The reason WHY this is gonna be so long is because he sucks in so many aspects. So here it is... why Eric Wedge should be fired.
1. This one is just an observation… It is truly amazing and kind of ironic how poorly Eric Wedge handles a pitching staff considering he was a catcher in his playing days.
2. It is just as amazing and equally ironic how incapable this team is at winning under pressure or when expectations are raised (internally or externally), considering Wedge's whole mantra is to stay "even keel" and take things "1 game at a time".
2004: Playing for 1st place in mid-August. Result? 9 game losing streak. Finish 12 games out.
2005: End the year with 3 against 90+ loss Tampa Bay and 3 with a ChiSox team that clinched the division and rested ½ of its regulars the last 2 games. Only need to go 3-3 to get into the playoffs. Result? 1-5 (1-6 including a series-ending loss to Kansas City, never added that part before).
2006: Expectations raised after 93 win 2005. Indians picked not just as a division contender, but are a popular World Series pick as well (locally and nationally). Result? 78-84. Have to win 8 of 9 down the stretch just to reach that.
2007: Expectations lowered after dismal 2006. Indians a popular pick to finish 3rd in the division. No expectations? 96 wins. Still manage to melt down though. Blow a 3-1 lead in the ALCS, including losses by 2 of the top 5 pitchers in the American League. Wedge claimed home field advantage was unimportant going into the series.
2008: Expectations raised again after 2007. Indians again a popular pick to compete not just for the division, but for the World Series. Result? 81-81 finish. 0-8 on the Wedge/Shapiro proclaimed “make or break” road trip. (Gonna keep this part because it's still relevant)Some people (like Shapiro) like to blame injuries for the 2008 struggles. Well… the team was 22-25 when Fausto got hurt, 24-29 when Jake went down a few days later, and…
3. On July 13, 2003, the Cleveland Indians were 41 - 53 and 11 games back.
On July 13, 2008 the Indians were 41 - 53 and 13.5 games back.
Injuries or not, can you honestly tell me that the 2003 team featuring guys like Matt Lawton, Ricky “At least I’m not Franklin” Gutierrez, pre-success Brandon Phillips and pitchers like Jack Cressend and Carl Sadler was as talented as the 2008 team? I didn’t think so.
Again, the wins came WITHOUT C.C, Casey, Byrd, Hafner, etc. Injuries are NO EXCUSE, because they started winning once the best players were GONE.
4. Attitude reflects leadership. Game after game Wedge sits in the dugout twitching, emotionless, and basically appearing uninterested in what is going on. This has clearly worn off on the players, as I honestly can’t remember the last time it looked like this team was having fun, even when they were winning. The Wedge supporters call this his “even keel” approach. Well they’ve even keeled themselves right into last place. Now they've started to loosen up a little since management threw in the towel, but it's gonna be too little, too late (unless they pull an 07 Rockies, but I'm not holding my breath on that one).
^ Nailed that one. And they've already managed to do it again this season
5. Wedge never has this team ready to play coming out of spring training. They consistently dig themselves into early holes due to piss poor play in April. It isn’t a surprise or coincidence that the only season they had a decent April is also the only year they’ve made the playoffs under Wedge.
2003 April: 7-20 (11.5 back)
2004: 9-13 (6 back)
2005: 9-14 (7.5 back)
2006: 13-12 (4.5 back)
2007: 14-8 (1st place… went to the playoffs. Incredible!)
2008: 13-15 (2 back)
2009: 8-14 (3.5 back)
6. Wedge is too “buddy buddy” with his players. Every year he refuses to get rid of/bench one of his “boys”, regardless of how poorly they play. In 2006 it was Aaron Boone, in 2007 it was Mike Rouse, in 2008 it’s David Delucci. Stop trying to be everybody’s pal and start acting like a manager. You know, what you get PAID to do?
7. Since 1948 (the last world series win), the Indians have had 20 managers, NOT including interim guys. Exactly 1 of them has been kept around more than 6 seasons. That was Mike Hargrove. He managed to last longer because, although he didn’t win one, he at least MADE IT to 2 World Series and won the division every year. Hell, he even got fired after winning the division.
On the other hand Eric Wedge has 0 World Series appearances, 1 playoff appearance in 6 years, and 3 seasons below .500 (with another right at .500 now)
8. This is only from 2005, and the reason for this (and why I did that last season) was to avoid the Wedge apologists using the "it was a rebuilding year" excuse. With 2005 and up, they have no excuses to use for these numbers.
1-run games
2005 (93-69) 22-36 (that's not a typo)
2006 (78-84) 18-26
2007 (96-66) 29-24
2008 (81-81) 14-17
2009 (8-14) 3-3
86-106 overall
extra innings
2005 (93-69) 8-10
2006 (78-84) 5-3
2007 (96-66) 11-8
2008 (81-81) 5-9
2009 (8-14) 0-1
29-31 overall
And to add on to the 1-run games record...
What is pythagorean winning percentage?
Pythagorean winning percentage is an estimate of a team's winning percentage given their runs scored and runs allowed.
Here are the Indians Pythagorean winning percentages in the Wedge era...
2003 record: 68-94, Pythagorean record: 73-89 (-5)
2004: 80-82, Pythagorean 81-81 (-1)
2005: 93-69, Pythagorean 96-66 (-3)
2006: 78-84, Pythagorean 89-73 (-11)
2007: 96-66, Pythagorean: 91-71 (+5) Again, NO COINCIDENCE that this was the only year under Wedge they made the playoffs. EVERYTHING that could have possibly gone right did. It was the ultimate "blind squirril finding the nut" scenario, and EVERY stat backs that claim up.
2008: 81-81, Pythagorean: 85-77 (-4)
2009: 8-13, Pythagorean: 10-11
Add all of the above, plus the fact that the Indians are consistently one of the worst fundamental teams in baseball (in terms of base running, situational hitting, etc.), and tell me WHY Eric Wedge should get (make that GOT)a 7th year?
Edit: Mission accomplished.

