Ok, but what was the point of saying that managers can't turn a team of scrubs into a .500 ballclub in the Marlins weren't scrubs? Ever heard of Justin Verlander, Ryan Zimmerman and tons of other players I'm too lazy to look up? They never played AAA. In fact, many of them were top talent. I remember many people on this board especially praising Florida's moves because they got so many highly touted prospects. I disagree that talent doesn't get you anywhere without direction, just look at Matt Murton and Rich Hill. Do you think Dusty had anything to do with their success? Again, I don't think anyone is denying him credit. I wouldn't be upset if Girardi became the manager of the Cubs. I am just skeptical that the reason the Marlins had a solid season was because of Joe's managing. The KC Royals had a pretty bad team in 2003, but Tony Pena led them to a 83-79 record in his first full year as manager. One year doesn't make a good manager. The point of saying they're not scrubs is that even the best manager can't take a team full of crap and make them win. Zimmerman, Verlander, Willis, etc are the exception to the norm. Anecdotal evidence at best. It is not routine to graduate AA players to the majors and have them stick (and excel). The very talented ones will, i'll give you that, but by and large, the Marlins' prospects were not as highly rated as Zimmerman and Verlander. Those are guys with huge ceilings. Hanley Ramirez...his stock tanked last season. To rebound, and at the ML level no less, is flat out remarkable. That didn't happen just b/c "he is talented." Something brought the talent out consistently in every player on the Marlins staff. If they had a bunch of hit and misses bringing guys up from the minors, I'd agree with you about Girardi, but pretty much across the board guys improved. That's what good coaching does. Have you ever played organized baseball? ...beyond high school and little league? Coaching matters with young guys. With vets, not so much. I can't even believe we're having this discussion. Any experience whatsoever beyond non-competitive baseball, watching baseball, and looking at stats makes this a no-brainer (not that those things aren't valuable). I don't hear any baseball insiders saying Girardi was a non-factor. I don't hear Beinfest saying that, or the other jack*sses who stabbed him in the back anonymously. Did Girardi turn a 100 loss team into a playoff contender on his own? Hell no. Those players are talented, but a coach isn't supposed to swing the bat for players or catch the ball. He's supposed to unlock potential, and that's exactly what happened. It's either a huge coincidence that that many rookies succeeded consistently, or the coaching staff had a large positive influence. Any fool can take a team of self managing and policing vets w/ talent to the playoffs (Baker, Louie P). Getting results (best record in the last 1/2 decade for a 15M team) with young guys with a couple stars (Willis and Cabrera) is something to take note of. Am I in awe of Girardi? Nope, but he's the best choice Hendry might make. The Larry Dierkers of this world aren't going to visit the Wrigley dugout anytime this decade, that's for sure.