As Nats embark on next journey, will Stan K …
稍早之前的文章:
For the past five years, the public face of the Washington Nationals has been
President Stan Kasten. Like a pit bull with a law degree, he has stood on the
front step of Nationals Park and defended the team and its owners, the Lerner
family, from every criticism.
Will he still be there, on guard, next opening day?
Or, after a season of agonizing about his future, will he leave after his
obligations to the Nats are over at the end of this year?
"I can honestly tell you that no decision has been made," Kasten said.
"Remember, I am the master of misdirection."
Although friends, family and baseball associates know he has been
reconsidering his future with the Nats for months, and some are certain he
already has decided to leave, Kasten may still want to keep his options open.
And as a result, he will continue to have as much influence as possible on
the Lerner family, whom he has tried, with mixed success, to move toward his
less-frugal way of thinking.
In the past, Kasten has never publicly said the Nats should increase payroll
or be aggressive in free agency. Now, he's changed his tune.
"This is the time to act," he said this week. "We are close. This is how it
felt in Atlanta just before we turned it around. Once you've laid the
groundwork and improved the farm system, you need to add some pieces. That's
where we are now."
If the Lerners, with their gradually rising payroll of $66 million, took the
decisive step toward the kind of $85 million budget that mid-market teams in
new parks typically can afford, would Kasten stay to see his plan evolve?
After all his success with the Braves, it would be out of character for him
to leave a job that remains so unfinished: 24th-best record, 23rd in
attendance, 22nd in payroll. But, according to those closest to him, his
frustration at his lack of effective influence on the Lerners, as well as a
desire to get back to his family in Atlanta, will probably end his D.C. days.
If Kasten leaves - even if he soft-pedals his departure, praises his
handpicked GM Mike Rizzo and crows about the futures of Stephen Strasburg,
Bryce Harper, Danny Espinosa and the rest - the Nats' reputation will take a
hit within the industry. And they will have a hard time replacing his broad
skill set.
My preference for the Nats' sake: He stays. My firm opinion: He's gone.
In Washington, Kasten is seen as caustic with the media and a symbol of
baseball's second-worst record over the last five years, ahead of only the
Pirates. Since he arrived in 2006, just four of 30 MLB teams have failed to
have a winning season. This week, Nationals Park had its smallest crowd ever:
10,999. Moreover, Kasten is seen by many as the guy who invited all those
insulting Phillies fans to invade his own team's opening day. Maybe he knew
Atlanta inside out, they argue, but he has proven tone-deaf in the Washington
market.
所以究竟 Kasten 是不是因為不爽 Lerners 不願意一口氣把 payroll 大幅增加才憤而求
去呢?麻煩在離開之前一次說明白好嗎?不然這樣實在是很耐人尋味...
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◆ From: 118.166.129.233
※ 編輯: s9527206 來自: 118.166.129.233 (09/24 09:00)
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09/25 11:36, , 1F
09/25 11:36, 1F
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