Friday, November 21, 2008

End of an Era-The Boss gives up control

After 30 years, the Boss, George Steinbrenner, gave up official control of the Yankees to his 40 year old son Hal yesterday.

The Boss lead an investment group that purchased the Yankees from CBS for $8.7 million in 1973 and was an innovator, realizing early on how free agency would change the game. Signing Goose Goosage and Dave Winfield ushered in the Free Agency Era. He was so effective at this and the other teams did not catch on to the change right away that my late grandfather in the early 80s called him “Stein-grabber”, because he would grab the NL star free agents. My grandfather was an old school baseball fan and thought free agency was ruining the game.

With his big signings and blockbuster deals, George saved the Yankees twice, once in the mid 70s and then again in the mid-90s after his own mess of the team after his banning from baseball. The Yankees won 6 World Series and 10 AL pennants in his reign.

“I realize it’s a great responsibility,” said Hal Steinbrenner. “My dad is, needless to say, a tough act to follow.”

Really?

I will argue that the Boss’ tactics, while fun, were not as productive as the numbers show. The golden years of the Yankees were after his ban: 1996-2001, where they won 4 World Series, including 3 in a row, countless division titles and went to the playoffs from 1996-2007. His “saving” of the Yankees in the 90s was by letting others grow the minor league system and not trade them away or sign as many free agents and lose draft picks. A lot of this building went on when the boss was banned. Prior to 1996, the Boss changed managers 20 times and was famous for feuding with manager Billy Martin.

By the mid-90s, the Yankees settled on one manager for over a decade and built the core of their championship teams from their farm system, not trades and free agency. Name the stars that have lead the Yankees over the past decade: Jeter, Riviera, Posada, Pettitte, etc, they were all from the farm.

The minute the Yankees lost the streak in 2001, old George was back. Rumors about firing Joe Torre were all the buzz and the Yankees went back to the superstar signings: Jason Giambi was the first one, and then I predicted the golden age would be over. Then came tons of other flops: Randy Johnson, A-Rod (the jury is still out on him, but his post season performance has proven otherwise so far), etc. Letting Joe Torre go last year, no playoffs this year.

So Hal looks like he is going to continue the path of his father. Too bad.

Posted by Steve in New York


















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