MLB notebook: Girardi steps down as
USA Baseball manager
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[October 18, 2019]
Focusing on a return to managing
in the majors, Joe Girardi stepped down as manager of USA Baseball.
The 55-year-old Girardi has interviewed with the Chicago Cubs and is
a candidate for openings with the New York Mets and Philadelphia
Phillies.
Girardi compiled a 988-794 (.554) record managing the New York
Yankees for 10 seasons (2008-17) and the Florida Marlins for one
season (2006). He led the Yankees to a World Series championship in
2009.
Scott Brosius is replacing Girardi as manager of USA Baseball and
will take over Team USA's preparations for the 2020 Olympic Games in
Tokyo. Training begins in Arizona next week and qualifier games
begin next month in Mexico.
--New York Yankees left fielder Giancarlo Stanton was not listed in
the starting lineup for Game 4 of the American League Championship
Series against the Houston Astros due to a strained right
quadriceps.
Stanton, who will miss his third straight game, tested his
quadriceps by doing some running drills approximately four and a
half hours before the first pitch of the contest. He ran a few times
down the first-base line as well as between first and third.
"Today I feel like he was better. And probably for the first time,
like, saw some improvement today," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said.
"Whether he's running at 60 percent or whatever, don't feel like
he's ready to be an option in the field for us. I think there's a
possibility of that kind of DH role now. So it's a little bit of a
decision for me."
--Astros manager A.J. Hinch expressed before Game 4 of the American
League Championship Series that he will pull his players off the
field if fans at Yankee Stadium throw objects at them.
Astros right fielder Josh Reddick said he had baseballs, water
bottles and other objects thrown at him during Tuesday's Game 3 when
Houston posted a 4-1 win over the Yankees to take a 2-1 lead in the
series.
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New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi (28) speaks at a press
conference during workouts at Minute Maid Park. Mandatory
Credit: Shanna Lockwood-USA TODAY Sports
"I will pull the team off the field if we get in that situation
again where bottles are being thrown and balls are being thrown and
it becomes unruly," Hinch said. "There's other ways to support your
home team ... It would be a very ugly scene for baseball, a very
ugly scene for the Yankees, if one of our guys was hit by something
from the upper deck. Something tragic could happen and nobody wants
that."
--Cleveland Indians catcher Roberto Perez had surgery to remove bone
spurs in his right ankle.
Dr. Robert Anderson performed the arthroscopic procedure in Green
Bay, Wis.
The team said Perez is expected to be ready for spring training in
February.
--The San Diego Padres' search for a manager has narrowed to two
candidates with Texas ties, according to multiple reports.
Former Rangers skipper Ron Washington and Jayce Tingler, the
Rangers' field coordinator in 2019, both have second interviews
scheduled with Padres ownership.
Washington, 67, compiled a 664-611 record in eight seasons with
Texas (2007-14) and led the Rangers to back-to-back American League
pennants in 2010-11. He spent the last three seasons as the
third-base coach for the Atlanta Braves. Tingler, 38, has been with
Texas since 2015, working primarily in the player development
department.
--Field Level Media
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