I think you give managers in general too much credit. When the other team is pitching as well as you and hitting your pitchers, there's not much a manager CAN do. And I'm not sure how much blame you can put on Garner RE: Clemens' two inning performance or Oswalt looking like crap. I do agree with indifferent, though, that he could take a few more risks. He can order things like try a squeze, hit and run, steal, intentionally walk certain hitters, make pitching changes at the right time, get the best matchups possible out of his bullpen and off his bench late in the game. To me, Garner seems bad at doing any and all of that. I think he's a poor in game manager, basically. I agree that if his players don't execute there isn't much he or any manager can do, but Garner can't even do what a manager in theory can do (above) to get/prevent runs. In short, Garner sucks. People look at the WS game score and see a blowout, but in reality, these have all been close games. Garner making the right moves could have changed the outcome of one, maybe two games. Who knows? But his ineptitude is especially disappointing given the close nature of the games. I know we're talking about Roy Oswalt, but I would have been fuming had Tony not pulled the starter in the 5th inning, even if it was Chris Carpenter. Let us not forget this is the same manager who pulled Berkman in the 9th against ATL for a pinch runner in a tie game (along with expunging various starters - Ausmus was playing 1st base) and who had no bench or pitchers with the exception of Clemens in game 4. Cuse Cubs, you give the manager the benefit of the doubt if you assume he knows what he's doing or what's best for his players. I don't think he gave much thought to it personally. I think it was an off the cuff, emotional reaction and any manager in any field should know better.