Remember last year when the Cardinals loaded up the bases and Edmonds was due up, and Dusty brought in Mike Remlinger to face him? Edmonds crushed the ball Remlinger served up. Heck, I think even Remlinger knew he shouldn't have been the one to face Edmonds in that situation. Making a move like that is comparable to a chef serving up raw chicken. There's a slight chance you might not get sick, but you probably will. Gut feeling is crap. If you play the percentages, I won't be screaming like a lunatic and throwing things at my tv. And running Neifi and Macias out there to bat 1/2 in the order ahead of Lee is asinine. I just walked over and turned off the tv, and I rarely do that when a Cubs baseball game comes on. I'd never consider trying that once as an experiment. Dusty did it numerous times. I don't care who was injured. We had Murton, Barrett among others to hit at the top of the order. Neifi is an out machine and how many times did he hit 1st or 2nd last year? Way, way, way, way, way too many times. Why do players like playing for Dusty? Because he doesn't ride their asses when they do something stupid. He just lets them play. When Moises Alou kicked the ball into the ivy and let a relatively slow runner walk around the bases for an inside the park home run, a "good" manager would have told him to take a shower and go home. He most certainly would not reward lazy, half assed play go rewarded with more playing time. I could go on and on. Being a long time baseball player doesn't make you a good manager. While I am not stating I know more about the game or would do a better job of managing a team, it doesn't mean that I'm willing to concede that every guy that has been a manager at the major league level is a good manager. And I certainly do not think that Dusty is a good manager. A good manager doesn't continue sending your set up man out to close games when it's obvious to everyone in the stands that he doesn't have the mind set to close games. Dusty did it day after day after day. If that wasn't enough, he did it again the next year. Hawkins is a good set up man. But, don't let him close. We learn when we are young that if you put your finger in a pan of boiling water, you will burn your finger. Dusty puts his finger in that boiling water everyday. Screw hunches. Play the percentages. If you lose playing the percentages, then at least you gave your team the best chance to win everyday, and I won't complain. If you have watched Cub baseball everyday while Dusty has been in charge and can still say he's a good manager, then I applaud your optimism. But, there is absolutely nothing you can do to convince me you are correct. And the saddening part of it all was that I supported bringing in Dusty Baker as the manager. I guess I didn't really know anything about him prior to coming to Chicago other than the fact players liked playing for him. I didn't realize it was because mediocre to bad veterans get more playing time and those are the guys who actually like playing for him. "Walks clog the bases" is not the mentality I want to hear from the manager of the team I route for. Baserunners score runs. The aggressive approach is good if you are swinging at good pitches. The Cubs barely scored 700 runs last year, so maybe a few more walks might be in order? To each there own. I'd actually prefer to have Baylor back. I thought his in game management was bad, but Dusty's is worse. Last year when it was apparent that the Cubs were out of it, Dusty still wouldn't play the kids. He wanted to get the Cubs record over .500 so that he could make his resume look good for another 4m a year long term contract. It didn't work. The crap he was sending out there everyday in meaningless games wasn't as good as the kids he's now planning on starting this year. I don't know who would make a good manager, and I'm not overly fond of Tony LaRussa, but LaRussa is definitely better. The Cubs had over 40m to spend this offseason and there was no excuse to put together a team that couldn't win it all. They went out and got the guys "they" wanted. Let's just see how it works out for them. I'll be cheering for the Cubs to win, but I'll be cheering in spite of Dusty's poor managerial abilities. If they don't secure a playoff spot this year, I want Hendry and Baker gone. Hendry could salvage his job only if he got rid of Baker quickly enough to not impact the entire season. I'm a lifelong devoted Cub fan. I am not a pessimistic person by nature. Baylor and Dusty have made me this way by their poor management skills. Baylor still isn't managing today, and Baker is only still managing because he managed good teams that would have been fairly successful whether he was there or some other manager that could keep Barry Bonds happy.