![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Your account | Today's news index | Weather | Traffic | Movies | Restaurants | Today's events | ||||||||
|
|
Friday, November 07, 2003 - Page updated at 09:44 A.M.
Mariners By Larry Stone
Dodgers farm director Bill Bavasi, who was on the other end of one of the crowning moments in Mariners history, appears to have emerged as the winner of the club's five-week search for a new general manager. Though the Mariners had a cloak of secrecy regarding the successor to Pat Gillick, who on Sept. 30 announced his intention to step down as GM, all signs point to Bavasi, 45, as the choice. Reached on his cellphone late yesterday afternoon, Bavasi declined any comment, nor would he disclose his location. The other two finalists for the job, Detroit assistant GM Al Avila, and Mariners vice president Benny Looper, both said last night they had not heard any word of their status. As Angels GM in 1995, Bavasi suffered through Seattle's comeback from a 13-game deficit to win the American League West title. But Bavasi, who became the Dodgers' director of player development in 2002, watched the foundation of the Angels team he had built win the World Series last year. Acknowledging Bavasi's role in building the Angels, his successor, Bill Stoneman, invited Bavasi and his longtime scouting director, Bob Fontaine, to attend the World Series, which the Angels won in seven games over San Francisco. During Bavasi's 16-year tenure in Anaheim as farm director, assistant GM and GM, the Angels acquired and developed Troy Percival, Troy Glaus, Darin Erstad, Tim Salmon, Garret Anderson, Bengie Molina, Jarrod Washburn, John Lackey, Ramon Ortiz and Francisco Rodriguez. Bavasi, who spent six seasons as the Angels' GM, resigned under pressure after the 1999 season, in which the Angels finished 70-92, 25 games out of first place. Bavasi is the son of Buzzie Bavasi, who was GM of the Dodgers from 1950-68, winning four World Series titles, and later ran the Padres and Angels. His brother, Peter, was once president of the Toronto Blue Jays and Cleveland Indians, and another brother, Bob, was the longtime owner of Everett's minor-league team. Bill Bavasi, who served on the Padres' grounds crew as a teenager, once told the Orange County Register, "I think I've reached where I am today because of my ability. But there's no question I was hired originally because of one thing: my last name."
When Whitey Herzog resigned after the '93 season, Bavasi, at 36, became the youngest GM in the major leagues. One of his first big moves was signing Bo Jackson. One of his final moves was signing Mo Vaughn to a six-year, $80 million contract. He fired popular manager Buck Rodgers 39 games into the '94 season and replaced him with Marcel Lachemann. He later hired Terry Collins midway through the '96 season to replace Lachemann, who resigned. During his six years, the Angels finished in second place three times, contending strongly for division titles in '95, '97 and '98. But the team plummeted in '99, with players openly complaining about Collins, who resigned in September. According to published reports, Bavasi stepped down after the season because of differences with team president Tony Tavares. Larry Stone: 206-464-3146 or lstone@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2003 The Seattle Times Company
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
seattletimes.com home
Home delivery
| Contact us
| Search archive
| Site map
| Low-graphic
NWclassifieds
| NWsource
| Advertising info
| The Seattle Times Company