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  • Articles posted by Noe in Austin (Page 14)

Glad You Asked! Vol. 1, Entry 3.

Posted on October 15, 2009 by Noe in Austin in Featured, Glad You Asked

gya-largeIs there a correlation between Leadership and Management in sports/baseball?  Is it important to be a leader as a manager and vice versa?  Are we saying the same thing when we say “leadership” and “management”?

Glad you asked.

First, before we launch into some far too often explored yet sometimes misunderstood sports/baseball strong held truths, let me start by saying if you research (re: google) the words Leadership and Management, you’re going to find strong opinions on why these two things are not the same.  A small sampling if you will:

  • Leaders lead people, managers manage task.
  • Leadership and management are two notions that are often used interchangeably but these words actually describe two different concepts.
  • To lead, be a coach, not a manager.
  • Leadership is an asset a successful manager must possess.

By now, you probably have a very good idea where I’m heading with this so let’s just go ahead and get it out of the way: Cecil Cooper showed all of us that while he could manage task well enough to be successful in baseball (stop laughing, he wasn’t that bad a “manager”), his leadership skills left a little to be desired.  Was that important?  Yes, somewhat.  No, make that very much so.  I know some will argue that even managing task were a boon-doggle for Coop.  Thank you Geoff Blum, now sit down please.  So what is the big deal about leadership to manage a baseball team?  You got nine guys, a ball, some gloves, some bats and all you have to do is make sure you manage the strategy and let the players do the rest.  Okay, here is why in many ways it is very important. Leadership comes in two flavors on a baseball team: peer-to-peer, or better said veteran-to-not-so-veteran and of course manager-to-player.  If this is true, why is the duality of leadership needed?  Can’t players do that leadership thingy and thus allow the manager to just concentrate on filling out a lineup card correctly?

Glad you asked (part two).

Where some fall in the long held truths in baseball when it comes to managers is that the manager’s job is to manage the task within a game, a series and of course a very long season.  Do that well and you will succeed they say.  Whitey Herzog may have not been the first one to say it, but he is well known to repeat it often enough: “To win in baseball, you need a lot of luck and a strong bullpen”.  I don’t disagree that if you have the talent, the depth on the bench, good to great pitching and a little bit of luck come your way, you can be so-so as a leader and yet manage strategy well enough to be the next manager to get a ring with the word “World Series Champion” inscribed on it.  But tell me something, how many teams outside of New York, Boston or Los Angeles have the sort of money to insure themselves against a manager who really has little to no leadership skills whatsoever?  Okay, I agree: not many.  Certainly not the Houston Astros, the team we all root for and of course the team with an owner who just won’t act like a spend crazy lunatic owner who will buy the next World Championship.

I’m not bitter.  Really.

So back to what we’re talking about – leadership and management.  I do believe that if you have a strong player/leader presence in the clubhouse, you will mitigate the very skill lacking in a manager.  In fact, some managers will welcome not having to display leadership qualities because most of them learned how to manage by the very people who managed them.  By and large, it’s been about players policing themselves in terms of leadership and of course managers managing the task and the two being somewhat working in a symbiotic relationship.  You probably already figured out that the best years that the Houston Astros franchise has ever had were the same years that number 5 and 7 donned the uniform of the local nine.  In fact, it was not such a good idea for a manager to try and become a vocal, even harsh “leader” for the team during that time because it could clash with the two player’s influence on the others.  I give you Terry Collins for example, a manager prone to bouts of vitriolic rants to try and prove his leadership ability.  All for naught too.

So who could blame a managerial candidate really not wanting or even expecting to be a leader in the Houston clubhouse.  If you want leadership, well that is what coaches are for, blah, blah, blah.  Did you happen to hear these words this summer: “As a manager, all I can do is fill out the lineup card and try to change it every once and while to see if I can break us out of the funk we’re in”.  Whether this was a statement uttered in defense of a lack of leadership or not, the end result is that it proved what most managers really do expect their job to be.  Task oriented skills primarily and of course mostly.

With the absence of Bagwell and Biggio now very much accepted and stamped into the Houston Astros scene, the idea of a leader in the clubhouse to mitigate a manager’s deficiencies in this area is very much a necessity.  You may think players like Berkman, Lee or Oswalt were the ones given the baton by Bagwell and Biggio, but the reality is that not many see any of those gentlemen as true leaders.  In comes Miguel Tejada and in a few short years, this player who has little time in and around the Houston organization, propels himself into a leadership role.  His work ethic, his attitude, his passion was rubbing off on this team, so perhaps there was a chance of the symbiotic relationship blossoming in Houston this summer.  Leadership and Management, wow, it can happen.  And then of course, some failed bullpen management (or abuse) during the dog days of summer plus some really unlucky health issues to key players, and there is nothing leadership and management could do to make it work.  Wrong moves on management side could only make it worse, and there was some of that for sure.

So where are the Houston Astros today?

As of the end of the season, you can pretty much toss a coin in the air if Miguel Tejada is coming back.  My hunch is no, he will not be back, and I think it will be a mutually agreed upon split.  Houston will not want an aging shortstop and Miguel will probably want to go somewhere else to play for his last shot or shots at glory.  The organization for its part is in search of a manager.  Be not dismayed at the list you have been privy to in terms of candidates, all of them can manage.  Here is what I want to know:

Is there one amongst them that can lead?


noe2About this column: We had to do it folks, sorry. We just could not bear the thought of stuff like this appearing on the Talkzone any more. It was killing our bandwidth and some of you (you know who you are) were encouraging this behavior by our author. So we’ve given Noe his own little sandbox to play in and you can count on his ramblings to appear here from now on. You can thank us later. Plus, Noe is encouraging your comments on his thought here if you’d like. That is a dumb idea but it was the only way we could convince him to let go of the TZ.

HE’S BACK!

Posted on September 3, 2009 by Noe in Austin in Game Recaps

From real doubt he'd ever play baseball again...

From real doubt he'd ever play baseball again...



... to a very real appearance on the field five hard months worth of work later.

… to a very real appearance on the field five hard months worth of work later. The Houston Astros lost to the Chicago Cubs, 2-0, on Aaron Boone Day. *sigh*

July SnS Spike and Star Award Winners

Posted on August 4, 2009 by Noe in Austin in Featured, Monthly Awards

potmJuly is the month of All-Stars, pennant chasing teams making the start of their push and of course the MLB trading deadline.  July is also the month where you expect some players to step up for a team if any hopes for post season glory is to be realized.  The Houston Astros were no different than any of the other Wild Card and NL Central contenders, all 28 of them, in that they got some very good performances from some players and thus the hunt was on and fans were getting excited. For the July Spike Award, the candidates were Lance Berkman, Alberto Arias, Jeff Keppinger and Aaron Boone. For the July Star Award, the candidates were Michael Bourn, Miguel Tejada, Carlos Lee, Roy Oswalt and Wandy Rodriquez.  This was an interesting vote and the winners are:


july_spikeJuly 2009 Spike Award This month’s Spike Award winner is a pitcher who helped solidify a shaky bullpen beset by injury and inconsistency.  Geoff Geary, Doug Brocail, Chris Sampson were key contributors in Houston’s bullpen along with LaTroy Hawkins and Jose Valverde.  A bullpen considered a strength of the team.  Well the best plans of mice and men can and will go awry and in terms of a bullpen need, this plan of Ed Wade certainly did.

Well, he's got the closer snear down pat!

Well, he's got the closer snear down pat!

So the search was on for a pitcher that could provide good work to help salvage a season that was going nowhere fast.  In steps Alberto Arias, a pitcher who has a nice arsenal of pitches, all with late movement and just hard enough to keep hitters on notice.  Arias enjoyed a successful month as the setup man pressed into the role because of injuries to Chris Sampson and LaTroy Hawkins.  He did well, posting a .265 ERA in 17 IPs, recording 13 strikeouts and only 5 walks.  Now, with some of the injured returning, Arias is an interesting prospect for more work as a key setup man along with Sampson and Hawkins.  Some even think he may be a good closer candidate if he keeps up the good work.

Honorable mention: Aaron Boone got some love from the SnS because of his desire to return this season from heart surgery.  Wow, coming back from heart surgery all within the same season is hard to ponder, but he’s planning on it and it’s worth following.


julyJuly 2009 Star Award

Hey, a Wandy Rodriquez three-peat?

Yes indeed, it is a Wandy season after all, as the little lefty took home his third Star Award by posting an outstanding performance for the month of July.  He had a .075 ERA in 36 IPs, tossing his first complete game of the season.  He also posted his tenth win for the season in the month of July when he registered four wins total for the month without a loss.

Tipping my pitches, eh?  Here, guess what I'm going to throw now!

Tipping my pitches, eh? Here, guess what I'm going to throw now!

10 wins is his highest win total so far for his career.  In the month of July, he had 34 strikeouts and 7 walks.  He also helped the club make a push upwards from inconsistency to solid winner, becoming a part of a one-two gut punch for opposing teams with Roy Oswalt.

Honorable Mention: Miguel Tejada continues to post good numbers, not succumbing to the late season swoon predicted  by many.  Miggy is the leader on the club now with the injury to Lance Berkman and the happy go lucky attitude of Carlos Lee.  Leadership is a wonderful thing if you post the stats to back up your words and Miggy has.

1560 The Game/SnS Podcast: Zipp meets Hoffy, oh my!

Posted on July 23, 2009 by Noe in Austin in Audio, Media

Andyzipp appears on the Ken Hoffman show on 1560 The Game sports radio. And the outcome is one of groveling, humble pie eating, p’wned-ness… and not by Hoffman either.



Powered by Podbean.com

Glad You Asked! Vol. 1, Entry 2.

Posted on July 22, 2009 by Noe in Austin in Featured, Glad You Asked No Comments

gya-largeIs there really a great reason to get excited about the second half Houston Astros?  Are they really good enough to make a playoff push?  Can they overtake the Cardinals, Cubs, Brewers and Reds?

Glad  you asked!

The questions can be answered this way: Juneberno.  But there seems to be a growing giddiness that has overtaken some in the Astros fandom.  Great, that is really what fans should do.  Seriously.  I’m in, I’m a fan first, I love watching this team play really well and take it to the Dodgers and Co-ards (the last being a semi-poser of a contender actually, but let’s not quibble about the pedigree here, they’re the frontrunners in the NL Central, so let’s leave it at that).  This is awesome.  Live for the moment because the moment is good.

Really good.

But what happens when the moment is bad?  Well, just like one can get giddy, one can also get a bit miserable because we allow it to be this way.  Unfortunately for fans, the major league baseball season is a marathon, so you’re going to have these up and downs in a season.  Right now, it’s up people, so get up!  Here is the thing though, do you want the GM and Manager reacting to the season in the same manner as you and I?

Gosh, I hope not.

They could both take a page right out of the Jeff Bagwell book of cliches that make a ton of sense.  Primarily, “never get too low after a loss, never get too high after a win”.  Or “this is not football where you can use emotion to help you win, in fact it’s better to play relaxed than too pumped up”.  So what is happening right now for the team is great from a positive standpoint of going out the ballpark.  Heck, I want to see some steM destruction this weekend and will settle for nothing less!  Woo-hoo.  But back to the GM and Manager for a minute.  This 2009 version of the Houston Astros are pretty good in terms of talent, no one has questioned that.  But the question mark has been the age of said talent and the ability to stay productive consistently for an entire season (not just for several months).  The other question mark was pitching.

I thought the defense was not an issue and neither the bullpen when the season started, but we all agreed that starting pitching… yes, a question mark for sure.

Calling Mr. Hampton, Mr. Mike Hampton.  The Astros are going to need you!

Calling Mr. Hampton, Mr. Mike Hampton. The Astros are going to need you!

That Roy Oswalt started off slowly again was cause for concern.  Thank you Wandy for providing good work early to keep this team hanging around.  Now the starters seem to have hit a groove and hopefully the aged Ortiz and Hampton can be the same guys in a couple of months.

That’s left to be seen.  Same with Moehler.  Wandy is hovering around uncharted waters for him but maybe this is where a Hampton and Ortiz can help him… the mental aspects of being a starter who is the leader of the squad along with Oswalt.

Offensively, they’re performing where most of us thought they would and thank goodness Cooper came to his senses when it came to Bourn.  Now he has that sparkplug that the team can rally around.  Now if he just settles with Pence at the six hole and stops some of his madness with lineup construction, he’ll be fine.  The minute a two game losing streak happens, you don’t want your manager acting like a fan and overreacting.  If fact, as long as the Astros win, Cooper is held in check from doing what is his flawed managerial manuevers.  “All I can do is change the lineup!”.  Yeah, well here is hoping they keep winning (and no they won’t keep just winning – winning is as streaky as losing so expect some losing streak at some point as well).  I know the Astros are a second half team, but two things you want from the GM and Manager is this:

Don’t be fans, be baseball men and react accordingly.

Help this team win more than lose and that requires looking at making moves in terms of trades or callups from the minors.  It also requires putting your guys in the best position to produce, even when they’re losing (sounds strange I’m sure, but you cannot be fan-like and decide to make a bunch of moves to shake things up).  I think one place for sure where the GM has to look to provide some serious help is in the bullpen.  I know, Doug Brocail is coming back and all.  Fine, but the reality we’re seeing lately is that we have a highly inconsistent bullpen.  The next thing we’ll hear though is “who doesn’t have an inconsistent bullpen?”.  True, but if you’re serious about doing something down the stretch, a consistently good bullpen… no, a consistently great bullpen is a must.  Just saying.

So any way, the second half is on the way, everyone is noticing the good play of the Astros and are talking about the possibilities.  Here is where you have to see just how good your GM and Manager are and also how good (consistent) this team is as well.  Here is hoping it is all positive (and a stray hurricane doesn’t make a return engagement any time soon).


noe2About this column: We had to do it folks, sorry. We just could not bear the thought of stuff like this appearing on the Talkzone any more. It was killing our bandwidth and some of you (you know who you are) were encouraging this behavior by our author. So we’ve given Noe his own little sandbox to play in and you can count on his ramblings to appear here from now on. You can thank us later. Plus, Noe is encouraging your comments on his thought here if you’d like. That is a dumb idea but it was the only way we could convince him to let go of the TZ.

June SnS Spike and Star Award Winners

Posted on July 8, 2009 by Noe in Austin in Featured, Monthly Awards

potmThe votes are in and the winners have been chosen. The month of June has been an interesting one for the Houston Blood and Mud as individual performances led to a continued climb upwards towards the mark of average amongst the many.  The infamous .500 mark, elusive as the team strived earnestly to obtain the goal.  Keep working fellas, you’ll get there eventually.  One can only hope.

For the June Spike Award, the candidates were Geoff Blum, Jeff Fulchino and Darin Erstad. For the June Star Award, the candidates were Michael Bourn, Miguel Tejada and Lance Berkman.  Let’s see who won:


june_spikeJune 2009 Spike Award

This month’s Spike Award winner is a guy who stepped up for the team in many ways, one of which was in the leadership category. So much so that his influence as a manager-like came shining through when he took charge of a potential volatile situation and provided direction and proper management to a young player in order to keep a first inning mistake from escalating into a full blown mess.

The "Boss" takes time to speak to his boys around the batting cages.  It's what a manager does.

The "Boss" takes time to speak to his boys around the batting cages. It's what a manager does.

Geoff Blum is his name, leadership is his game.  He’s also involved himself in some memorable Cub-killer situations.  In said situations, Blum delivered the death shot each time in walk-off fashion for the Chicago nine.  Many wait for the Cubbie meltdown in August, but for the month of June, Blum may of provided the percursor of things to come.  That he later mentioned how this sort of treatment against the Cubs was fun for his Chicago southside friends probably earned him extra points in terms of Cub hatedom.  Yeah, I’d say he’s a really good Spike winner, so take a bow Mr. Blum, our June 2009 Spike Award winner.

Honorable mention: Jeff Fulchino, a pickup by GM Ed Wade that has paid off, made a run for the Spike Award with his consistent and bullpen steadying performance for June.  I’m sure many would question a fan site that would give an award to a middle reliever, but that’s just how we roll.


june_starJune 2009 Star Award

Turn on an inside fastball?  Check!

Turn on an inside fastball? Check!

Hey, no Wandy Rodriquez three-peat?  Hardly, he wasn’t even in the running.  But in a rare situation (rare because we’ve never seen it before, nevermind our awards have been around for only three months, so there is that) our last month Spike Award winner made the leap from hard nose wall banging spectacular catch making player to all around good performer for June.

Michael Bourn, having to cringe at his manager’s MVP pronouncement, kept a cool head about him and went about his business of being the leadoff man… nay, breakout player his GM put on him early in spring.  A consistent leadoff man doing his job well bodes well for the type of middle of the lineup hitters that the Astros feature.  Michael has managed to keep Cecil Cooper from scratching his name off the leadoff spot in the lineup.  In fact, finally Cooper is trying to manage the young player instead of just react to so-so performances with the bat as a reason to bench him in favor of a veteran.  It is all so much easier for the Astros when Bourn is performing as he has.  Keep it up kid!

Honorable Mention: Lance Berkman has had a steady climb upwards from well below the Mendoza line.  It’s taken some consistent multi-hit games and some monster offensive nights.  The month of June for 2009 will be the month that most will look back on and say “That is when Lance turned it around!”  Bank on it!

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