Dave D out in Detroit

Submitted by cozy200 on
Being reported all over. Crazy time to change GM's no?

bronxblue

August 4th, 2015 at 5:20 PM ^

He's arguing that just because KC was able to turn a terrible pick into a decent bullpen pitcher shouldn't be proof of great planning by the KC administration.  He could have drafted Evan Longoria, Clayton Kershaw, Tim Lincecum, Max Scherzer, hell Ian Kennedy and gotten a better return.

KC is doing a better job drafting now, but it remains a team that finally started to play well after decades of being terrible.  Let's see if they can continue to be competitive in the coming years before we crown them.

Stringer Bell

August 4th, 2015 at 5:25 PM ^

And again, I'm not talking about how KC's organization is run, I'm talking strictly about how they built their bullpen, and it's undeniable that they've built a great one while the Tigers have....struggled in this regard, to say the least.  Dave thought that throwing money, or overpaying with prospects, would solve this problem.  As someone said below, having a multitude of internal options is how you account for the variance of bullpen performances.

bronxblue

August 4th, 2015 at 7:02 PM ^

Fine, then you can stand on your tiny mole hill of an argument as victorious. Personally, I like a guy who turns Andrew Miller and a mediocre outfielder into a great hitter, puts together multiple WS runs with decent enough bullpens, and turns expiring contracts and FAs into good prospects. But yeah, good on KC building a decent bullpen.

bronxblue

August 4th, 2015 at 5:12 PM ^

KC spent nearly 2 decades being anywhere from average to terrible.  Congrats - they had enough bad draft picks that they turned into bullpen guys.  

I hate people pulling out KC as some model of how a team should be run.  They finally field a competent team and now all of a sudden they are a model franchise?  Please.  St. Louis has been consistently good AND built for the future.  Detroit isn't St. Louis, and that should be the goal.  Sucking long enough that math ultimately gives you enough studs to win isn't a plan.

Stringer Bell

August 4th, 2015 at 5:20 PM ^

Man people sure like to read things that aren't there.  I'm talking SOLELY about building a bullpen.  I don't care what KC did for the 30 years prior, they've built a great bullpen and did it not with expensive FAs and trades.  I also used KC as an example because they're a team we see frequently.  I'm sure there are plenty of other examples (Cardinals being one) of teams that built quality bullpens from primarily internal options.

BigBlue02

August 4th, 2015 at 6:00 PM ^

You are essentially saying that using high draft picks on what end up to be relievers is a great way to build a bullpen. If Dombrowski's only job was to build a bullpen, then that would be an awesome plan. It isn't though, which is why it is a pretty dumb plan.

SAM love SWORD

August 4th, 2015 at 4:17 PM ^

I credit Dombrowski with building this team out of shambles in the early 00s. Aside from the Fister trade (and time will tell on the Ausmus hire) you could count on sensible executive management from the Tigers.
I hope this builds us for the future but I fear this could be the final straw and send us back to the basement.

His Dudeness

August 4th, 2015 at 4:30 PM ^

This is the worst possible thing that could have happened. Sure fire Hall Of Famer GM.

FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUDGE

How is Avila a better option?!?! HOW?

I'm not happy right now. This is awful.

 

I seriously might cry. I may never see my favorite pro team win a championship in my life... He took us to TWO World Series. This is awful.

 

 

ahw1982

August 4th, 2015 at 6:08 PM ^

Hahaha, agree 100%.

Ahhhhhh, reminds me of a certain football team that suffered years of mediocrity until they hired a coach that sent them to 2 NFC Conference Championships and 1 Super Bowl, and they inexplicably fired him because he didn't win a Super Bowl.

That team has about as bleak a future as the Tigers right now.

ahw1982

August 4th, 2015 at 6:37 PM ^

For some reason I have a very specific memory of watching Game 162 in 2003 on the shitty TV in the lobby of University Towers, with Mike Maroth getting the W and the Tigers avoiding breaking the Mets record for most losses in a season.  As shitty as that season was, the last week when the Tigers went something like 5-1 to avoid breaking the Mets record was kind of awesome in its own way.

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

August 4th, 2015 at 4:56 PM ^

It's not even about 2003.  I'm grateful to have a Tigers team that isn't the Randy Smith era of the late '90s.  That was a totally directionless franchise with no plan and no ambition and no capability of doing anything but spinning its wheels.  It was a lost decade.  DD had the franchise in position every year, which is all I ever ask - the rest is just up to execution.

Prince Lover

August 4th, 2015 at 4:18 PM ^

If it was amicable, then fine but I sure hope he wasn't pushed out. He recreated Tiger love. It wasn't too long ago that the Tigers sold less tickets than the Pistons do now.

stephenrjking

August 4th, 2015 at 4:18 PM ^

Avila just quoted saying he "believes we can win this year."

My best guess is that Mike decided he didn't like being a seller and is trying to salvage the season. Which, if true, is insane.

My initial reaction is that Ilitch has gone off the rails.



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stephenrjking

August 4th, 2015 at 4:27 PM ^

Maybe true, though through recent years much talk has always centered on Mike's desire to see a title before he dies.

FWIW I just saw a quote from "Mike" saying that DD was released from his contract to allow him to pursue other opportunities. Everyone knows he has them. Perhaps this is just a semi-amicable parting at the end of a long stint. Might as well cut the cord now--DD did a good job selling, so he was faithful to the end.

I don't expect Al Avila to have this job next year.



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ahw1982

August 4th, 2015 at 7:09 PM ^

Article on Freep says Avila signed a long term contract with the Tigers.

http://www.freep.com/story/sports/mlb/tigers/2015/08/04/al-avila-detroi…

It also says that the Tigers denied permission to the Mariners (2008) and the Angels (2011) to interview Avila for a GM spot.

Maybe Dombrowski always intended to leave after his contract was up after this year?  I hope that's the case because the Tigers firing Dombrowski is dumb, IMO.

Alton

August 4th, 2015 at 4:26 PM ^

Probably, but which Ilitch?

It's no secret that Mike Ilitch is not very healthy right now--he hasn't been seen in public more than once or twice in 2015.  So the question is who is in charge right now making these decisions?  Is it still Mike, or is it Christopher, who might care a little less about winning and a little more about keeping his money?

 

Lanknows

August 4th, 2015 at 4:31 PM ^

Your guess is insane, and therefore almost surely not true. What do you want Avila to say?  "I think my team should give up!"

More likely, DD has other opportunities for more money, Illitch is disappointed with some of the moves last few years (e.g., Fielder, Fister, Price, Nathan, Soria) and the lack of talent development in the organization, or some combination of the above.

My guess is that Illitch expressed some frustrations, DD said "I'm not feeling the love/respect I deserve" and now is about as good of a time as any to make a move.

stephenrjking

August 4th, 2015 at 4:38 PM ^

Just checked on the Avila quote. According to Slonskis, it is: "We're confident we can make a strong push to win this year." That's not a vague platitude; that's a repudiation of last week's fire sale, which was an admission of futility.

What else can he say? Lots of things: "We are going to build a team that will win championships." "We have a bright future." Even, "We can win baseball games this year." But he was a whole lot more specific than that. It sounds to me like the Tigers might try to buy at the waiver deadline.



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umchicago

August 4th, 2015 at 6:27 PM ^

although improbable.  what if the following happens:

1. verlander and sanchez pitch closer to 2013 levels

2. norris becomes a solid #3 SP down the stretch

3. simon and #5 SP don't impload.  help from lobstein

4. cabrera comes back in a week or two and the tigers score runs at toronto or ny levels

5. wilson does well in the closer role

6. rondon figures it out and hardy continues to pitch well in set up role.

all these things are possible.  if 2/3 of these pan out, detroit could make up 4-5 games on the field and make the playoffs.  that would be something, especially if they were to face off against price and the blue jays in the wild card game.

Lanknows

August 4th, 2015 at 6:56 PM ^

That wasn't a fire sale. They traded 3 guys, all them expiring contracts, and added - what - 6 of their top 15 prospects?  The 76ers this isn't.

Agreed it was an "admission of futility" of sorts, but was also a realistic assesment. The Tigers odds of making the playoffs dipped from something like 8% to 4% I read. So you can argue their odds this season didn't change dramatically.

And you can back that claim up. We're talking about guys who offer a difference of 1 or 2 wins for the rest of the year - easily made up for by simple luck. Furthermore, Norris is only a half step back from what Smyly offered Tampa Bay in terms of immediate help when they traded Price a year ago. The actual difference in performance was negligible between the two in 2014.  Dombrowski probably noticed that and thought it was worth a shot.  Where the Tigers would really miss Price and those other guys is the playoffs...

The Tigers aren't going to buy at the deadline and it would be insane for them to do so barring an incredible hot streak over the next few weeks.

The idea that Dombrowski acted on his own valition without approval from his his boss is...insane, as you said.

stephenrjking

August 4th, 2015 at 9:11 PM ^

In two days they sold everything that they wanted to move. Maybe "fire sale" isn't the term that strikes people as the best option, but it was a pretty thorough selloff.

But don't mistake that term for a critique. My reading of your comment suggests that you perceive me to be critical of the trades in some way. That would be inaccurate--I thought they were good trades and that selling was absolutely the right move. As you've observed, the chances of them making the playoffs were and are spectacularly small. Getting assets like this was something that was desperately needed.

Which is why I found Avila's "strong push" comment disconcerting. Yes, there is a slim chance that JV gets totally right AND Norris stays strong AND Miggy comes back feeling great AND the bullpen fixes itself AND the guys in the outfield produce AND Castellanos continues to show growth AND the team comes together, gets hot, and passes a bunch of other teams.

But it's not likely, and a GM talking about a "strong push" sort of implies his own involvement, and his activity right now should be entirely focused on what's best for the team after 2015.

Dombrowski said he got approval from the higher ups, and I have no reason to doubt it. I am not suggesting that he went over their heads. However, I do wonder if there is some seller's remorse going on.



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MGoBender

August 5th, 2015 at 9:26 AM ^

You're one of the best baseball posters on MGoBlog, but I think you're reading waaaay too much into the "we want to win this year" comments.  

Those are just platitudes for players and fans, given they were 3 GB.  Even in his press conference, Avila said he agreed with the decision to sell.