced with the better, nicer, wiser Coppy then it's probably a net positive in the long run.
If he is replaced by another member of the good old boy club with a room full of harrumph, harrumph, harrumph (Blazing Saddles reference) decision making then welcome to my nightmare.
I personally don't really care about the departure of Coppy as a person. I thought he came off as a smug b*astard who thought he was way smarter than he really was.