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In 2010, when six of his eight position players spent time on the disabled list, Manuel guided the Phillies to the best record in the major leagues (97-65). With the addition of Cliff Lee to an already strong rotation, the Phillies enter this season as one of the top favorites to win the World Series.
Manuel wasn't the people's choice when the Phillies hired him as the successor of fiery Phillies shortstop-turned-manager Larry Bowa in the fall of 2004. After interviewing several candidates, including Jim Leyland, Don Baylor and Jim Fregosi, the Phils picked Manuel.
The Phils' turnaround from pretender to contender, guided by Manuel's easy hand, quickly made him a popular figure among a hard-to-please fan base. He has his own local TV and radio shows.
"We've talked about it quite a bit, changing the culture and the mindset, making it a more positive environment ... Charlie deserves credit for this," Amaro said. "Not just for the players, but in regard to everybody, from the clubhouse people, the people on our training staff, it just made it across the board a new, different mindset was created. Instead of the glass being half-empty at times, we've gotten to the point I think where the glass has changed to half-full.
"He's basically the same guy every day in the clubhouse. Just as an employee, and any employee, you'd like for someone to be the same every day, and to believe in you and kind of have your back. That's the thing Charlie exhibits on a day-to-day basis and I think that's gelled very well with our players. And I think that's worked very well for us," he said.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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