That is the biggest load of absolute crap I have ever heard from a baseball front office. It's so clear they don't want to win this year, why can't they at least be honest about it instead of blowing smoke that everyone in the world can see through?Manager John Russell, who summoned players into his office to hear them out on Thursday, said trading away McClouth should not be taken as a sign the Pirates aren't serious about winning, according to the report, echoing what general manager Neal Huntington and team president Frank Coonelly earlier said about the deal. He also said the team still had a job to do, despite the players' feelings.
"The players lost a friend, a teammate and a good player," Russell said, according to the report. "They might be thinking that we've thrown in the towel, but it's time to turn the page and play baseball. It's time to move on."
Here was the players' reactions:
"Wow," second baseman Freddy Sanchez said Thursday of the trade, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "I think the biggest thing was the shock factor. It's obviously a tough pill to swallow. Our No. 3 hitter just got taken away, the guy who leads our team in home runs and RBIs, and we were 6½ games out. We could still have been right there. I think we still can. But we're all just kind of wondering right now ... wondering what it is."I think the overriding question from this is when will the Pirates ever actually try to win? When will they come out of this eternal sell-off and actually try to compete? I really do feel bad for Pirates fans, because they have to put up with this year after year, and there is no end in sight. And the front office just continues to alienate fans. You know...a lot is made about "small-market" teams not having enough money to compete, yada yada yada. And yes, there is merit to the fact that their fan base isn't large enough to compare to bigger cities and it hurts them. HOWEVER, teams like the Pirates can't really argue this fairly, because they continue to alienate fans, which doesn't do anything to garner more money. We all saw how many fans now come out to teams that perform well, even in small markets. The Rockies got huge numbers of fans to come out when they were doing well. The Marlins get large numbers of fans when they play well. Look what the Rays have done. They live in freakin Tampa Bay. But they get large crowds because they compete now. They've had a successful rebuild process, made a competitive team out of it, and now they sell tickets like wildfire. If teams like Pittsburgh would get out of this endless cycle of selling off players, maybe they could make some money to compete. It's just a thought."There ain't a guy in here who ain't [ticked] off about it," said first baseman Adam LaRoche, according to the report. "It's kind of like being with your platoon in a battle, and guys keep dropping around you. You keep hanging on, hanging on, and you've got to figure: How much longer till you sink?
It's fine. Heck with it. We're not the GM. We don't run the team. If they feel like it's the best move for three or four years from now, great," LaRoche said, according to the report. "Unfortunately, that does me no good. I've still got to be in here telling guys it's going to be fine with Nate gone. Well, you can only do that for so long until guys just kind of ... well, they know."
And I really, really do feel bad for Pirates fans. Genuinly. Because I know I would never, ever want to go through this.