Evidently Joel Skinner is a Cleveland native still:
Red Wings introduce new manager Skinner
Former Minor League Manager of the Year also has major league playing, managing experience
Jeff DiVeronica
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle USA TODAY NETWORK
The Red Wings introduced veteran skipper Joel Skinner as their 45th manager on Wednesday. The 56-year-old replaces Mike Quade, who took Rochester to the brink of the International League playoffs last year before deciding to become a roving outfield instructor for the Twins.
Skinner said he was ecstatic to join an organization such as Minnesota that is so good grooming future majorleague stars. Here are nine things to know about the new manager:
Familiar with Naomi Silver
Not that their history had an bearing on Skinner getting the job, but he has known the Red Wings chief operating officer since 1984. Naomi Silver was in her early 20s then and early into her seven-year marriage to ballplayer Cliff Speck.
Skinner was a catcher and a teammate of Speck on the Denver Bears and also played a quarter of the season with the Chicago White Sox, his first bigleague club. Skinner was with the Sox from 1983-86, the Yankees from 1986-88 and the Cleveland Indians from 1989-91. He played 15 years of pro ball, including 564 games in the majors.
Red Wings general manager Dan Mason was at the winter meetings when the Twins called and told him they’d hired Skinner.
Mason joked that Silver was the “happiest person in Rochester“ that day when he phoned her with the news.
Managing change
In 12 seasons as a minor-league manager, Skinner has a record of 860-777. He also went 35-41 while serving as interim manager of the Cleveland Indians in 2002 after Charlie Manuel was fired.
“The only constant in minor-league baseball is change ... (as a manager) you’re dealing with a constant flux in your lineup,” Mason said Wednesday. “So to have a winning record after 12 seasons managing minor-league baseball is a tremendous accomplishment.”
Great track record
Skinner, who was out of baseball last year, was named Minor League Manager of the Year by Baseball America and The Sporting News while leading the Buffalo Bisons to the International League Governors’ Cup Finals in 2000. He earned the same honor from USA Today Baseball Weekly in 1998 with Double- A Akron.
“Anytime you have good players hopefully you can do something with them and win some ball games,” Skinner said, deflecting praise. “Our job as staff members is to create a culture that is conducive to learn and to win.”
Most recently, he managed in the White Sox chain, going from Triple-A Charlotte (2012-15) to Single-A Winston- Salem in 2016. He was with the Indians in some capacity, from third-base coach to bench coach from 2001-09.
His first managing job was in New York state, too. He led Watertown to the New York-Penn League championship in 1995, earning Manager of the Year that season.
From San Diego to snow
Mistake by the lake? Don’t tell that to Skinner, who was born and raised in La Jolla near San Diego but has made his home in Cleveland since his playing days ended as an Indian in 1991. Skinner and his wife, Jennifer, who was at Wednesday’s announcement, have three daughters, Kate, Erin and Tara, and one son, Cameron. Skinner joked Wednesday about how a California native can handle the weather in the Northeast.
Father knows best
Skinner grew up around batting cages. He and his father, Bob, are only the second father-son tandem to manage in the major leagues and there’s a Rochester connection to that, too. They share that distinction with Red Wing and Baseball Hall of Famer George Sisler (St. Louis Browns, 1924-26) and his son, Dick (Cincinnati Reds, 1964-65).
George Sisler was general manager of the Wings when they won Governor’s Cup crowns in 1955 and 1956 and remained at the helm into the 1960s, as Rochester transitioned from being affiliated with the Cardinals to the Orioles.
“I think I learned more from (my dad) about baseball playing golf with him growing up as a kid than anything,” Skinner said. “The way you battle. The way you don’t give in.”
Among the managers Skinner played for were Tony LaRussa, Lou Pinella, John McNamara, Jim Fregosi and Mike Hargrove, among others.
Skinner played from 1986-88 with the Yankees and in 1988 under Billy Martin, who guided New York to a pair of pennants and the 1977 World Series crown. After being sent down to the minors in 1987 when Skinner joked he “forgot how to hit,” as evidenced by his .137 batting average, he said Martin boosted his confidence in spring training in 1988.
“He pulled me aside in Fort Lauderdale and pretty much put his arm around me and said, ‘Hey, listen, I believe in you,’ and that really went a long ways,” said Skinner, who called Martin a “fiery” manager who relied on his catchers to be leaders.
“He might yell at you, but (with) Billy’s way of yelling at the catcher, he’d rather yell at one guy than 10 pitchers.”
Back to the big leagues?
Would Skinner like another shot at managing in the majors? Of course, he said.
“Anytime you do anything, at least for athletes, you want to aspire to the highest level, to be challenged at the highest peak,” he said. “From that standpoint, yeah, sure, that’d be great. It’s not who I am. It’s what I do.
“But right now I’m the manager of the Red Wings and I just pour my total attention into that and go from there. ... I don’t get caught up in (what could happen); I never have. As a player, coach, manager, whatever you’re doing, I think the players see through that.”
Call-up, a manager’s perspective
Skinner spoke humbly about sharing that moment when he gets to tell a Triple- A player he’s going to “The Show.”
“There’s no more joy that I get than calling a young player in and telling them that they’re going to Minnesota.”
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