Live from the ballyard: For Bobby Cox, the end really is nigh

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

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:18 pm

That ship has sailed, and thankfully it’s not coming back

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:19 pm

Bobby’s stuck at 158? You think that will be the final tally?

A fan of MLB

September 27th, 2010
9:19 pm

Wow! What a close call.

rugburn

September 27th, 2010
9:19 pm

agree with you jesse. a little bloop towards that first baseman-like bull in a china shop that tries to play left field should be treated like a double right out of the box. that guy is all effort though.

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:19 pm

trivia answer was Al Leiter

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:20 pm

Weird stuff happening. Brad Davis breaks bat and both barrel and ball go toward Prado. He fields neither.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:21 pm

I’m thinking he’ll get thrown out Saturday, Coach Grantham.

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:21 pm

who was Al Ford?

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:21 pm

I work for the High A affiliate of the Marlins and saw Morrison come thru. He is an unbelievable hitter and think he will be back on first base for the marlins or someone else soon. Gaby is a 27 or 28 year old rookie.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:21 pm

My guess would have been Kevin Brown, Jesse.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:22 pm

Double play.

Denny

September 27th, 2010
9:22 pm

Mark can you go over what happens if the braves giants and padres all end the season tied. Thanks.

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:22 pm

Why? Bob Davidson in town this weekend?

Kentavo

September 27th, 2010
9:23 pm

I think some of these moves will payoff if the Braves can somehow limp into the playoffs. I mean Sea Bass doesn’t have the range of Yuni; but he’s hit a couple of blasts that have been the difference makers; and come playoff time we hope these savvy veterans (I say that with a bit of tongue in cheek) can put it together because they’ve been there before. I’m talkin’ Sea Bass, D-Lee, D-Lowe, Ricky “Sprained” Ankiel, Hinske, and even the Melkman who does have that shiny WS ring.

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:23 pm

I think Bobby should throw out the first ball Sunday. And aim right for Davidson’s head.

Kentavo

September 27th, 2010
9:23 pm

Whoops, and I forgot the forgotten man, Troy “WS MVP” Glaus.

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:23 pm

Just saw Dom Capers on MNF. Mark, if you’ve ever been up close to him, can you tell me if his hair is spray-on?

Headley Lamar

September 27th, 2010
9:24 pm

Phillies three outs away.

At least we made them earn it.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:24 pm

Here’s the e-mail from the Braves, Denny.

If two teams are tied for a division title and the Wild Card is also shared with a third team, the games will be played as follows:

• The two teams tied for the division lead will play the one-game tie-breaker, with the winner being declared the Division Champion.

• The losing team will then play the club from the other division for the Wild Card.

If three clubs are tied for first place in the Division with an identical winning percentage at the end of the regular season, then the tie is broken by designating the Clubs as “A,” “B,” and “C,” with selection of those designations based on the Clubs’ records against one another, and playing tie-breaking games as follows:

• Club A would host Club B on Monday, October 4th.

• The winner of the A vs. B game would then host Club C on Tuesday, October 5th.

• The winner of the A/B vs. C game would be declared the Division Champion.

rugburn

September 27th, 2010
9:24 pm

al leiter? how many? i didn’ think he had that many good years. he was in the east for a while though

Bryan

September 27th, 2010
9:25 pm

Watching the Bears Packers along with the Braves. Just saw a play where the bears punted and could have done what the Saints did in blocking a player into the return guy but didn’t. You’d think they would learn from that and more teams would do it since they allow it.

Paul in RDU

September 27th, 2010
9:26 pm

A question about Bobby – How many WS would he have won if he had Mariano Rivera?

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:27 pm

Omar Infante beats out a bunt.

Milo

September 27th, 2010
9:28 pm

Wow, the atlanta fans really showed up for this game. They might be able to get 25,000 to show up tomorrow. Do the fans know that Atlanta is in a playoff chase? I know everytime I see a highlight of the Phillies games there is alot of fans and waving towels. If I were a ballplayer and seen the turnout of the crowd, I wouldnt have that motivation that the players keep talking about after every loss. Way to show up!!!

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:28 pm

Al Ford was the referee in the Jasper Sanks game

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:28 pm

wonder if Omar Bradley ever beat out a bunt.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:28 pm

That question has been asked a time or two, Paul. I’d say three at least.

Denny

September 27th, 2010
9:28 pm

Thank you Mark. Well at least if we only get a tie, we won’t have to play two games. You’d think they would just look at head to head and give it to the team with the most wins. I suppose they use head to head to determine who gets the game at their place for the wild card in case of a tie. Also, doesn’t that push back a series since they would likely play the Division game Monday and the next game Tuesday? That’s a lot of traveling for the losing team, especially given a west coast east coast scenario.

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:29 pm

Correct. isnt he a video review official now?

tardawg

September 27th, 2010
9:29 pm

Paul in RDU you are exactly right

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:29 pm

The Marlins really have a tough time catching.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:30 pm

He is. He did a Georgia game last year, as I remember.

rugburn

September 27th, 2010
9:30 pm

jason takes a lot of walks,which is good, but he takes a lot of pitches, which i think is bad. he can do a lot more for us by swinging the bat than he can by trotting to first. ..like that!

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:30 pm

How many would Bobby have won if the Barry Bonds trade had worked out?

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:30 pm

Omar Bradley: The G.I. general. No relation.

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:30 pm

probably the LSU game.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:31 pm

It might have been the LSU game, believe it or not.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:31 pm

Prado hurt. Couldn’t even run.

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:31 pm

DAMN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:31 pm

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:31 pm

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:31 pm

the Prado hamstring finally gave up I guess

count_schemula

September 27th, 2010
9:32 pm

Now this team is really doomed. Prado all but collapsed.

Jesse Stone

September 27th, 2010
9:32 pm

looked more like an oblique

todd grantham

September 27th, 2010
9:32 pm

Oh, come on. That would confirm my conspiracy theory about the SEC against UGA.

Mark Bradley

September 27th, 2010
9:32 pm

Brooks Conrad is at third base.

Craig

September 27th, 2010
9:32 pm

Where do you live Milo and who do you root for? It’s been raining and storming here tonight between 5-8. Also, our fans were there from 91-96. When we started “choking” the fans got cynical.

Brave Observer

September 27th, 2010
9:33 pm

There goes the season for sure

DC Braves Fan

September 27th, 2010
9:33 pm

Brooksie time

JD

September 27th, 2010
9:33 pm

and the Steven King nightmare continues