I guess that's where we're parting ways in the assessment of the situation. Losing McCann (regardless of how he did in NYC) is a big difference in the clubs and Chris Johnson had a career year in 2013 and Simmons may have been exposed at the plate. And if you look at the scarcity of prospects in the minor leagues, we have to count on turnarounds on the existing roster to get back over .500. Add to this mess, the fact that we are currently short about 400 IP in the starting rotation and I'm going to have to be convinced otherwise that we are remotely a contender in 2015.
I'm an optimistic sort, and I'm inclined to think we can turn things around in 2015 (in a bizarre way, the utter completeness of the collapse in September makes me more optimistic), but sure, there's a very legitimate argument that contention isn't a realistic goal next year. I think if the organization wanted to re-trench for a year or two before the opening of the new park and deal Heyward and Justin Upton for prospect help, that would be a fair idea. And if you want to savage Frank Wren, the Johnson extension isn't a bad place to start.
However, the point is that even if you buy into the most pessimistic portrayal of our current state, that positioning doesn't have anything to do with a departure from "the Braves way." No one was complaining about Wren's radical, anti-Braves approach to organization building when we won 96 games and smacked around the Nationals in 2013. Or when we won 94 games in 2012. Or even in the couple years before, including the 2011 collapse. Wren had a nice thing going, a consistent, winning organization, and there existed nary a peep about "the Braves way."
Hell, even something like replacing McCann with Gattis would seem an example of "the Braves way," insofar as it was an example of us letting an aging, expensive veteran go because we could replace him with younger, cheaper, home-grown talent.
Then things collapse this September, the knives come out and all of a sudden come the cries of, "Wren betrayed the Jedi Ord- I mean, the Braves Way! We have lost The Path of the Beam! Salvation lies only in a return to the way we did things in the Long-Ago."
The organization isn't in a great place now, no doubt. But we need good players, not a return to hoary cliches.