He announced his plans to retire more than a year ago, and he and I have talked about it a half-dozen times since. But it didn’t really hit me until after the third game in Philadelphia last week, when the Philly and national writers stopped to shake his hand as they were leaving. Bobby Cox really is going away.
Love him or lampoon him, he has become part of our lives. He has managed the Braves since June 22, 1990, and we pause here to note that Georgia’s football coach on that distant date was Ray Goff, that Georgia’s basketball coach was Hugh Durham and that Juan Antonio Samaranch had not yet announced that the 1996 Summer Olympics were coming to “the city of Atlanta.”
Twenty years in the same job. Fourteen first-place finishes. One World Series title. (And only one, as his critics constantly remind us.) That’s a Hall of Fame resume, but sometimes I wonder if anyone around here can cut through the blather to see it.
It has become locally convenient to credit Bobby Cox for none of the games the Braves win while debiting him for every single loss. Anyone could have managed Glavine and Maddux and Smoltz, goes the line of thinking, except that no team in the history of sports has ever managed itself. (The Cubs had Mark Prior and Kerry Wood a few years ago — how’d those prized young arms turn out?)
And now we hear that Cox is culpable for his final club’s September slide, which again makes me wonder if I’m seeing the same doings as everyone else. With Chipper Jones hurt and Troy Glaus used up and Jair Jurrjens and Kris Medlen hurt and essentially an empty chair playing center field, does this look like a first-place team?
It isn’t Cox who has dragged the Braves down, I submit, but Cox who propped them up — 99 days in first place — so long. A lesser manager wouldn’t have kept this team buoyant after a poor April, but this manager kept believing in guys and tinkering with his lineup until something finally worked, and suddenly it was Memorial Day and the Braves were in first place.
We can and will quibble over his in-game decisions. That’s part of baseball. (As the famous baseball man Rocky Bridges had it: “There are three things the average American male thinks he can do better than anyone else: Build a fire, run a hotel and manage a big-league baseball club.”) I wouldn’t suggest that Cox never errs when it comes to tactics. Every manager does.
But I would suggest a team of such modest means that has conjured up 24 victories in its final at-bat has overcome both credulity and its modest means. I would suggest that these Braves rose so high for so long — and could well make the playoffs even now — because they were managed by a true believer. Who else would have stuck with Glaus into May?
Maybe Cox shouldn’t have bunted with Martin Prado against the Nationals last month. (He got mad at me for asking.) Maybe he should have redone his rotation to match Philly’s Big Three last week. (Although a long post by Eric Seidman on the pay site Baseball Prospectus examined the decision after the fact and reached no conclusion.) Maybe he should have given up on Rick Ankiel sooner. (But didn’t Ankiel drive in both runs in Washington on Sunday?)
OK, enough. The point here isn’t to try to persuade any of the bashers. If the space that awaits Cox in Cooperstown isn’t evidence enough for those folks, nothing will be. Today’s intent is to say that we soon we will be taking our last look at the greatest manager we’ll ever see. And if you’re too busy griping to give him his due, you have my condolences.
With that, I’ll open the floor for questions, comments and the usual Cox counterarguments. It’s overcast at Turner Field at the moment, but I wouldn’t take that as an omen. I have a positive feeling about the Braves this week, and I’ll be obliged if you join me in keeping the good vibrations happenin’, as it were.
1,048 comments Add your comment
Chico's Bail Bonds
September 27th, 2010
9:04 pm
I want to sponsor Richt’s boys
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:04 pm
Bobby Cox is an honorable manager. . .though you wonder how much competition Braves had in their division during their run. . most impressive feat was probably overtaking the Giants in ‘93, after that they pretty much smooth sailed in the NL east. . . .
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:04 pm
Wow. Diving up and out and backhanded and everything. Great play.
todd grantham
September 27th, 2010
9:04 pm
No problem with those 2 guys. No way they leave in the middle of a season to come to UGA.
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:05 pm
And now another beauty. Infante to his right.
Paul in RDU
September 27th, 2010
9:06 pm
I’ve read some interesting posts. This Don character seems to be quite the prognosticator – forecast months ago what the gap would be between the Braves and the Phillies at the end of September. Obviously with his massive betting winnings he has plenty of time on his hands and nothing else to do but come on a baseball blog and berate the simpler folks who don’t have his massive understanding of baseball.
Don – help me out here – what will the winning Powerball numbers be this week? Or are you going to post them on Thursday?
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:06 pm
Raining HARD now in florida. . halladay might not get the complete game shutout. . . reminiscent of the ‘08 world series game 5 fiasco
todd grantham
September 27th, 2010
9:06 pm
No cynicism involved. Just hard reality.
Jeff
September 27th, 2010
9:06 pm
doesn uga cover the 4 in boulder this week?
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:07 pm
Question– Is Freddie Freeman supposed to be near as good as Jason Heyward as far as his minor league ranking/prospect ?
Jesse Stone
September 27th, 2010
9:08 pm
RedNeck- Good prospect, but no Heyward
rugburn
September 27th, 2010
9:09 pm
leather working ok right now. it’s time to get some sticks going.
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:09 pm
Freddie is an outstanding prospect. Jason was beyond outstanding
Jesse Stone
September 27th, 2010
9:09 pm
Think James Loney
Paul in RDU
September 27th, 2010
9:09 pm
Nice to see you on Coach Todd
Jesse Stone
September 27th, 2010
9:10 pm
Marlins broadcast trivia: What pitcher has had most wins vs. Bobby Cox’s Braves?
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:10 pm
Braves 1, Marlins nil. McCann.
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:10 pm
Jesse Stone– Heyward is a big prospect but he’s somewhat over-rated. . .just wondering what the potential is for Freeman. . .anyhow
rugburn
September 27th, 2010
9:10 pm
mccann goes just deep enough
rugburn
September 27th, 2010
9:10 pm
take sign for mr lee.
bobbycoxcountdown: 6
September 27th, 2010
9:11 pm
B Mac…. that a way son!
Reno
September 27th, 2010
9:11 pm
Marlins Trivia Guess: Dontrell Willis
Jeff
September 27th, 2010
9:11 pm
D Lee swings at balls and takes strikes???
Jesse Stone
September 27th, 2010
9:11 pm
Don’t agree RedNeck. Heyward very polished and has a very high ceiling.
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:11 pm
McCann’s 21st home run.
Jesse Stone
September 27th, 2010
9:12 pm
Reno- will let you know when they give answer
Paul in RDU
September 27th, 2010
9:12 pm
Dontrell Willis sounds like a good guess Reno. He’s a former pitcher for the Carolina Mudcats
Jeff
September 27th, 2010
9:12 pm
.187 avg for nate. Isn’t that what some pitchers hit?
A fan of MLB
September 27th, 2010
9:12 pm
Cudos to Philadelphia ….. With that lineup 1- thru 6 it is the best in the MLB. The team has sold out some 115 games in a row at Citizens Bank Park. A team that has become what the Braves were in the 90’s. Loved my many across baseball.
rugburn
September 27th, 2010
9:12 pm
livan?
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:13 pm
Nice shot by McCann.
Going to 9th in Washington. . .Halladay working on a shut-out. . Phils on verge of clinching 4th straight division for first time in 118 year franchise history
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:13 pm
The Marlins do that thing where they run away from a fly.
todd grantham
September 27th, 2010
9:13 pm
with apolgies to Joanie Sommers
Richt get angry
Richt get mad
said you’d give us the best
football team
that we ever had
but you didnt
and we said screw it
Ritch you really were just a temporary fad
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:14 pm
Nate breaks an 0-for-14 skein
Jesse Stone
September 27th, 2010
9:14 pm
was going to guess that rugburn. Mclouth should be on 2nd
Ree Roe
September 27th, 2010
9:14 pm
Yess! Big HR
@ Mark, I guess I respect your rosy perspective on the Bravos. This Mets like collapse has been troubling to watch these past few weeks & I am down on our prospects of making the playoffs. Looks like we just ran out of gas :-/
-REEspectfully Roe!!
hugheswb
September 27th, 2010
9:14 pm
Don’t forget Ankiel’s bases loaded triple with 2-outs and 2-strikes in the top of the 9th against the Cubs… that alone was worth giving him some playing time, when you consider how important every victory is for a team fighting for a playoff spot.
Reno
September 27th, 2010
9:14 pm
Livan is a better guess. But Willis was a 20-game winner once upon a time. Definitely a fall from grace
bobbycoxcountdown: 6
September 27th, 2010
9:14 pm
nice hustle Nate.
Way to turn a gift double into a single.
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:15 pm
McLouth’s on second now. Steals.
Jeff
September 27th, 2010
9:15 pm
How did Nate not get to second on that pop up anyway?
todd grantham
September 27th, 2010
9:15 pm
…and a stolen base! Saints be praised!
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:15 pm
Sea Bass grounds to third.
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:16 pm
NATIONALS pitcher JUST THREW AT HALLADAY’S HEAD !
Ghost of Jeff Treadway
September 27th, 2010
9:17 pm
True or False: Sea Bass is the best nickname ever?
Chief O'Hara
September 27th, 2010
9:17 pm
Beggora
tardawg
September 27th, 2010
9:17 pm
Great Article Mark I have loved the Braves through the rotten years and glory years. Yes we only won the one but that was the first for the ATL and BY D@##$ that will and should mean something to any Braves fan. What he has done with absolutely nothing is nothing but what Bobby does best I and alot of others will surely miss him he is truly a legend. Now we need to send him to the playoffs and hopefully more GO BRAVES!!!!!!!!!! and THANK YOU BOBBY COX!!!!!!!!
TeamRedNeck
September 27th, 2010
9:17 pm
Y Escobar – A Gonzalez trade will go down as one of the more foolish in Braves history.
Mark Bradley
September 27th, 2010
9:18 pm
It’s among my favorites, Ghost of J.T.
E-6
September 27th, 2010
9:18 pm
Our other black hole predictably ends the inning.