Miley, O'Brien never did mesh
General manager wanted Graham
By John Fay
Enquirer staff writer
In retrospect, it's surprising the baseball marriage of Dan O'Brien and Dave Miley lasted as long as it did.
The two couldn't be much further apart on the personality scale.
Miley is an old-school baseball guy, a little rough around the edges, strictly blue-collar. If it were up to him, the only meetings he would attend are the ones on the mound when he removes a pitcher.
O'Brien is much more corporate, very smooth, and his button-down white shirts are always perfectly pressed. He likes to meet often and long.
Ask Miley a question, and you'll get a few short, fragmented sentences. Ask O'Brien what time it is, and he'll tell you how to make a watch.
But the two were thrust together when O'Brien was hired as general manager Oct. 27, 2003. Miley had just finished the season as the Reds' interim manager.
O'Brien conducted a search that lasted more than a month and settled on Brian Graham, the Pittsburgh Pirates' director of player development.
Miley eventually was hired when chief operating officer John Allen and chief executive officer Carl Lindner intervened.
Miley and O'Brien got along. They had a reasonable working relationship. But they were never very comfortable around one another. Again: different styles, different personalities.
One story illustrates that pretty well.
Miley has a lot of little catch phrases. One of his favorites is: "What do you want me to do about it? I'm only one man."
It's said in jest. If a writer said his office was too hot, Miley's reply would be: "What do you want me to do about it? I'm only one man."
O'Brien got wind that Miley was using the expression and asked him to stop. Miley did, but he was perplexed. He always said what he said in fun, but O'Brien didn't see it that way.
Miley didn't speak to the press Tuesday. O'Brien said Miley was "relieved" when given the news of his firing.
But Miley told friends he wasn't so happy after hearing what O'Brien and interim manager Jerry Narron had to say at the news conference introducing Narron.
Miley took responsibility for the club's woes. He told Allen in Denver when Allen made his last-day-of-the-road-trip visit that he would understand if Allen fired him.
Though he took responsibility, Miley thought the 6-19 record of his top three starters had a lot more to do with the team's record than anything he did or didn't do.
It has been written and said a lot lately that Miley had lost the team.
Sean Casey said that's not true.
"I don't think Miley lost the team," Casey said. "I think the team was just in such a funk. The result of us playing so bad was that Dave Miley got fired. But he wasn't the reason we played so bad."
Miley was not universally popular in the clubhouse. Rich Aurilia endorsed his firing.
"It's a step in the right direction," Aurilia said.
Aurilia, of course, was not happy that he lost his starting job to Felipe Lopez.
Told one day that Aurilia was going to rip him because Aurilia wasn't in the lineup, Miley mentioned Lopez's stats and then said:
"What do you want me to do about it? I'm only one man."
E-mail jfay@enquirer.com