Indians fire Manny Acta

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • MVPete
    Old School
    • Mar 2008
    • 17500

    Indians fire Manny Acta

    CLEVELAND -- Someone had to be blamed for the Cleveland Indians' collapse.Acta, hired by Cleveland in 2009 after two losing seasons as Washington's manager, was fired Thursday by the Indians, who dropped from contention in July to last place in the AL Central.
    Cleveland was within three games of first place on July 21 before losing 21 of 25, going 5-24 in August, and eventually sliding all the way to the bottom of its division. It certainly wasn't all Acta's fault, but there were times when the Indians seemed to be going through the motions and a lack of effort isn't a positive reflection on any manager.
    Acta went 214-266 in nearly three seasons with the Indians, who are just 21-50 in the second half this season. Acta had one season left on his contract.
    The Indians announced Acta will not return in 2013 on an off day before they opened a final homestand against Kansas City and the Chicago White Sox. If there is any solace to Acta it's that his final two games were road wins over the second-place White Sox, who are chasing Detroit for the division title.
    Bench coach Sandy Alomar Jr., a former Indians All-star catcher and fan favorite who could become Cleveland's next full-time manager, will replace Acta for the last six games of 2012.
    Indians general manager Chris Antonetti said the search for a new manager will begin immediately. Acta's coaching staff will remain intact for the rest of this season.
    Antonetti, who probably shares some responsibility for the Indians' stunning drop this season, said the decision to dismiss Acta was made Wednesday night following discussions with Indians president Mark Shapiro and owner Paul Dolan.
    "Unfortunately, our results on the field fell short of our expectations," Antonetti said. "We made this decision with the idea of getting better moving forward."
    Antonetti shared in the responsibility for the Indians' disappointing season.
    "Ultimately, the responsibility rests with me," said Antonetti, adding Acta handled the decision with class. "Manny is not the only one to blame. We need to take a hard look organizationally to see how we can do better. We all have higher expectations."
    Earlier this month, Dolan said he was not considering a managerial change, but the Indians continued to stumble and left the club with little choice. Dolan indicated the decision was made by Antonetti, who is in his second season.
    "I have great respect for Manny and appreciate the effort he exhibited not only leading our team, but also the contributions he made in our community over the past three years," Dolan said in a statement. "I fully support Chris' decision to make this change and am confident that he will lead a tireless search to find the right individual to lead the club to our ultimate goal of winning the World Series."
    The 43-year-old Acta maintained a stoic attitude during the Indians' freefall and insisted he wasn't concerned about his future but only about developing young players.
    It didn't help him that several Cleveland players underperformed this season while others couldn't stay healthy. Former All-Star center fielder Grady Sizemore, who was signed to a one-year, $5 million free-agent contract in November despite missing most of the past three seasons with injuries, never got healthy enough to play. Designated hitter Travis Hafnermissed several months with a bad back.
    And Antonetti's major acquisition in 2011 of ace Ubaldo Jimenez failed to pay dividends as the right-hander went 9-17 with a 5.55 ERA.
    After winning 80 games in 2011, the Indians entered the season with high hopes. It seemed as if they were in position to compete for a playoff spot before their inexplicable collapse, and Acta paid the steepest price.
    "I always hoped our play would turn around in the second half," Antonetti said. "Unfortunately it didn't."


    Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press
    Crazy. Seemed like they were going to have a decent season the 1st half, then it just bottomed out.
  • Warner2BruceTD
    2011 Poster Of The Year
    • Mar 2009
    • 26142

    #2
    Originally posted by MVPete
    Crazy. Seemed like they were going to have a decent season the 1st half, then it just bottomed out.
    Same thing happened last season. Acta stinks, lets face it.

    And shame on Antonelli for the Ubaldo fiasco. It was pretty clear that Jimenez was not the smae pitcher anymore when COL started shopping him, as suitors dropped out one by one. The saving grace is that Alex White & Drew Pomeranz look like poop so far for COL, but i'd still rather have a couple of 22 year olds who were highly thought of not too long ago than a head case who pitches so badly that he isn't worth the trouble.

    Comment

    • ThomasTomasz
      • Nov 2024

      #3
      Well, you could argue that he doesn't make the deals for players. Jimenez was a bust signing, and this year has been horrible in the second half. It also says a lot for the pitching in general when your ERA leader (yes, the one that goes by the official minimum IPs) has an ERA of 5.03. They do have a pretty good back end of the bullpen, but how often were they able to be used effectively? They also don't have an offense that really stands out to you one way or another. They don't have a big power bat in the middle (though Santana is evolving into maybe being that guy) and they have some guys who put up a decent OBP but they also don't have a lot of team speed either.

      I just think it's a poorly constructed roster, and the fact that they are a small market club that made some bad big-contract investments (thank God Hafner is about done, and Jimenez also takes up a good amount of cap room) has only compounded problems for them. Maybe Acta is unfairly fired here, but there also is no reason for that pathetic collapse. I would have given him some time into next season, but had him on a very short leash.

      Comment

      • Rudi
        #CyCueto
        • Nov 2008
        • 9905

        #4
        I never really understood the whole "Let's fire this guy with a week left" idea.

        Comment

        • ThomasTomasz
          • Nov 2024

          #5
          Speculation already going that Francona could be the favorite for this job, with Sandy Alomar Jr. Alomar has obvious ties and is a current coach and taking over for Acta, while Francona was a special assistant back in 2001 and worked with Shapiro.

          Comment

          Working...