It’s a reflex: Something happens with the Braves, you ask the man in charge. So I sought out Bobby Cox on Wednesday afternoon, and I said: “If Chipper does quit, what do you do for a third baseman next year?”
Cox smiled. Then he said: “Not my problem.”
And that’s when it hit. For all the changes undergone by this organization these past two decades, nothing has or could prepare us for what’s surely coming next spring. We’ve seen the Braves without Tom Glavine and Greg Maddux; without John Smoltz and David Justice; without Terry Pendleton at third base and without Andruw Jones in center field … and we’ve heard them without Skip Caray and Pete Van Wieren … but we’ve never encountered anything like what’s apparently at hand.
No Bobby Cox in the dugout. No Chipper Jones batting third. No remaining touchstones to the era of baseball that made us care about the Braves in the first place.
Cox has announced his retirement. Chipper stands to announce his any day now. (After Wednesday’s game he said: “In good time.”) Yes, there’s symmetry there. As general manager, Cox drafted Jones No. 1 overall in June 1990, and since arriving in the big leagues to stay in September 1993 the great switch-hitter has known only one manager. And we on the periphery have come to regard them as a package deal.
We’re about to see the package unwrapped. We’re about to see the Braves work with two fewer numbers at their disposal. (Surely Nos. 6 and 10 will be retired along with their distinguished wearers.) We’re about to see the final holdovers from the run of excellence severed from the team they made great.
Think of it this way: Cox won division titles over 14 consecutive completed seasons managing the Braves, and if you credit Chipper as being part of the improbable 1993 NL West championship team — he was a September call-up — he was part of 12 first-place finishes. Only two other members of the 2010 club have been part of even one Atlanta division title: Tim Hudson and Brian McCann, each of whom arrived in 2005.
How would it feel, McCann was asked, to become the senior Brave among everyday players? Said McCann, who’s all of 26: “Until something happens [with Chipper], I don’t think that’s something I want to comment on.”
And what is there to say? We all knew the day was coming when the Braves would be without Cox and even without Chipper, but that won’t mean the day itself won’t hit us like a two-by-four upside the ol’ noggin.
Back to the original premise of today’s exercise: What might the Braves do for a third baseman? I asked the ascendant Troy Glaus if relocation to first base is a permanent career move. He said no. “In my heart I’ll always be a third baseman. Actually, I’ll always be a shortstop, but we know that’s not going to happen. I could play third.”
For the Braves? In 2011? “Maybe,” Glaus said.
We’ll have plenty of time to bat this around these next few months. (Glaus, as we know, is working on a one-year contract and might be slugging his way out of the Braves’ price range.) But the question itself gives us pause: We’ve never had to ask what the Braves would do for a third baseman because we’ve come to expect Chipper to be standing on the left side of the infield, same as we expect to see Cox at the near end of the dugout.
Next year we might not see either. No Chipper at the hot corner. No Cox grousing about balls and strikes. No “Crazy Train” when the No. 3 spot comes up. No Cox with his awful nicknames.
No Bobby Cox and no Chipper Jones. And what, Bill Acree was asked, would that mean?
Said Acree, the Braves’ director of travel/equipment manager and a team employee since 1966: “The world would come to an end.”
And it might. It just might.
With that, we’ll open the phone lines. (Which have been open all along, but bear with me.) I’ll be here to chat during tonight’s Braves-Rays games, and I’ll let you know if anyone retires. Unless I’m the retiree. In which case I’ll just close the computer and walk away.
228 comments Add your comment
Swamp Fox
June 16th, 2010
9:51 pm
Ready for the Jinx. According to TV the Braves have won 38 in a row when scoring 5 or more runs.
Mark Bradley
June 16th, 2010
9:51 pm
There’s something to complain about. The Braves dropped the ball twice but still got one out.
CaptainMudderland
June 16th, 2010
9:52 pm
Knuckleheads is not a friendly term boss!
Mark Bradley
June 16th, 2010
9:54 pm
Venters fans Pena. One to go.
coachx
June 16th, 2010
9:54 pm
Good article Mark !
Jon Koncak
June 16th, 2010
9:55 pm
This Kid Johnny Venters is a keeper! This manufacturing runs is reminesent of the 90’s. I Love it!!!!!!!!! This year could get very interesting.!!!!
Mark Bradley
June 16th, 2010
9:55 pm
Shutout lost on a seeing-eye broken-bat grounder.
Omar! Omar!
June 16th, 2010
9:55 pm
Goodbye shutout.
Mark Bradley
June 16th, 2010
9:56 pm
Then again, the shutout should have been lost in the sixth inning. And it’s now 6-2.
Jon Koncak
June 16th, 2010
9:56 pm
Dang, no shut out!!!!!!
frank james
June 16th, 2010
9:56 pm
Best Braves announcers to me have been Ernie Johnson Sr., Skip Caray and Pere Van Wieren. I think Joe Simpson is close. We got get Heyward to let that ball travel and use the whole field. When Jurigens comes back the Braves will have the best starting rotation in baseball. I hope they can stay healthy for the stretch. Get Wagner loose!
Mark Bradley
June 16th, 2010
9:57 pm
Braves win. They’re still in first.
Kane337
June 16th, 2010
9:57 pm
Yanks have the tie run at the plate in the Bot 9th. Down by 3, 2 out, Posada up.
Jon Koncak
June 16th, 2010
9:57 pm
That does it!!!!!!!!!!
Omar! Omar!
June 16th, 2010
9:57 pm
Way to bring home the win, MB. Maybe you should attend a KK game!
Jon Koncak
June 16th, 2010
9:58 pm
I really like our team this year!!!!!!!!!!!
Kane337
June 16th, 2010
9:59 pm
Lidge strikes out Posada.
curtis jones
June 16th, 2010
10:00 pm
Good game! No Chip Caray, no cringe-inducing moments.
Swamp Fox
June 16th, 2010
10:01 pm
Mets gotta lose sometime.
Omar! Omar!
June 16th, 2010
10:01 pm
It’s amazing what a better, more pleasant experience watching the game is on Peachtree versus listening to Chip.
Kane337
June 16th, 2010
10:02 pm
ESPN’s 30 for 30 is on. Documentary on June 17th, 1994. Should be interesting.
CaptainMudderland
June 16th, 2010
10:03 pm
10 over .500 that will work!
Confused
June 16th, 2010
10:11 pm
Venters fans Pena?
The Braves are letting people who post in the AJC Vent pitch in relief now? I know the AJC had a first pitch contest, but I think that’s taking it a little to far.
Joshua
June 17th, 2010
3:23 am
Seriously? Did someone suggest we trade Kenshin Kawakami for a good hitter? Holy smokes what a brilliant idea. Might as well get them to throw in a few prized prospects and pay that player’s salary as well while we are at it.
Seriously what we need to do is acquire Cliff Lee. Yea we could use another solid bat but just look, even with Chipper not performing up to standard, the Braves have one of the best offenses in the league with a remarkably deep bench. Lee is a flame throwing, top of the line starter who also happens to be a left hander with a vendetta against the Phillies. Not only that, but I feel it is about 100% likely that if we don’t acquire him, the Mets will. GET CLIFF LEE.
turkeycaller
June 17th, 2010
4:12 am
Braves minus Cox and Jones equals a chance for a better team. Both individuals will continue to drag this team down if continued to have the chance. Braves win despite them. FACT.
BaseballRun - Braves’ Jones Says No Decision on Quitting
June 17th, 2010
6:07 am
[...] is as much a face of the Braves as Manager Bobby Cox, who is retiring after the season. They are what is left of the club that won 14 consecutive [...]
Tweets that mention No Cox AND no Chipper? Is the world coming to an end? | Mark Bradley -- Topsy.com
June 17th, 2010
6:36 am
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by ajc sports editor, akihiro. akihiro said: Like the rain stops, the reign will end soon… No Cox AND no Chipper? Is the world coming to an end? http://shar.es/mz40C #mlb #braves [...]
Lindsay
June 20th, 2010
10:56 pm
I hope Chipper doesn’t retire and Bobby needs to change his mind!