Q&k4 wih e- f(#A a / &ae Y gjoa01 The Michigan Daily -Sports Monday- February 5, 1990 - Page 3 Richard Eisen V Bill Lajoie The Tiger GM talks about the Tigers' current headaches and the headaches rotisserie baseball owners have caused him lately Bill Lajoie is the Detroit Tigers' General Manager. He is responsible for building the Tigers that won the 1984 World Championship and received high praise for pasting together a division championship team in 1987. Now, he has come under fire for the Tigers poor finish in 1989. Recently, Daily Sports Writer Adam Benson talked with Lajoie and the state of the Tigers. Daily: How are the Tigers able to increase spending? How are they *able to offer a Kent Hrbek the kind of money they did? Lajoie: I'll tell you Adam, I just do what I'm told. If somebody says there is money available to offer to players then that's what I'll do. Where it's coming from or how we... if we are going to acquire them or whatever, that doesn't matter. They just said 'let's go try to sign -'some free agents.' D: So picking up players like Lloyd Moseby and Tony Phillips, are these the kind of players who can -make the Tigers contenders again? Are these the players at the top of -'your list while trying to rebuild the Tigers? L: We attempted to get some players, Hrbek, (Mark) Davis, and so on. We were not able to acquie * those, so we went to the next group of players that was available. D: Do Phillips and Moseby, players known for their speed, change the personality of the Tigers, a team that had relied on the home run during their best years? L: You make your club around what's available. If players with some speed and good defensive ability are available, then you have to change your team a little bit. Baseball isn't something you can build a long time contender just from your farm system. If we could tailor our ball club to our park, we'd have all power hitters. That's not the way it is, because the free agency players that are available one year are not available the next. You have to adjust to what's available. D: Does Bo Schembechler's 0 ° arrival into the Tiger brass change your job at all? L: I don't believe it will change my dealings in any way. I'm just reporting to a different man. That's the way I see it and Bo is very interested and wants to see what's going on, so it hasn't changed that much. D: There has been a lot of talk over the years about changing the minor league system in baseball. Some have suggested that the colleges should serve as a training ground for major leaguers, allewing more potential players to go to school? The college would become a sort of training ground for the major leaguers. L: I'm not in favor of growing (the minors) to pay college players. If you look at All-Star teams in the major leagues, every year the majority of players in those game are signed as high school players. The biggest stars, the longevity factor points for a player to sign at 18. The college players are making greater inroads the last six or eight years because that is what teams were drafting. But now, teams are starting to go back to the method of 10,15, 20, 30 years ago of trying to get high school players into the game. D: The Tigers have for the most part continued to draft players out of high school under farm director Joe McDonald. Will we see those players, like Phil Clark, Steve Pegues soon? L: We certainly feel that those players have the ability to play in the major leagues. Its all a matter of getting the opportunity. There will be seven (Tigers out of the farm system) on our roster this year and we will get a look at them next spring. D: What about super prospect Travis Fryman? Would bringing in Fryman, a shortstop, move Alan Trammell out of his position? L: That's not going to happen. Hopefully Fryman will get a good opportunity to make our ball club, if he doesn't, he'll play in Toledo. D: Is Fryman the prospect that everybody makes him out to be? L: Travis Fryman is the best prospect we have in the organization. He's a very well- rounded player. He can run, he can hit, he can field and he loves baseball. D: How does Sparky Anderson appear to you this season after all the problems he had dealing with a losing team last season? L: Sparky is fine. He'll be ready to lead the ball club. D: Are you worried about him in charge of a ball club that may finish in the lower tier of the American League East again? L: We're supposed to finish in the lower half of the East for four years and we didn't do to badly two of the four years. I'm not a doomsayer. 5 D: What about the pitching staff? You didn't do as much to bolster that part of the team? L: You know, you are a tough son-of-a-bitch you know that? You are giving me the idea that you want to see 24 people change hands, and that's impossible. Don't ask me questions that can't answered. If teams can change their whole offense, and their defense, and their pitching in three months - if you can ask me a question like that, you tell me who else has done that? D: It hasn't happened. But I didn't ask if you could change the team, I asked about the pitching staff. L: The pitching staff - the first thing you have to do, there are fewer hitters that are available. So you have to go after the ones that are available. The pitching can be fixed very quickly through someone being a surprise. Hitters usually don't surpiise, but hitters do. Some guy comes in and starts throwing the ball over the plate and you got a pitcher. Hitters it usually takes, you know its a time thing with them, but there could be a pitcher that we just decide its time for them to make the club, and they do. D: Who do you look for to emerge as a great pitcher, this year. Will be one of the younger pitchers, like a Kevin Ritz or a Brian Dubois? L: They certainly have the arms to do a good job, but if they don't its not going to be a disaster. There is also (Steve) Searcy, and we are bringing other pitchers who can do the job. D: Jack Morris comes to camp this year, without the usual squabbling that has followed him through contract negotiations. He is able to sign quietly and quickly. Can we expect better things from him this year? L: Jack is sound and he pitched 9 or 10 games after his injury last year, most them were pretty good. So I thin Jack is back on track. D: Do you think Detroit fans have come to expect a winner every year after the great seasons of the 80s? L: We've been very successful and I think everybody expects a winner. It's kind of the mentality of the fan. It's like the Lions, they were 1-8, now they win a game and a thousand more people come. They win another, 5,000 more. I personally just like to see a good game. That to me is the joy of watching any sport, to watch people perform up to their ability. D: Is this group more like the ones in the late 70s, a club in transition from an older group to a younger team? L: No, we signed players 26 to 30 years old that could carry us for a few years until the players on the farm can filter in and start giving us some experience. It's not a young club, it's not an old club, its one of those inbetweeners. Most players reach their peak at 28, 29 years old. If players like Moseby and Phillips want to stay in baseball and continue to make the money they've been making, these are the years they have to be productive. D: The National League has made more key signirigs in recent seasons? Is there any reason for that? L: The (American League) East has lost a lot of players over the past four years. Who knows why a player leaves a team? Maybe they win once and they decide its best to go somewhere else. I felt that myself, when we put a lot of players together that maybe I should see if I could do it somewhere else. It wasn't that I didn't like where I was, it was just that I wanted to see if I could do it again. I think that's why Kirk (Gibson) left. He wanted to see if he was the dominant force that could help another team win and he was. D: Is this club on the right track? Is this more than just a thrown together club? L: We've had 11 years of good ball clubs here. Last year...you know, we lost a lot of games, but I don't think people look at why. Hell, nobody had a good year. If Trammell can't play anymore, then it doesn't matter really what you do. Now is he going to bounce back, or is what you saw last year? D: I know a lot of rotiseree league owners who hope he will. L: Well when people want to dump on somebody because he had a bad season and say 'Oh the hell with it' that's the mentality that's going on today because of the thing you just mentioned: rotiseree baseball. Get rid of that son-of-a-bitch, he only hit .240. And that's what is going on all over this country. It's nuts. D: Rotiseree baseball is having that kind of effect? L: Rotiseree baseball, right now, is effecting the labor negotiations. It effects setting salaries, determining by computer what people should make. D: You don't own a rotiseree team yourself, I take it? L: Hell no. I can't stand it guys off the street call up and imitate general managers. They get right through to me. D: Does it worry you that some of these free agents wanted to only play in the bigger, warm weather cities? L: It is. Montreal and Toronto said they couldn't attract players to come there. This is something people predicted would happen in 1976 when the whole thing began. This year, Hubie Brooks wouldn't even accept an offer from another team until California or the Dodgers said 'we don't want you.' As long as they were interested, he wouldn't listen. D: Is there anything you can'do in the new labor agreement to change that? L: A free agent is a FREE agent. Dynasties making a return in the 90s Just a few years ago, when Reagan was our clue-, uh I mean fearless leader and "Matlock" was in its first banner season, nobody had ever heard of the term "Three-peat." Three-peat? What's that? Can I find that in the Kroger's produce section? It sounds like some green zuchini-like vegetable. Delicious with Stove Top Stuffing. How about a new and improved lawn fertilizer? New Three-peat moss, it's three peats in one! It's one peat, mixed with another and wrapped around by the third peat. Nice, fresh lawn in days. Amaze your neighbors. Ah, but now, in the hip 90s, sports knows all about three-peats. It seems that after a decade of complete futility, the sports dynasty has re- turned with a vengeance. The 80s conventional wisdom taught the sports fan that everyone gun- ned for you if you were the champion, thus repeats became hard to pull off. Older sports fans, who remember the day when the Brooklyn Dodgers were 'dem bums' and players earned their money the hard way, became dis- appointed that dissension always came along with the championship tro- phy in the business-like 80s. Championship players demanded more mo- ney and those who would not get it demanded trades. No stars, no repeats. But the decade turned and voila! The mighty dynasty has returned! And without too much warning. Who thought the 1989 San Francisco 49ers would turn into the greatest football team to walk on a gridiron? There are still folks who maintain that the 1989 49ers are one of the best, but not the best. In fact, the 49ers have the best front office and organization football has ever seen. All the players seem happy to play for owner Eddie DeBartolo Jr., who shakes all his players' hands after every game, win or lose. Maybe George Steinbrenner should wake up and smell the tea leaves. So, I say they are the best I've ever seen, better than the Steelers and better than the 1985 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Oops, I meant to say Chicago Bears. Guess all those Bear losses to the Bucs kinda messed me up. The Niners made the Super Bowl look like a flag football pickup contest. Although the Broncos played with the intensity of a jar of Play- Doh, the Niners are the real thing. As the smoke cleared in New Orleans, Joe Montana and the rest of his team left the field screaming that word for the 90s: three-peat. And they'll do it, too. Don't forget, the dynasty has returned. This phenomenon has spread to baseball as well, with the Oakland Athletics being the first team to repeat divisional titles since the Yankees and Dodgers did it in 1978. However, dissension looms on the horizon for the A's as headcases Rickey Henderson and Jose Canseco can destroy the team at any moment. One joyride by Canseco can put the whole 1990 season in the tank for the A's. But, if the headcases remain stable, this team can become one of the true baseball dynasties. Even college football has become susceptible to the dynasty. The Michigan Wolverines became the first Big Ten team in 23 years to win the conference twice in a row. Notre Dame, thank goodness, fell just short of capturing its second straight national title. Miami keeps winning, proving there is still no one upstairs who likes me. All throughout the 1980s, everyone wondered why no world champions repeated - in any sport. Only three teams had the ability to repeat championship feats in the 80s: the Los Angeles Lakers in basketball, and the New York Islanders and Edmonton Oilers in hockey. And as we entered the 90s, it seemed that of these teams, only the Lakers would have the chance to actually repeat again. Wait a minute, repeat again? Redundant? Nah. The Oilers can't repeat again because I'd say Wayne Gretzky played an integral part in the Edmonton dynasty. And he's in Los Angeles now. The Islanders won't win consecutive championships because, well, they play on Long Island. So, why has the dynasty returned? Well, "Matlock" is still on the air. Maybe there's a connection here somewhere. Are you bothered by slanted texts and biased teaching at U of M? DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT! ACCURACY IN ACADEMIA MASS MEETING Monday, Feb. 5 at 7:30 pm. Pond Room, Michigan Union GOT A BIG N9SE? We're here to he . It's a new Write: Help I advice c/o Michigan Daily column in 420 Maynard the Daily. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 4 TRY US FOR LUNCH! Pizza, Subs and Salads Eat-in or Carry Out FREE DELIVERY! (11 a.m.-2 p.m.) Corner of State and Hill 994-4040 BUSINESS LEADERS of Tomorrow. . . If you are considering management studies, let us tell you about THE MICHIGAN BBA FREE PLAY 0 Limit 1/Person/Day Avv *vaAlur~ £ 7L r l1YK (AS W. (ANN ARBOR'S FINEST VIDEO & PINBAL * ICE COLD POP * FRESH CANDY* ANN-ARBOR'S ONLY INSTANT PHOTO BOOTH * POOL TABLES * -'603 E. WILLIAMS, Above Stereo Shoppe -1215 S. 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