Cubs fire Rick Renteria

Oct 26, 2012
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The Chicago Cubs today announced that the club has fired manager Rick Renteria. Renteria, the 53rd manager in franchise history, led the club for the 2014 season after being named to the position on November 7, 2013.

Cubs President of Baseball Operations Theo Epstein released the following statement:

Today we made the difficult decision to replace Rick Renteria as manager of the Chicago Cubs. On behalf of Tom Ricketts and Jed Hoyer, I thank Rick for his dedication and commitment, and for making the Cubs a better organization.

Rick’s sterling reputation should only be enhanced by his season as Cubs manager. We challenged Rick to create an environment in which our young players could develop and thrive at the big league level, and he succeeded. Working with the youngest team in the league and an imperfect roster, Rick had the club playing hard and improving throughout the season. His passion, character, optimism and work ethic showed up every single day.

Rick deserved to come back for another season as Cubs manager, and we said as much when we announced that he would be returning in 2015. We met with Rick two weeks ago for a long end-of-season evaluation and discussed plans for next season. We praised Rick to the media and to our season ticket holders. These actions were made in good faith.

Last Thursday, we learned that Joe Maddon – who may be as well suited as anyone in the industry to manage the challenges that lie ahead of us – had become a free agent. We confirmed the news with Major League Baseball, and it became public knowledge the next day. We saw it as a unique opportunity and faced a clear dilemma: be loyal to Rick or be loyal to the organization. In this business of trying to win a world championship for the first time in 107 years, the organization has priority over any one individual. We decided to pursue Joe.

While there was no clear playbook for how to handle this type of situation, we knew we had to be transparent with Rick before engaging with Joe. Jed flew to San Diego last Friday and told Rick in person of our intention to talk to Joe about the managerial job. Subsequently, Jed and I provided updates to Rick via telephone and today informed him that we will indeed make a change.

We offered Rick a choice of other positions with the Cubs, but he is of course free to leave the organization and pursue opportunities elsewhere. Armed with the experience of a successful season and all the qualities that made him our choice a year ago, Rick will no doubt make an excellent major league manager when given his next chance.

Rick often said he was the beneficiary of the hard work of others who came before him. Now, in the young players he helped, we reap the benefits of his hard work as we move forward. He deserved better and we wish him nothing but the best.

We have clung to two important ideals during our three years in Chicago. The first is to always be loyal to our mission of building the Cubs into a championship organization that can sustain success. The second is to be transparent with our fans. As painful as the last week was at times, we believe we stayed true to these two ideals in handling a sensitive situation. To our fans: we hope you understand, and we appreciate your continued support of the Cubs.
 
Oct 26, 2012
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It does not matter who the manager is............

no one can win with that legion of clowns that Theo Epstein has assembled. If you want to fire someone who is the cause of all of this, fire EPSTEIN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Who tears down and rebuilds the Cubs, a team that has not won in over a century????? Only a moron. This is his last leg. If Joe Maddon does not win, Epstein's head is going to roll!!!
 

SanfordRJones

Senior
Nov 17, 2006
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I'm not a cubs fan, but I wholeheartedly disagree. No one in baseball has better high level position player prospects. If they can pick up some pitching in a strong free agent pitching class, they're going to be in a pretty good position to compete in the next year or two.
 

DawgatAuburn

All-Conference
Apr 25, 2006
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As the board's resident Cubs punching bag, let me just say that I think you are completely wrong. Rizzo and Castro are established young All-Stars. Alcantara and Baez took some lumps this year but showed why they are so highly regarded. Soler looked better than both of them. And the two best prospects, Bryant and Russell, have yet to make their debut. There's more talent in the lower levels, including Kyle Schwarber who i was not initially excited about but he seemed to make good progress this year. (I wanted them to draft Aaron Nola, but whatever.) The young pitching looked better than expected but they have to prove they can do it over the long haul. Reclamation project Jake Arrieta looked like a potential #2 starter. Starting pitching has to be the area addressed if they hope to contend in 2015 but I've said for two years that I think 2016 is more likely. It would not surprise me at all if Theo makes a run at both Jon Lester and Max Scherzer this year, and even if he signs one of them, at David Price next year.

Maddon is nobody's fool. He knows what he's walking into.
 

Thirty-Two Dive

Redshirt
Feb 10, 2013
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A little Russell Martin would be good, as well. But Schwarber may shock me, and pan out behind the dish. Gotta sweet bat.

Javy Baez dressed as Manny Ramirez, for Halloween. I hope his hitting dresses as Manny come April...

This is the first time (in many lifetimes), the Cubs have a viable, upper tier, front office.

Yeah, Maddon's just Dusty Pinella 3.0.**********************
 

DawgatAuburn

All-Conference
Apr 25, 2006
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I do like Martin but at this point I'm fine with Castillo keeping the catcher's spot warm until Schwarber arrives. He was certainly serviceable the last two years. Save the money Martin will command and upgrade elsewhere.