Sort of piggy-backing on Juanky's comments (which, I agree with, more or less) following the Cespedes signing: is succeeding early and failing late a problem for the franchise? Does this do more to fuel the anti-Marlin skepticism that will seemingly never leave the media down here? Was it all an elaborate ruse?
In all seriousness, though, I got into a twitter discussion with Glenn Geffner (yes, I hate myself right now too) but, anyway, the sentiment seems to be, since I assume he's at least somewhat a mouthpiece of the organization, that the team did all it could do and silly fans for believing they were ever a front runner. That kind of spin control, to me, suggests a few things: (1) we're still the little kid sitting at the big-boy table. We're talking about spin control for a dude who may or may not be good and who almost certainly isn't worth the fuss being made over him. And (2) as much as it pains me to admit it, the Dolphins, for all their short comings, are probably doing something right with this veil of secrecy/inaccessibility rather than constantly allowing a microphone to be stuck in an overwhelmed (and perhaps under qualified) executive's face.
So, to spur some new conversation (since there's plenty here to have one sentence snipes on) did the Marlins make a mistake by maintaining public interest, or was there so much good done that it didn't matter?
In all seriousness, though, I got into a twitter discussion with Glenn Geffner (yes, I hate myself right now too) but, anyway, the sentiment seems to be, since I assume he's at least somewhat a mouthpiece of the organization, that the team did all it could do and silly fans for believing they were ever a front runner. That kind of spin control, to me, suggests a few things: (1) we're still the little kid sitting at the big-boy table. We're talking about spin control for a dude who may or may not be good and who almost certainly isn't worth the fuss being made over him. And (2) as much as it pains me to admit it, the Dolphins, for all their short comings, are probably doing something right with this veil of secrecy/inaccessibility rather than constantly allowing a microphone to be stuck in an overwhelmed (and perhaps under qualified) executive's face.
So, to spur some new conversation (since there's plenty here to have one sentence snipes on) did the Marlins make a mistake by maintaining public interest, or was there so much good done that it didn't matter?
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