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AOL Fanhouse: Marlins to Possibly Look at Padres' Simmons for Managerial Opening

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  • AOL Fanhouse: Marlins to Possibly Look at Padres' Simmons for Managerial Opening

    The Florida Marlins will interview interim manager Edwin Rodriguez and other candidates for their managerial job after the season.

    Among those the Marlins will consider is San Diego Padres bench coach Ted Simmons, FanHouse has learned. Florida has been gathering information on Simmons, said a major league source.

    Simmons, 60, was an eight-time All-Star catcher who batted .285 in a career that spanned 21 seasons. He was 19 years old when he debuted as a catcher with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1968.

    As a bench coach in recent years Simmons held the managerial reins in both Milwaukee and San Diego when the manager was absent. He's never been a full-time manager but said he's ready to manage.

    "At this point I either get on with doing it or forget about it, and it's much too compelling to forget about it," he said.

    Simmons has worn several other hats. He was general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates from 1992-93 before downshifting because of a heart attack suffered in 1992. From 1993-98 he was special assignment scout for Indians GM John Hart.

    The Padres had him oversee their farm system and scouting from 1999-2001 before moving him into an assistant's role to GM Kevin Towers. Simmons likened his duties as a farm director to managing because he was "responsible for, at that time, seven teams, seven managers and the operation of games daily, times seven. You tend to do a lot of managing."


    Simmons, whose playing days ended in 1998 with the Atlanta Braves, returned to the field in 2008 as Ned Yost's bench coach with the Brewers.

    He has been Bud Black's bench coach in San Diego since 2009, and Black recommends him highly.

    "He'll come to managing with a great perspective because of where he's been his entire baseball career -- player, farm director, GM, scout," said Black, who on Monday received a contract extension. "He will truly have insights on what ideally makes an organization go. He blends a strong passion for the game with some absolutes that he truly believes in, but there is also a side in him that's innovative and creative."

    With the second-lowest payroll in the majors, the Padres boast the best record in the National League entering play Monday. Simmons is one of Black's sounding boards and also works closely with Padres players, especially catchers Nick Hundley and Yorvit Torrealba.

    Hundley said Simmons' energy and competitiveness are among the coach's many strengths.

    "I don't think there's anybody that cares more about the Padres and about us winning than Teddy does."
    -- Padres catcher Todd Hundley "I don't think there's anybody that cares more about the Padres and about us winning than Teddy does," Hundley said. "He's in the game with us. He's in there to try to help. Sometimes he gets on me. But at the same time, it's all in terms of learning. He's trying to help me get to the level that he got too -- win a lot of games, get to the playoffs, get to the World Series."

    Simmons said he has interviewed for a managerial job only once, with Tampa Bay when the franchise was debuting in 1998. The job went to Larry Rothschild.

    As a player, Simmons was volatile and durable, and highly successful, amassing more RBI (1,389) than all but three other switch-hitters in major league history (Eddie Murray, Mickey Mantle and former New York Giants star George Davis). He confronted opponents, umpires or teammates. His intelligence and candor brought him extra attention from the baseball media.

    Friends of the hard-driving Simmons worried for his health after he became GM of the Pirates. Simmons has described the heart attack as a "wakeup call" that led to a healthier approach to life.

    "The good thing about this game," he told FanHouse on Sunday, "is you don't need a heart condition for it to kill you."
    http://mlb.fanhouse.com/2010/07/19/m...sms_ss=twitter

    Ummmmm, no.

  • #2
    That picture looks like a mug shot.

    Comment


    • #3
      What a joke.. he was on the bench when Ned Yost was managing the Brewers. He almost looked like he was sleeping in the dugout and that you needed to hold a mirror up to him to see if he was breathing.

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      • #4
        no please
        Originally posted by Madman81
        Most of the people in the world being dumb is not a requirement for you to be among their ranks.
        Need help? Questions? Concerns? Want to chat? PM me!

        Comment


        • #5
          Going solely off the picture, I like the cut of his jib.

          Going off everything else, pass. But he would be cheap and seems like the type of guy who'd be a good front office lapdog, so he's probably a realistic candidate for the job.

          Comment


          • #6
            2nd look at the pic.. he looks like a cockerspanial.

            Comment


            • #7
              If your going to get a puppet can you go with a young manager and not someone who already suffered a heart attack

              Comment


              • #8
                Best picture ever. Even tops the untucked Fredi shot.

                Man, the world needs more of this guy.

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