Top sportswriter Terry Pluto goes behind closed doors in the Cleveland Indians front office to analyze the team's controversial recent move to scrap a roster of popular stars and rebuild on a budget.After a decade of hot teams and growing payrolls, savvy owner Richard Jacobs sold his franchise at the top of the market in 2000. New owner Larry Dolan and new general manager Mark Shapiro faced a how to keep winning without blowing their bankroll. They made radical changes. Stars such as Manny Ramirez, Roberto Alomar, and Jim Thome were gone, replaced with roster of unproven youngsters and veteran retreads. Fans were alarmed and dismayed. Yet, as predicted by Shapiro, the Indians were back in contention for the playoffs within three years of announcing their rebuilding plan. At the end of the 2005 season, the Tribe was one tantalizing game away from a return to the playoffs--and Shapiro was voted the league's "G.M. of the Year." How was it done? In his familiar clear prose, Pluto explains for fans the many risky moves made by management and tells which ones paid off, which ones failed, and why.
Terry Pluto is a sports columnist for the Plain Dealer. He has twice been honored by the Associated Press Sports Editors as the nations top sports columnist for medium-sized newspapers. He is a nine-time winner of the Ohio Sports Writer of the Year award and has received more than 50 state and local writing awards. In 2005 he was inducted into the Cleveland Journalism Hall of Fame. He is the author of 23 books, including The Curse of Rocky Colavito (selected by the New York Times as one of the five notable sports books of 1989), and Loose Balls, which was ranked number 13 on Sports Illustrateds list of the top 100 sports books of all time. He was called Perhaps the best American writer of sports books, by the Chicago Tribune in 1997. He lives with his wife, Roberta, in Akron, Ohio."
I picked up this book because the author told me it is where I could find the story of Jim Thome's exit from the Indians through free agency. But then I just could not resist reading the other stories as well for a little trip down memory lane.
The author first produced this book in 2005 then came out with an update after the 2007 season in which the Tribe came up one game shy of the World Series. He chronicles the Indians from the sale of the team to the Dolans in late 1999 through the pennant run of 2007. Each chapter is an episode of those times, often dealing with personnel moves (Ramirez, Alomar, Colon, Thome, Wedge, Bradley), but also much frank discussion of (and with) the Dolans, Shapiro, and Wedge (and even Manuel and Hargrove). I always stay pretty close to the Tribe but I learned a lot of inside stuff (particularly regarding management decisions) as Pluto had lengthy interviews with these key players and others for the book.
It is fascinating to read this volume over ten years on now knowing how things turned out in the long term (Francona even gets a brief mention as a special assistant before making it big with Boston and, of course, later with Cleveland).
Great fun and interesting reading for the inveterate Tribe fan still waiting for that World Championship.
One thing I found really interesting about this book is that it portrays Dick Jacobs (beloved former Indians owner) in a somewhat negative light and portrays Larry Dolan (hated current owner of the Indians) in a more positive light.
The book follows the Tribe's front office as they dismantle their aging powerhouse team of the 90s and moved to a younger prospect focused team. Even though the Indian's consistently under-perform, it is worth noting that this plan (which is hated by most fans) rebuilt the Indians in 3-4 years, whereas most rebuilding projects for teams take 10-15 years.
Just an okay book about Cleveland Indians' deals for players. It is cool b/c they talk about how they got rid of all of their older, experienced, more expensive players and replaced them with the young powerhouse players that currently comprise the team. Only huge Indians' fans will find this remotely interesting.
Great & easy read explaining the transition of the Indians from the high payroll championship years under the ownership of Dick Jacobs' to the re-building low-payroll years under the ownership of the Dolans'. One gets a great appreciation for the challenges faced by small market teams and an appreciation for what a keen, talented GM we have in Mark Shapiro.
This book is about how the Cleveland Indians went from a World Series contender to a losing team and then back to a playoff team. This book talks about all of the moves the Indians made between the early 90's and 2007. I would recommend this book to anyone who is an Indians fan or just a baseball lover.
I'd say this is a kind of business book as well as a sports book. The Tribe's front office has developed a winning strategy that won't break the bank and should provide winners for the foreseeable future.
Sports Writer Terry Pluto does a masterful job explaining the inner workings of the Indians organization. In detailed fashion he describes how the front office/management team built a contender and excited the entire city of Cleveland. I highly recommend this book for all MLB fans