Re: Articles
Posted: Fri Aug 24, 2012 9:09 am
Cleveland Indians CEO Paul Dolan says there are no plans for front office, managerial changes
Published: Thursday, August 23, 2012, 6:26 PM Updated: Thursday, August 23, 2012, 7:42 PM
By Dennis Manoloff, The Plain Dealer
Indians CEO Paul Dolan insisted Thursday night that no moves were likely in the front office before the end of the 2012 season.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Indians CEO Paul Dolan said Thursday night that there are no immediate plans to dismiss any combination of President Mark Shapiro, General Manager Chris Antonetti and manager Manny Acta.
The Indians have lost eight in a row and 21 of 25 to careen out of playoff contention. They are 54-70, fourth place, 14 1/2 back in the American League Central.
"We all have a lot of work to do, but their jobs aren't at stake in this,'' said Dolan, who spoke with reporters at Acta's charity bowling event at The Corner Alley downtown. "As I sit here today, I have no intent to make any changes. I have to understand what's happened. I'm not going to have that understanding today. Hopefully, sometime in this off-season, we'll be able to assess and move from there.''
Later in the five-minute session, Dolan reiterated, with conviction, that he is not considering a managerial change. Acta, in his third season with Cleveland, has one year remaining on his contract.
"I don't know how (to explain the free fall),'' Dolan said. "I don't understand exactly what's happened -- other than we haven't performed at virtually every level of the game for the last month.
"We had a team threatening to make the playoffs that has collapsed. We have to understand what happened, and I'm not going to make judgments on that right now. It's going to take more time to assess what we have, what we need, and what we're capable of doing.''
On July 26, the Indians rallied to defeat Justin Verlander and the Tigers, 5-3, at Progressive Field. They improved to 50-49 and were in third place, 3 1/2 games back of first-place Chicago. The Indians went on the road and set a franchise record for futility by losing all nine games on the trip. The streak eventually reached 11. On their most recent nine-game trip, which ended Wednesday, they won the first and lost the next eight.
"It's been extraordinarily difficult,'' Dolan said. "In our entire tenure as owners here, we haven't seen a contending team deep into the season collapse like this. We share the fans' frustration. At the end of July, we were in the playoffs, or on the verge of the playoffs, having just beaten Verlander. Then it all fell apart.''
The Tribe made no significant moves at the trade deadline, when it was 50-53 and six games back.
"I doubt it was demoralizing to the team,'' Dolan said of the inactivity. "Most teams I know are glad when they're kept together like that. We were very aggressive in looking for something that could help the team. I'm not convinced, given what's happened, that anything we might have done would have made a material difference.''
Dolan was asked what he would say to fans who are frustrated with his franchise's lack of success since coming within one game of the World Series in 2007.
"Over the last five seasons includes teams that have had some success, including the best team in baseball,'' Dolan said. "The fact that we haven't won consistently is frustrating to all of us. But we have been, on balance, a team that has accomplished some things, in contrast to some teams that have done nothing.
"Our challenge is to take teams and get them to the next level. We thought we were on the verge of doing that this year, which is why it's so much more frustrating.''
Under the Dolan ownership, which began in 2000, the Indians have reached the playoffs twice and won one playoff series.
Related topics: cleveland-indians, manny-acta, paul-dolan
Published: Thursday, August 23, 2012, 6:26 PM Updated: Thursday, August 23, 2012, 7:42 PM
By Dennis Manoloff, The Plain Dealer
Indians CEO Paul Dolan insisted Thursday night that no moves were likely in the front office before the end of the 2012 season.
CLEVELAND, Ohio -- Indians CEO Paul Dolan said Thursday night that there are no immediate plans to dismiss any combination of President Mark Shapiro, General Manager Chris Antonetti and manager Manny Acta.
The Indians have lost eight in a row and 21 of 25 to careen out of playoff contention. They are 54-70, fourth place, 14 1/2 back in the American League Central.
"We all have a lot of work to do, but their jobs aren't at stake in this,'' said Dolan, who spoke with reporters at Acta's charity bowling event at The Corner Alley downtown. "As I sit here today, I have no intent to make any changes. I have to understand what's happened. I'm not going to have that understanding today. Hopefully, sometime in this off-season, we'll be able to assess and move from there.''
Later in the five-minute session, Dolan reiterated, with conviction, that he is not considering a managerial change. Acta, in his third season with Cleveland, has one year remaining on his contract.
"I don't know how (to explain the free fall),'' Dolan said. "I don't understand exactly what's happened -- other than we haven't performed at virtually every level of the game for the last month.
"We had a team threatening to make the playoffs that has collapsed. We have to understand what happened, and I'm not going to make judgments on that right now. It's going to take more time to assess what we have, what we need, and what we're capable of doing.''
On July 26, the Indians rallied to defeat Justin Verlander and the Tigers, 5-3, at Progressive Field. They improved to 50-49 and were in third place, 3 1/2 games back of first-place Chicago. The Indians went on the road and set a franchise record for futility by losing all nine games on the trip. The streak eventually reached 11. On their most recent nine-game trip, which ended Wednesday, they won the first and lost the next eight.
"It's been extraordinarily difficult,'' Dolan said. "In our entire tenure as owners here, we haven't seen a contending team deep into the season collapse like this. We share the fans' frustration. At the end of July, we were in the playoffs, or on the verge of the playoffs, having just beaten Verlander. Then it all fell apart.''
The Tribe made no significant moves at the trade deadline, when it was 50-53 and six games back.
"I doubt it was demoralizing to the team,'' Dolan said of the inactivity. "Most teams I know are glad when they're kept together like that. We were very aggressive in looking for something that could help the team. I'm not convinced, given what's happened, that anything we might have done would have made a material difference.''
Dolan was asked what he would say to fans who are frustrated with his franchise's lack of success since coming within one game of the World Series in 2007.
"Over the last five seasons includes teams that have had some success, including the best team in baseball,'' Dolan said. "The fact that we haven't won consistently is frustrating to all of us. But we have been, on balance, a team that has accomplished some things, in contrast to some teams that have done nothing.
"Our challenge is to take teams and get them to the next level. We thought we were on the verge of doing that this year, which is why it's so much more frustrating.''
Under the Dolan ownership, which began in 2000, the Indians have reached the playoffs twice and won one playoff series.
Related topics: cleveland-indians, manny-acta, paul-dolan