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“The Heckler” on A Fan
Speaks Out
September 5, 2006
Talking Fan To Fan With Mike
Murphy
(Editor’s Note: This interview was conducted
August 22, 2006)
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Mike Murphy |
On a station (WSCR 670AM) that is now the home of the
Chicago White Sox, Mike Murphy is the one beacon of light calling out to Cub
fans to air their woes. A life-long Cub fan and one time bleacher bum, “Murph,”
as he’s affectionately known by his listeners, is never one to mince words.
While he sometimes can get hot under the collar on the air if he doesn’t like
where a conversation is going, it’s that same passion that drives him to strong
opinions on Dusty Baker and his beloved Cubs. In this issue, he expounds on why
he wants Dusty Baker gone, explains what he would do if he were running the
team, and why it seems like Jim Hendry has never heard of Bill James.
The Heckler: How did you get your start in radio and how
did you end up on the Score?
Mike Murphy: In 1990, I was lucky enough socially to
have met some people in radio, one of whom was Drew Hayes, who was involved in
the early days of talk radio at WLS when they just changed formats. He badgered
me into doing a show on Sunday nights talking sports. He knew I had a radio
background (in high school and college) and loved sports and I said, no, no, and
then I finally said I’ll do it this one time. This was in April of ’90. I said
I’ll do one show, three hours, and if you like it, handshake, I’ll come back and
continue to do it, and if you don’t like it, there would be no hard feelings.
Drew named the show Fan Talk, and I did the show for eighteen months, until late
’91, I got a phone call from the folks at WXRT who were starting up a new sports
talk station on the 820 frequency. They invited me to do a weekend show there,
and four years ago, I finally gave up the day job (at Reed Industries since
1975) because I always worked either weekends, night time, or mornings, and then
I would go to work.
TH: I know you’re not a fan of Dusty Baker. Were you happy
when they originally hired him?
MM: I was happy when they hired Dusty Baker because
he was a veteran who had great success. I liked Dusty Baker because I thought he
was the type of guy that a Cub fan would respect, and that for once, the Cubs
actually tried to go out and get somebody like when they got Leo Durocher. The
last good Cubs manager before Dusty Baker was Don Zimmer, before him was Herman
Franks, and then you go back to Leo Durocher. So I guess every fifteen years
they find one. I thought this was on the time frame, and I have to say me and I
think all Cub fans were excited when Dusty was hired.
TH: Why in your opinion do you now think that he’s such a
bad manager?
MM: Dusty Baker is a bad manager in my opinion on
many levels. One, I think he’s a lousy in-game strategist. Number two, he lacks
the ability to motivate his players, such as not arguing with umpires. When you
see Jacque Jones three times in one week doubled off second on hump-back liners
to left field and he’s still in the game and he’s not replaced, there’s no
motivation. I always say if you’re a player, your manager has to have two things
to be a winner; you have to be able to respect his knowledge and his ability to
manage the game and not be outsmarted by the other manager. And number two is
the player has to fear the manager. His players feared Don Zimmer because they
thought he would take a punch at them or kick them or beat them up because even
though he was in his sixties, the players felt he was nuts and could pop a cork
anytime. Players feared Leo Durocher because he’d send them to the minor
leagues. You can’t send guys to the minor leagues now so you can only fear the
manager on a couple levels and one is to bench him. So if you don’t bench him
and you don’t physically hit him, (which I don’t condone) I don’t think the
players respect him or fear him.
TH: Did you think going into the season that the team the
Cubs had was a contending team?
MM: No, the team was not a contending team. They
have never addressed on-base percentage and walks. You can look it up but
they’ve been near the bottom of the National League in the entire four years
Baker has been here and the entire regime of Hendry (Jim) and MacPhail (Andy).
They have never understood on-base percentage and conversely, they have never
understood trying to get the other teams’ pitcher into high pitch counts and
working walks. Sarge (Gary Matthews) and Geno (Gene Clines) and Baker, all
acknowledged to be great hitting coaches, must still have the mantra hit the
first pitch, it might be the only one you hit. I knew the team was in trouble in
the winter when they didn’t address on-base percentage by bringing in Jacque
Jones. Number two, anyone who knows anything about baseball including Jim Hendry
should have known that you’re rolling the dice with Wood and Prior as the
backbone of your pitching staff along with Zambrano (Carlos).
TH: Speaking of the situation with Wood and Prior combining
for only two wins for the whole season, and with Lee being out for most of the
year, and I know you’re down on Baker, but isn’t the team where you would expect
them to be right now, and could any manager have kept them in the race under the
circumstances?
MM: Where Dusty Baker fumbled the ball was when
Derek Lee had his injury. Dusty Baker along with Jim Hendry, they both did
nothing. Hendry didn’t make any major trades and Dusty Baker allowed the players
to go through the motions expecting that if we could tread water until D Lee
comes back, and Woody comes back and Prior comes back, then we’ll turn the light
switch on in July, August and September. In yesterday’s paper, (August 21) Dusty
Baker said, “We were all waiting for Derrek Lee to come back.” The players can
not be allowed to think that, they have to be pushed and prodded every day.
Baker never argued with the umpires or showed any life. He waited and waited
until he thought Lee, Prior and Wood were coming back and they’d still be able
to make a run. If they had been able to play .500 ball after Lee got hurt with
better management by Baker and Hendry, then they would still have had the
opportunity like the Dodgers did on July 31st, Mr. Hendry, to make
moves and get the team back up into the easy to reach wild card and Central
Division races.
TH: As a fan, we all watch the games and think we can
manage the team. If you had been the manager of the Cubs instead of Dusty Baker,
what would you have done given the situation he had to deal with?
MM: The first thing I would have done was make sure
fundamental baseball was played. What I mean by that is I would not have
tolerated throwing to the wrong base, being doubled off bases, missing the
cut-off man, and not laying down bunts when appropriate. How do you correct
that? You get them out there in the morning. I would have had them out there a
couple of hours before the game and work them and work them, because it was a
lais-sez faire attitude on this team. So not necessarily should Baker have done
different things as far as line up or changes, what he should have done is let
them know he was not going to accept the type of play he was seeing. But Dusty
Baker is a dinosaur that is soon to be extinct. He is still managing from an era
ten years ago when he had Barry Bonds and he allowed him to have total freedom
to do whatever he wants. He did that with Sammy (Sosa). He wanted to treat these
twenty-five guys as men, so he won’t yell at them or criticize them or lean on
them. He wants to treat them like men but they don’t reciprocate back to him so
they play lazy baseball and the manager allowed them to play lazy baseball. So
what changes would I have made if I was manager? I still would have had to play
Jacque Jones in right because the GM just gave him $15 million over three years.
I still had second baseman with low on-base percentage though Todd Walker had a
good on-base percentage but couldn’t field. I had three guys at second, what
could I have done, I couldn’t do anything else; those are the three knuckleheads
that this GM gave me. What I would have done was try to play hard-nosed baseball
and they never have under Baker.
TH: Since you mentioned the players that Baker had to work
with, what’s your opinion of the job Jim Hendry has done the last couple of
years?
MM: To evaluate Jim Hendry’s job is very difficult,
because unlike the movie the “The Wizard of Oz,” we must pay attention to the
man behind the curtain, Andy MacPhail and his boss at the Tribune, and that
guy’s boss. Jim Hendry probably has a lot less freedom than the fans realize,
and in the corporate Tribune, he is never going to come out and say I’m
hamstrung by my bosses. That being said, he still has a payroll around number
seven. It ought to be around number two or three. With the seventh highest
payroll, Jim Hendry still should be able to win the weak National League Central
and or the wild card. Here’s what you have to do. You have to occasionally trade
a star like Ramirez to lower payroll and get someone else’s two or three young
kids. The only trades Jim Hendry has ever made have been our kids for the
established star in his prime, i.e. Lee, Ramirez, and an up and coming Barrett
(Michael). One time, you’re going to have to do this Mr. Hendry, and this winter
might be a good time. July 31st would have been a better time.
You’re going to have to trade a Ramirez to a team that needs a third baseman and
they’re in a pennant race, and they’re going to give you two or three young
guys. But that is a gamble, and GM doesn’t stand for gambling man and a lot of
them don’t like to gamble and a lot of them do. Look at the Dodgers; their
General Manager (Ned Colletti) gambled all year and as of this interview,
they’re sitting in first place. So Jim Hendry doesn’t have the resources he
should have, but he has plenty of resources to have a team to win. He has to not
continually hitch his wagon to the highly paid guys like Prior and Wood.
TH: What do you think of the job Jim Hendry has done with
the farm system?
MM: Jim Hendry has been involved with the farm
system for many years with the Cubs after he left the Marlins (Florida) and I
believe for a while he was the Cub’s scouting director. The best prospects the
Cubs have had over the last ten years under MacPhail and Hendry were Dontrelle
Willis and Ricky Nolasco, and right now they are both with the Florida Marlins.
Again trading young prospects for veterans (with Willis going for Antonio
Alfonseca and Matt Clement, who was a throw-in because of salary constraints).
And the Juan Pierre trade for Nolasco which could be salvaged if you sign
Pierre
to a long term contract. The farm system has been a disaster. Bobby Hill washed
out. Felix Pie right now is a question mark at best. So you’d have to grade the
Cubs farm system over the last five years as a D+.
TH: They haven’t developed an everyday player that has had
success for any extended period of time since Mark Grace and Rafael Palmeiro
back in the 80’s. Is there any reason you can think of for that?
MM: That’s a great question that frankly I don’t
think is in my area of expertise to answer. I think only Jim Hendry can sit down
and tell you why they failed. They have money in the
Pacific Rim. (They got Hee
Seop Choi out of there.) They don’t have as much money from what I understand in
the Latin American countries for scouting compared to other teams. Maybe they
are looking for the wrong type of players, but they are not doing the job. I
think you have to be in the scouting room and hear what they’re looking for and
that’s not something they’re going to tell me.
TH: What’s your opinion of the job that Larry Rothschild
has done as the Cub pitching coach?
MM: That’s tricky also. Scott Eyre was on the Score
on July 31st and said, “I’m really going to miss Greg Maddux, because
two weeks ago Greg Maddux taught me the two-seam sinker. I worked with it for a
couple of days in the bullpen and used it in a game against the Nationals and
got out of the inning with a groundout.” Greg Maddux is a genius. There is no
pitching coach out there that is as good as Greg Maddux. All I know about Larry
Rothschild is this. Guys have been getting hurt under his command. I also know
this; Dave Dombrowski (GM of the Detroit Tigers) offered him a three year
contract as the pitching coach with the Detroit Tigers this past winter so
someone must think he’s a good pitching coach. Some people say he’s not. It’s
very difficult for a fan like me to evaluate a pitching coach. That might be one
area where you would have had to have pitched in professional ball to understand
the nuances. I can just go by the fact that a lot of guys get hurt and the Cubs
walk as many people as anybody in the league, but that could be with power
pitchers in the past like Wood and Prior, they throw a lot of pitches, a lot are
fouled off, and they walk and strike out guys.
TH: Let’s say you get your wish and Dusty Baker isn’t back
next year. Who would you like to manage the team and why?
MM: Well the guy obviously twelve months ago would
have been Joe Girardi, but that ship has sailed unless the owner of the Marlins
and Girardi can’t agree to disagree, in which case with his iron-clad contract
there would have to be a trade, and then the Cubs would have to send the Marlins
another young pitcher who the Cubs think is the least apt to blossom and he’ll
be in the rotation with Willis and Nolasco. Number two I would say Bob Brenly,
for the main reason that he has seen this team for the past two seasons. So you
don’t bring in a manager who says I didn’t know Aramis Ramirez can’t bunt, or
that Jacque Jones cannot be relied upon to hit a cut-off man. I think Bob Brenly
seeing two years of baseball would be a terrific benefit and a step ahead of any
other manager they would bring in. He has a World Series ring and when you watch
the games on TV, he’s like a Steve Stone where he seems to be a step ahead of
the game, where I don’t think Dusty Baker is a step ahead of the other manager.
The other names of course that you hear, round up the usual suspects. Lou
Pinella might be great, but there’s something about Brenly, he looks like he
might be passionate and I don’t see anybody better sitting there that knows all
of the negatives as well as the positives.
TH: We kind of got into it a little before when you
mentioned trading Ramirez, but what kind of moves would you make in the
off-season if you were the GM?
MM: The first move I would make is sign Juan Pierre
as quick as you can because I don’t think you’re going to be able to resign Juan
Pierre. You should have done it when you signed him for the one year for three
years. Now he’s going to be a free-agent and everyone is going to take a shot at
Juan Pierre. If you lose him, you’re really in trouble. That’s number one.
Number two, you must at all costs, acquire players that can walk and get on
base. Izturis at shortstop has a .300 on-base percentage which is terrible.
Cedeno is a young guy and he can change and I don’t think Izturis can, but he
has an even lower on-base percentage, so you have to have your doubts. If Hendry
thinks he can come north with Cedeno at second and Izturis at short, that means
one of them has got to bat number eight, fine, and the other one has to bat
seven or two, and you’re going to kill yourself with either of those guys
playing everyday, so that means you cannot come north with both of those guys.
Third, I would trade Ramirez to lower payroll, something that should have been
done on July 31st, and try to get someone’s two young kids. This team
right now, they need speed. They need Ramirez’s power, but they need a gamer,
and any guy who dogs it and runs half-assed to first base like Ramirez, I don’t
want on my team. The only time Ramirez runs out a ball to first, you’ll notice,
is if it’s an RBI for him. You watch him haul ass on a
6-4-3 potential double play
if there are men on first and third. He can run; he’ll beat that throw, he has
no bad hamstring, he sniffs the RBI and runs when he feels like it. He’s a dog.
I don’t want dogs on my team, I’d have him gone. My next move would be to unload
Jacque Jones as quickly as I could. I don’t care if Jacque Jones is going to hit
like he does every year, .280, 26 homers, eighty RBI’s. He kills you with his
lack of baseball acumen throwing to the wrong base, bad base-running decisions,
and striking out. I want Jacque Jones and Ramirez gone. I don’t care if you
trade Izturis or Cedeno, one of them has to be gone. And if you have enough
power, you could live with Matt Murton in left field. If you could live with him
in left because you have power in other spots, then he’s your number two hitter.
Classic, goes to right field, runs the bases better than you think, goes first
and third if he has to, he can bunt, he’s got a high on-base percentage. And you
have to bring in two starting pitchers. So right now, Mr. Hendry has a lot of
work in front of him, but don’t forget, he’s got about $20 million dollars to
the good. He’s going to lose about $10 million with Wood, even if they negotiate
to bring him back, he’s going to lose 7.5 million at second base with the three
guys he had this year at 2.5 million. He needs starting pitching and maybe a
closer too. I think Dempster’s role is the eighth inning, and Howry and Eyre the
seventh.
TH: Why do you think the team has been historically bad for
so many years?
MM: The team had been historically bad under the
Wrigley regime because Mr. Wrigley did not pay for scouting. They did not have a
scouting department. Wrigley did not spend money on scouting. Since the Tribune
Company has taken over, I’m not saying the General Manager’s do not strive to
win. I would never say a General Manager’s not trying his best. But I do not
think the corporate guys above the General Manager care as much about winning as
making sure that they have their profit statement. There’s a sign at the men’s
executive bathroom at the Chicago Tribune, right above the mirror, risk aversion
at all costs. Avoid risk. They never take a risk, they never take a gamble. Jim
Hendry’s the same way. He’s never traded a star player for a young player. He’s
always traded young players in a de-facto salary dump, Lee, Ramirez, Barrett,
from other teams. So, it’s time for the GM to be a gambling man and it’s time
for the bean counters at the Tribune to put the payroll for the great Cub fans,
even if it’s once every five years, throw us a bone in the bleachers that you’re
going to put a payroll in the top two or three behind the Yankees at 110 or 120
million; that’s all we ask.
TH: Do you think Hendry’s done a good job with the money
he’s had to spend?
MM: No. He’s put a team on the field that has low on
base percentage, doesn’t have any foot speed, and pitchers that throw too many
pitches and get their pitch count up. It’s as if he has never read Bill James
and doesn’t understand current baseball.
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