Indians manager Eric Wedge must be feeling a bit left out this spring. His boss, GM Mark Shapiro, recently agreed to a five-year contract extension through 2012. Everybody is talking about whom among his best players -- namely, Jake Westbrook, C.C. Sabathia and Travis Hafner -- will be offered contract extensions first. But Wedge himself, in the final base year of his contract, isn't the subject of any such scuttlebutt. Papa Cass opines.
Indians manager Eric Wedge must be feeling a bit left out this spring.
His
boss, GM Mark Shapiro, recently agreed to a five-year contract
extension through 2012. Everybody is talking about whom among his best
players -- namely, Jake Westbrook, C.C. Sabathia and Travis Hafner -- will be offered contract extensions first.
But Wedge himself, in the final base year of his contract, isn't the subject of any such scuttlebutt.
Earlier this month, Shapiro said he doesn't expect to talk to Wedge about a possible contract extension until after this season.
Much of that might have to do with the fact that the Wedge's contract
has a pair of club options for 2008 and '09, so there really isn't a
rush to make a decision on his long-term future.
But there might be more to it than that.
For
the past four years, there has been a public perception that Wedge and
Shapiro have been of one mind, rubber stamping each other's moves
without so much as a hint of difference. The local media had a little
bit of fun with it last year, dubbing them the "Wedgiro Twins."
The
mutually back-scratching relationship between manager and GM has been
viewed as the soft underbelly of an otherwise strong Indians management
regime. If nobody is questioning anybody else, how can change be
affected when things go stagnant, as they did last year?
No one
outside of the Tribe's inner sanctum really knows what goes on behind
closed doors, but we do know that Wedge and Shapiro have been intensely
loyal to each other as the rebuilding process took shape. Both know
that stability is paramount when you are trying to turn a young team
into a winner.
They rolled with the punches, facing the good (93
wins), bad (September collapses) and ugly (Milton Bradley) together,
always believing that they were building toward something greater than
whatever the previous two weeks had shown.
Then came last year.
It
was the first time failure couldn't be chalked up to the
trial-and-error pitfalls of the rebuilding process. For the first time
since Wedge and Shapiro set down this road together in 2003, the team
took a true step backward. Both men failed the team last year, Shapiro
when he dismantled the American League's best bullpen from the year
previous with no real backup plan, Wedge when he didn't step in and
provide adequate clubhouse leadership.
It might have been the beginning of the end of Wedge and Shapiro walking arm-in-arm down the yellow brick road.
Burned
by last year's 15-game backslide in the standing and fourth-place
finish, there is some real pressure on Shapiro and Wedge to perform and
lift the Indians back to respectability this year. Shapiro feels he's
done his job, adding veterans to the bullpen and outfield, and trading
for a potential stud bat in Josh Barfield. Now Wedge is finding out that, even in the flattest of organizations, shit still flows downhill.
The
burden falls to Wedge once the curtain goes up on the season in a
little over a week. If Wedge can't take the team Shapiro has assembled
and win with it, the business-soulmate connection Wedge likely thought he had with Shapiro will be quashed once and for all.
It
isn't quite the Sword of Damocles dangling over Wedge's head, but the
heat has been turned up on the stove. Wedge is surrounded by potential
replacements, from Joel Skinner and Buck Showalter on the major league staff to Torey Lovullo at Class AAA Buffalo.
That's
not to suggest a managerial move is imminent should the Indians once
again stumble out of the gates, but if Wedge hasn't discovered the
difference between managing a rebuilding club and managing a club that
is expected to contend, he is about to.
The results Wedge is now
expected to produce don't amount solely to productive major-league
players, as it did during his stints as a minor-league manager, as it
did for his first three years managing the Indians. Now, it's wins,
which are a lot more black-and-white than prospect development. And a
lot more here-and-now.
Throughout his career, Wedge has been
trained that slow is good. Do not rush to snap decisions, let things
play out in full. As a player developer, he was a sculptor, carefully
crafting his final product. Now, his job is transitioning into
something like a pizza deliveryman. Wins, delivered to your door in 30
minutes or it's free. You don't deliver the wins, you don't keep your
job.
We will see over the next six months if Wedge can make the transition.
Shapiro
is still a partner-in-blame with Wedge if things once again go awry in
2007. But now he has the security of a long-term deal and a roster full
of homegrown talent to fall back on.
Rightly or wrongly, Shapiro
gets to sit back with his arms crossed like the rest of us and pass
judgment on Wedge. Rightly or wrongly, Wedge is quickly transitioning
from de facto front office member to just another manager trying to save his skin, judged solely on his team's record.
Hopefully Wedge realizes that before it's too late.