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Last-Place Orioles Fire Sam Perlozzo


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[quote][size=3][b]Last-Place Orioles Fire Sam Perlozzo [/b][/size]
By DAVID GINSBURG
AP Sports Writer



BALTIMORE (AP) -- Four men have tried. No one has succeeded. Is anyone out there capable of having a winning season as manager of the Baltimore Orioles? Sam Perlozzo was fired by the Orioles on Monday, the result of his inability to bring last-place Baltimore out of a lengthy funk culminated by an eight-game losing streak.

"We felt Sam was prepared, we felt the club was prepared to do battle every night," executive vice president Mike Flanagan said in a news conference. "For whatever reason, it just wasn't working."

Bullpen coach Dave Trembley will be the interim manager when the Orioles begin a six-game trip in San Diego on Tuesday. One of the leading candidates to fill the position on a full-time basis is Joe Girardi, voted NL Manager of the Year in 2006 with the Florida Marlins after he was fired in a dispute with ownership.

On another front, the Orioles are negotiating with former Chicago Cubs president Andy MacPhail about becoming chief operating officer, a job left vacant since Joe Foss resigned earlier this year.

Since Davey Johnson guided the Orioles to a first-place finish in 1997, no one has been able to win in Baltimore. Ray Miller, Mike Hargrove, Lee Mazzilli and Perlozzo all failed, and unless the Orioles pull off a surprising turnaround, the team's franchise-record run of losing seasons will reach 10 in 2007.

This was supposed to be the year when Baltimore finally made some noise in the AL East. The team spent $42 million to overhaul the bullpen, signed free agent hitters Aubrey Huff and Jay Payton, and added Jaret Wright and Steve Trachsel to the rotation.

The additions did not provide the desired results.

Danys Baez, who signed a $19 million, three-year contract, lost his job as setup man and was 0-4 with a 6.52 ERA before going on the 15-day disabled list Saturday. Orioles relievers were 0-5 with a 6.00 ERA during the homestand.

Huff and Payton have been adequate, but the offense is batting .260 with a mere 50 homers in 69 games.

Wright was removed from the rotation in April with shoulder stiffness and could be lost for the year, and left-hander Adam Loewen had season-ending elbow surgery last week.

For two months, the Orioles performed beyond expectations. Baltimore was 27-27 and in second place May 31 before losing 13 of 15 in June, including the last eight games of a 1-8 homestand that ended Sunday.

Baltimore's 29-40 record is the fifth-worst in the major leagues. The Orioles started the day trailing first-place Boston by 15 1/2 games in the AL East.

"We've changed a lot of things in the last three or four years to head in the right direction," Flanagan said. "And we still feel that way about the organization in spite of what happened today. We believe that everything else in place is working well."

The blame for the Orioles' losing record fell on Perlozzo, the first major league manager to be fired this season.

"It's always based on results," Flanagan said. "It really gets down to wins and losses and expectations, and believing that this club is better than it looked."

The 56-year-old Perlozzo was told of the decision during a 20-minute discussion Monday with Flanagan and vice president Jim Duquette.

"As you might imagine, today has been a very difficult one for me and my family," Perlozzo said in a statement. "I am very disappointed that I will no longer be managing the Orioles. That being said, I wish them nothing but the best. I have been with the team for 12 seasons and I consider myself an Oriole. I believe that I have represented the club well during my time with them and I hope that the fans believe that, too."

Trembley, 55, spent the last four of his 20 years as minor league manager in the Baltimore organization. He served as bench coach on occasion this season while Tom Trebelhorn returned to Arizona to tend to his ailing wife.

"We think Dave deserves a chance," Flanagan said.

The coaching staff will remain intact. Pitching coach Leo Mazzone, who joined the Orioles last year because of his tight friendship with Perlozzo, will continue his effort to right a unit with a 4.27 ERA and a league-leading 276 walks.

"Leo expressed disappointment, but at the same time believes in this pitching staff and is excited to see it go forward," Flanagan said. "He feels like we can turn this around."

After Sunday's 6-4 loss to Arizona on Sunday, there was talk in the clubhouse of Perlozzo's imminent dismissal. Several players publicly defended him, including Kevin Millar, who called for a players-only meeting in San Diego on Tuesday.

"Sam Perlozzo doesn't throw the ball and doesn't catch the ball. We know that for sure, right? He doesn't hit the ball," Millar said. "He doesn't play. We play."

Flanagan inferred that Millar's call for a team meeting was a factor in the team's decision to fire Perlozzo.

"Those are the sort of things that indicate that things aren't going well with the ballclub," Flanagan said.

Perlozzo took over on an interim basis after the Orioles dismissed Mazzilli on Aug. 4, 2005. After guiding Baltimore to a 23-32 record that season, Perlozzo signed a three-year contract in October 2005.

He finished 122-164, including 70-92 last season.

Perlozzo grew up in Cumberland, Md. and rooted for the Orioles during his childhood. Before being hired as manager, he spent 10 years on the team's coaching staff. He was invited to stay with the organization in a different capacity.

"I don't know what the future holds for me with regard to my career," Perlozzo said, "but I certainly hope to stay in the game that I have been a part of for so long."

© 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.[/quote]




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Is it only a matter of time???
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I am really suprised that Narron still has a job, my guess is that ownership knows that they gave him a turd to work with and is giving him the benefit of the doubt, what really will suck is if they put a decent team together and let him manage it then they will have to fire him midway through the season giving the fans another yet another "wait til next year"
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