Originally Published: October 11, 2007
Turning October logic on its head
Just when you thought you had October all figured out, along comes the 2007 National League Championship Series.
If the Diamondbacks are really playing the Rockies -- and we just got a press release from TBS that swears they are -- then here's what that proves:![]() ![]() Rockies-Diamondbacks series page |
- The team with the most postseason experience usually wins.
- The manager with the most postseason experience usually wins.
- The team with the biggest payroll usually wins.
No experience necessary
If the insanity of October takes a little getting used to, then how do we explain what just went on in the Division Series: Rockies with postseason experience: 4. Phillies with postseason experience: 9.| Players in NLCS with previous playoff experience: | ||
| PLAYER | YEARS | TEAM |
| Eric Byrnes | 2001-03 | A's |
| Tony Clark | 2004 | Yankees |
| Juan Cruz | 2003 2004 |
Cubs Braves |
| Livan Hernandez | 1997 2000-02 |
Marlins Giants |
| PLAYER | YEARS | TEAM |
| LaTroy Hawkins | 2002-03 | Twins |
| Matt Herges | 2003 | Giants |
| Mark Redman | 2003 | Marlins |
| Yorvit Torrealba | 2003 | Giants |
The one common fabric I see ... is that these guys really epitomize 'team.' This is not a collection of individuals playing for a team. This is a collection of individuals playing AS a team.
--Rockies GM Dan O'Dowd
Meanwhile in the dugout
In our postseason-preview column last week, we quoted an AL executive talking about how important managers are this time of year. Now there's a concept we can all agree upon, right? But here's what we can't agree on: The old adage that the manager with the most October experience, and most October success, is more likely to be the best manager this time of year. Take a look at the four National League teams in this year's field. The only manager in that field who had ever won a postseason series was Lou Piniella of the Cubs. He was also, naturally, the only one of the four who had ever won the World Series. So that same executive concluded that Piniella's experience should be "a big advantage." Right. Made total sense to one and all. But then the playoffs started. And what happened? Piniella got matched up with Arizona's Bob Melvin, who never had managed a postseason game before last week. Piniella, on the other hand, had managed 44 of them -- and played in 43 more. Over in the other NL series, the Rockies' Clint Hurdle also never had managed a postseason game before last week. But Phillies manager Charlie Manuel had been there, done that, with the 2001 Indians. And we might as well bounce over to the AL for a moment and mention that, in that Indians-Yankees series, Joe Torre had a slight edge on Eric Wedge in postseason games managed, too -- by a margin of 122-0. So how did those paragons of October managerial experience fare in those three series? They won none of them, of course. Now what conclusions do we draw from this? Well, first off, managerial brilliance is clearly overrated -- any time of year. "If J.C. Romero just gets Jeff Baker out [in Game 3 of the Rockies-Phillies series], Charlie Manuel isn't getting second-guessed right now for not going to a right-hander," said O'Dowd. "It always ultimately comes down to how players play." And that's true -- on Oct. 6 or on May 6. But there is a certain urgency to games in October, and the best managers manage in a way that reflects that urgency. You don't have to do things exactly how you did them all year. You do have to win tonight. And that's a concept that inexperienced managers often don't get. But some guys never get that, even after they've managed in the postseason six times. Others seem to catch on from day one. "I'd use Terry Francona, in '04, as an example," said Arizona GM Josh Byrnes, who was an assistant GM in Boston back then, when the Red Sox won it all. "He managed that year against three of the most revered managers in the game -- Mike Scioscia, Joe Torre and Tony La Russa -- and he was very, very good in handling everything that postseason. So managerial experience? I don't know if I'd go along with that theory." Hey, good call. Two of the last three World Series were one by managers (Francona and Ozzie Guillen) who had zero postseason experience. And five of the last six World Series were won by the manager with less postseason experience than the manager in the other dugout. So anybody see a pattern here?Payroll, schmayroll
Five years ago, Bud Selig and his favorite labor negotiators practically had us brainwashed to believe that size of payroll determined the outcome of every postseason series. He can thank the Oakland A's for finding a thousand different ways to lose a series, just to make that premise possible. But if it worked then, it's safe to say it doesn't work anymore.| TEAM | *PAYROLL | MLB RANK |
| Red Sox | $143.5M | 2nd |
| Indians | $61.7M | 23rd |
| Rockies | $54.4M | 25th |
| Diamondbacks | $52.1M | 26th |
| * -- Opening Day payrolls | ||




