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Cubs Suspend Milton Bradley for the Remainder of the Season

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  • National League: Cubs Suspend Milton Bradley for the Remainder of the Season

    Milton Bradley's season is finished. Perhaps his days with the Chicago Cubs are, too.

    The Cubs suspended their volatile outfielder for the rest of the season Sunday, one day after he criticized the team in a newspaper interview.

    Bradley was disciplined for conduct detrimental to the team. General manager Jim Hendry said he decided to send Bradley home after learning of the player's remarks in the (Arlington Heights) Daily Herald of Illinois. Bradley, scratched from Saturday's lineup with a sore left knee, was quoted as saying "you understand why they haven't won in 100 years here."

    Bradley has two years remaining on a three-year, $30 million contract that he signed as a free agent last offseason. Hendry said he doesn't know if the relationship can be salvaged.

    "The last few days became too much for me to tolerate," Hendry said. "I just decided late last night that's what I was going to do, and I didn't give it a lot of thought what's going to transpire moving forward."

    Cubs manager Lou Piniella agreed with Hendry's move.

    "Jim made the decision and I support it," the manager said. "I really do."

    Chicago signed the switch-hitting Bradley to provide balance in the lineup, but he struggled throughout his first season with Chicago, batting .257 with 12 homers and 40 RBIs. He was booed vigorously by home fans at Wrigley Field.

    The Cubs, who haven't won the World Series since 1908, began the day eight games out of the NL wild-card spot with 15 to play. They were 11 games behind first-place St. Louis in the NL Central.

    Piniella said whether the 31-year-old Bradley is with the team next season will be entirely Hendry's call. He wasn't sure why Bradley was unhappy in Chicago and maintained he did his best to deal with a player who he quickly learned required plenty of space.

    "I don't know what I could have done. I really don't," Piniella said. "I tried to make it as comfortable as I possibly could for Milton."

    In the newspaper story, Bradley also was quoted as saying the team did not have a "positive environment." He said he didn't know if he'd be back next season.

    "I need a stable, healthy, enjoyable environment," Bradley told the newspaper. "There's too many people everywhere in your face with a microphone asking the same questions repeatedly.

    "Everything is just bashing you. It's just negativity."

    Cubs outfielder Reed Johnson had trouble understanding why Bradley was so unhappy.

    "I came from Toronto and come here and just like fall in love with the city and fall in love with the organization," Johnson said. "It's just hard for me to believe that you can come to this city, come to this organization, and not enjoy your time here."

    Johnson didn't think Bradley had any reason to feel isolated from the rest of the team, saying "I think for the most part that was his choice."

    Hendry was surprised to learn that Bradley wasn't enjoying Chicago after seeking a deal with the Cubs in the offseason.

    "That's why it was so disconcerting to hear about negativity," Hendry said. "It's a great place to play. Great ballpark, great city, greatest fans in the world.

    "That's just something that's intolerable to me, to blame the fans and the other things that were blamed."

    Micah Hoffpauir played right field, Bradley's spot, for the third straight game in the finale of a three-game series against the St. Louis Cardinals on Sunday night. Outfielder Tyler Colvin, a first-round draft pick in 2006, was recalled from Double-A Tennessee.

    The oft-injured Bradley has a history of boorish behavior during 10 years in the majors with seven teams.

    He was sent home by Piniella during a June game following an angry outburst in the dugout, and suspended for a game after arguing with umpire Larry Vanover when he was called out on strikes with the bases loaded April 16.

    In 2004, Bradley was ordered to undergo anger management counseling while with the Dodgers after being suspended for charging a fan in the stands who had thrown a bottle near him. During the NL playoffs that year, he called a reporter an "Uncle Tom."
    Cubs suspend Bradley for rest of 2009

  • #2
    This guy's a bum and it's about time he gets out of baseball. If the owners can conspire against Bonds, they can conspire against this douche.

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    • #3
      He gets a fast pass into the "Most Annoying Baseball Players Ever/Clubhouse Cancer" rollercoaster.

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      • #4
        The prefer the board game company version of Milton Bradley.
        Need help? Questions? Concerns? Want to chat? PM Hugg!

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        • #5
          I know this is not popular, but if they pay his salary, I'd take him in LF in Landshark.

          I mean, it was pretty crappy of him to say all that about his team, but he has an .863 OPS since 2003. And he would make our outfield kind of cool, potentially.

          Really, he's been pretty good behaviorally over the last few years, hasn't he? Yeah, this season has been a mess, but he hasn't had many incidents recently from what I remember. Yeah, you're only going to get 450 PAs from him, but if he goes back to being that .850 bat, that'd be pretty cool, and you could afford to trade Uggla. There's absolutely zero chance they bring him back, and we have a good trading history with the Cubs, so if we give them literally anything they might eat his salary.

          And it sounds like he might want to play for a team that nobody gives a shit about and might not be an asshole.

          2B Coghlan
          LF Milton Bradley
          SS Hanley Ramirez
          3B Jorge Cantu
          C John Baker
          RF Cody Ross
          1B Logan Morrison
          CF Cameron Maybin

          I wouldn't mind that, I think that could score some runs. And Fredi's not a get in your face guy, so I can't imagine Milton would have a lot of gripes about playing here. And, making that kind of move (And trading Uggla) gives you the money to try and resign Nick Johnson (or, if they think Coghlan can play 3B, keep Uggla and lose Cantu).

          I would do it, but then I'm not all that worried about the clubhouse cancer/distraction crap. I wanted Barry Bonds two years ago.
          Last edited by Bobbob1313; 09-20-2009, 10:36 PM.
          poop

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          • #6
            Not sure why you mentioned Barry Bonds because they're completely different people.

            Bradley is a clown. He is MLB's TOwens.

            The only way I may agree with you on bringing him over would be this: He may go out of his way to be a cool tempered, team player guy at his next team (for a little while at least) because he will want to show everyone, "see, it was the Cubs not me!"

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            • #7
              Didn't have any problems last year. Prior to this year, has he really caused any problems since that scuffle with the umpire where he blew out his knee? I am also inclined to believe that he did get a lot of shit from the fans because Wrigley is the passive aggressive racism capital of America. He got a lot of flack and it's not like he's the only dude that underperformed on that suck-ass squad.
              This post was brought to you by: Dat SEC Speed

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              • #8
                Barry Bonds: Steroid user, paranoid delusional, racist, tons of media coverage, microscope.

                Milton Bradley: Said Cubs fans suck and the organization sucks, freaked out because an ump said something reportedly innapropriate (MLB Suspended him for the season and postseason for what he said to Milton), threw some baseballs on the field like 8 years ago, sometimes gets mad

                Not sure how Milton Bradley is MLB's TO. That's ridiculous.
                poop

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                • #9
                  If he's not MLB's TO, then who is?

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                  • #10
                    Does there have to be an MLB TO? I do not mind Milton

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                    • #11
                      Just because an athlete is black and gets frustrated with his team sometimes doesn't make him a TO. Nor does every league require one.
                      This post was brought to you by: Dat SEC Speed

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                      • #12
                        MLB is not as much of a celebrity league as the NFL. It's hard for someone to be MLB's TO, but Barry was getting there before he got blacklisted.
                        poop

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                        • #13
                          I could care less what color Bradley (or TO) is. If he was white I would have the same outlook. If Bradley was the target of racial remarks in Chicago I feel bad for him but I don't hear Derek Lee blowing up Chicago fans.

                          I still think comparing Bradley to Barry is lazy.

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                          • #14
                            Bradley to TO is as well!

                            Are you callin bobbob lazy cuz hes black?

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Daft View Post
                              I still think comparing Bradley to Barry is lazy.
                              It's far lazier to compare him to TO.

                              I didn't really compare them anyways. I said even if he is the clubhouse cancer etc I don't care because I wanted Barry too. Barry was probably a racist, definitely a distraction, definitely a surly mother fucker, and would probably have brought less to a team than Milton.

                              Barry was a bigger distraction than Milton Bradley could be, and I wanted Barry and I want Milton Bradley.
                              poop

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