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The Yankees need big changes, both in the makeup of the team and the way it goes about its business. Such changes always start at the top. Keep a nice-guy manager because he’s so huggable and the message to the team is that the status quo continues. No matter what changes are made to the roster, it’s still all-coddling all the time.
Most Yankee fans love Torre, and with good reason. But managers are hired to be fired, and his time has come. The team needs to know that the failures of the past six years are not acceptable. The clearest way to send that message is to dump the guy at the controls.
The Yankees are justly celebrated for their cool professionalism, but there’s a point at which being cool devolves into being comfortable. Once, Paul O’Neill provided fire in the dugout. We sometimes chided him for going overboard with the helmet-tossing after striking out, but he provided a palpable passion that is glaringly absent from the current team. O’Neill’s Yankees never relaxed. The current outfit often seems nothing if not smug. That’s got to change.
I can’t believe I’m writing such advice to Steinbrenner, who once made Ming the Merciless look like Mother Teresa. There were no excuses when his tenure as owner was young and lava flowed through his veins. Dick Howser won 103 games — their highest total in 17 years — as manager in 1980 and got fired for the crime of not getting to the World Series. For years, Steinbrenner would hire Billy Martin at breakfast, fire him at lunch, then rehire him in time for afternoon tea, which for Martin was poured from a bottle labeled “80 proof.”
It was beyond excessive, and the resulting chaos dragged the team through 14 years without a playoff appearance. Finally, after Buck Showalter got the boot after making the playoffs in 1995 but not advancing to the Series, Steinbrenner hired Joe Torre.
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The Boss says it wasn’t the manager’s fault the team went in the tank against Detroit, but he’s been saying that for six seasons now, none of which have ended with a champagne shower after the season’s final game.
There’s no question there will be roster changes, and there should be. Gary Sheffield is a supernumerary and won’t have his option picked up. Playoff patsy A-Rod should be dealt for a front-line pitcher and prospects; with Texas paying half his salary, there shouldn’t be a lack of takers. It would be great if the Yankees could get rid of Randy Johnson, too, but they’re probably stuck with his aching 43-year-old back, his flat slider and his $17-million contract for the last year remaining on it.
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NEW YORK (AP) - Will Venable hit a pair of RBI doubles and Cameron Maybin had two run-scoring singles as the San Diego Padres broke out the offense after a long rain delay and beat the New York Mets 11-5 Thursday night.
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