RIP Syd Thrift

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MJHRVA

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Joined
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Richmond, VA
http://www.timesdispatch.com/servlet/Satellite?pagename=RTD/MGArticle/RTD_BasicArticle&c=MGArticle&cid=1149190702964&path=%21sports&s=1045855934844
 
History will treat him better than he was treated in the here-and-now. Great baseball mind.

RIP.
 
I whine quite a bit about the 1992 NLCS, but if not for Syd Thrift, that early 90s run never would have occurred. Considering where the team was around 1985-86, the man is forever a genius in my book...RIP.

Nice read from Ron Cook...

http://www.postgazette.com/pg/04126/311389.stm
 
Trey Beamon said:
I whine quite a bit about the 1992 NLCS, but if not for Syd Thrift, that early 90s run never would have occurred. Considering where the team was around 1985-86, the man is forever a genius in my book...RIP.

No doubt about that. And thanks for the Ron Cook link. Very well done.
 
"The Game According to Syd" should be required reading for any baseball GM trying to build a team by using the minor league system.
 
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Cape_Fear said:
"The Game According to Syd" should be required reading for any baseball GM trying to build a team by using the minor league system.

"The Game According to Syd is probably a great book, but more importantly, it's the perfect size to prop up a short kitchen table leg." -- David Littlefield, Pittsburgh
 
Cape_Fear said:
"The Game According to Syd" should be required reading for any baseball GM trying to build a team by using the minor league system.

It was a very good book. I don't agree with everything in it and some of it is showing off how smart Thrift is, but it had a lot of good ideas and was very thought provoking.
 
I loved that Pirates team, for a while they were the NL team I rooted for - Bonds, Bonilla & personal favorites like Van Slyke, Lavalierre, Brian Fisher, Drabek, Rhoden etc.

RIP
 
Thrift did a great job in Pittsburgh, but he also did it in a different era. In 1988, payrolls ranged from the Yankees' high of $18.9 million to the White Sox low of $5.9 million.
 
Trey Beamon said:
if not for Syd Thrift, that early 90s run never would have occurred.

What? You mean Ted Simmons wasn't the genius behind that bunch?

Carry on.

(P.S. Syd was doomed by a moronic owner in Baltimore. Anyone who wants to toss more than 20 percent of the blame toward the GM in that case doesn't know how much of a tool Angelos is.)
 
Claws for Concern said:
Guess the Pirates won one for him tonight against the Dodgers.

And the Orioles for him against the DRays.

And the Yankees for him against the Blue Jays.

And the DRays for him against...ooops.
 
wicked said:
Trey Beamon said:
if not for Syd Thrift, that early 90s run never would have occurred.

What? You mean Ted Simmons wasn't the genius behind that bunch?

Carry on.

(P.S. Syd was doomed by a moronic owner in Baltimore. Anyone who wants to toss more than 20 percent of the blame toward the GM in that case doesn't know how much of a tool Angelos is.)

Agreed Angelos has hindered the Orioles, but Thrift's big fire sale netted the Orioles one impact player - Melvin Mora, who blossomed in Baltimore. Every other player the Orioles received (for Mike Bordick, Charles Johnson, B.J. Surhoff, etc.) brought back minor league scrubs or injured players (Luis Rivera! Great prospect!).
 
Charles Johnson never lived up to the hype coming out of the U. Bordick was falling apart at that point. Surhoff is like 58. How would you expect him to get a lot for those guys?
 

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