Time, not free reign, is only cure for Reds
By John Fay
Enquirer staff writer
A lot of people espouse the Marvin Lewis Theory for fixing the Reds: Bring someone in, give them free reign, and presto, things will be better.
This is no defense of Dan O'Brien or Dave Miley and no knock on Marvelous Marvin, but it's not that simple.
The NFL is set up for turnarounds. Major League Baseball isn't.
The NFL is different in four major ways:
In the NFL, you can cut someone and not pay him. In other words, Eric Milton could be gone after this year and the Reds wouldn't have to pay him $16 million.
In the NFL, small markets and large markets have almost identical payrolls, e.g., the Bengals' payroll is about the same as the New York Giants'. The Reds' payroll is $148 million less than the New York Yankees'.
In the NFL, you draft players who are ready to play. You draft Carson Palmer, sit him a year and he's your key offensive player. There are very few sure bets in the Baseball draft. You also can rapidly fill holes in the middle and late rounds of the NFL draft.
In the NFL, everything is set up to help the struggling teams - from the schedule to the number of teams that make the playoffs.
The point is, you could bring in anyone - John Schuerholz, Bob Howsam, Houdini - give them as much freedom as they need, and turning around the Reds still would take time.
More time, frankly, than O'Brien has been given as general manager.
Miley, or any manager in the current setup, is largely at the mercy of the general manger. You can be the greatest manager in history and you don't win if you don't have the players. Lou Piniella was a walking, talking, cussing example of that this week at Great American Ball Park.
So, as hard as it is for fans to accept, the Reds are probably best off letting O'Brien continue at least through the end of his contract.