""We were a blue-collar team," left fielder Luis Gonzalez said. "We weren't all about showboating and fancy and things like that. We wanted to go out there and play hard."Brenly's hire was the first big move of the 2000-01 off-season. After interviewing several candidates, including future managers Terry Francona and Clint Hurdle, the Diamondbacks chose Brenly, who had been their television analyst and was rumored to be Showalter's successor as far back as the previous summer. Replacing the fastidious, detail-oriented Showalter, Brenly wasted no time in implementing a more laissez-faire managerial approach, starting with his first team meeting in spring training. He made a loud thud when he threw a supposed rule book in the garbage. "That was more for effect than anything else," Brenly recalled. "Buck did not have a Manhattan phone book-sized rule book. He had his own rules, but the book that I dropped into the trash can was the organizational manual. . . . I used that because it had some heft to it. I knew it was going to make some impact." Brenly then pulled out a cocktail napkin with two rules written on it: Be on time, and play hard. He got the reaction he wanted. The players already felt they had Brenly's respect. "I think the biggest thing was that the players really enjoyed playing for him," said Joe Garagiola Jr., the organization's first general manager. "They wanted him to do well, and they approached their task that way."