In 1985 the braintrust at Coca-Cola got it into their heads
that a decline in one of more than a dozen sales channels was declining to arch
rival Pepsi. That company’s famous “Pepsi
Challenge” advertising was ringing a lot of cash registers in supermarkets,
thus the executives concluded that the solution must be to change the formula
to make it taste more like its competitor.
Thus New Coke was born and it was introduced to the public
with great fanfare along with the poorly formulated research experiments that “proved”
the new formula was preferable to the old one.
Ummm...no!
Instead, protests evolved around the entire world demanding that Coca
Cola return to its original formula that they knew and loved.
What happened then?
Well, the introduction of the original formula known as Coke Classic
surged to the number one spot atop the soft drink sales list. Slowly the bad idea of New Coke was rebranded
as Coke II and then allowed to die a quiet and long overdue death. In 2009 Coca Cola Classic was once again
positioned simply as Coca Cola.
Why this history lesson?
There’s an old axiom, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
In 2003 the Wilpon family bought out the NY Mets from the
Doubledays and with rare exceptions it’s been an unmitigated disaster of the
Coca Cola variety for the very same reason – executive meddling in day to day
affairs of the folks paid to know better.
Specifically Jeff Wilpon is the
MIC – Meddler-In-Chief – who is almost singlehandedly responsible for the
demise of an otherwise respectable franchise.
Recently Good Fundies Co-Founder Brian penned an extensive article that didn’t editorialize but merely chronicled media reports
of Wilpon interference in baseball operations with negative results. A few highlights of that very fine article will
show that the MIC in particular does everything short of demanding loyalty
oaths from his staff lest they be fired.
Back in the beginning, Joel
Sherman wrote, Jeff Wilpon did not
dispute he is in charge of the day-to-day running of just about every facet of
the organization from clean bathrooms to player procurement.
Executives
who speak regularly to Duquette say the GM lacks autonomy, is worn down by the
Wilpons’ penchant for micromanaging via voluminous phone calls and meetings,
and by Jeff’s inability to recognize ownership has too much else on its plate
to grasp all the pieces of data needed to make an informed decision.”
In
2005 Pedro Martinez related a story in which, though injured, he was commanded
by the MIC to pitch because, “While I’m the boss here, you’re going to have to
do what I say.” Apparently Wilpon felt
selling more tickets in late September for Martinez’ start was more important
than the risk of further injury.
In
2008 when the MIC was officially named the COO of the Mets, former owner Nelson
Doubleday quipped, “Jeff Wilpon said he’s going to learn how to run a baseball
team and take over at the end of the year.
Run for the hills, boys. I think probably
all those baseball people will bail.”
Almost
immediately following that change in the helm the infamous 3:00 AM massacre
occurred in which Willie Randolph was fired by Omar Minaya, but reporter Bill
Madden noted, “he was just the messenger…Jeff Wilpon and Vice President of
Development Tony Bernazard were the ones who really wanted Randolph fired.”
Joel
Sherman said in an article in 2010 about the MIC, “(Jeff Wilpon is) short
tempered. Tone deaf. An accountability deflector. A micro-manager. A second-guesser. A less-than-deep thinker. And bad at self-awareness.”
Even
more telling was a quote he obtained from a baseball executive who opined, “Jeff
is the problem with the organization and he’s is never going to realize
that. He cannot help himself. He has to be involved. He will never hire anyone who will not let
him have major input. He will hire anyone
who does not run every personnel decision through him.” In Sherman’s opinion, only a Marlins
executive has a lower industry reputation than does Jeff Wilpon.
Perhaps most telling (and detrimental to Mets’ player
development) was how the team moved on from Norfolk in AAA to baseball hell in
Las Vegas. Brian Costa of the NY Times
interviewed an executive from the Norfolk Tides who confirmed, “the
relationship soured after Jeff Wilpon became the Mets chief operating officer…When
he became involved in everything was when things changed…He had his nose and
hands in everything.”
In 2017 the NY Post’s Ken Davidoff reported, “Conversations with 10 people possessing
first-hand knowledge of the Mets’ baseball operations produced the picture
of … an environment where CEO Fred Wilpon and COO Jeff Wilpon both are
prone to micromanagement, with Fred Wilpon more likely to assert himself in on-the-field
decisions and Jeff Wilpon more involved in medical matters — such as working on
media releases about injuries — clouding the chain of command.”
That same year Marc Carig’s
bombshell article late in the season revealed, “Despite what the front office
perceived as Collins’ constant tactical blunders and concerns about his
relationships with the players, sources said efforts to explore a change
seriously were thwarted by the elder Wilpon…
The 80-year-old owner keeps a
low public profile and has not spoken at length about his team since 2013. But
privately, his influence in baseball matters still looms large, as shown by his
ability to single-handedly shield Collins, whom he visited frequently in the
manager’s office before games.”
Finally, there is a source
within the Mets hierarchy confirming all of this conjecture. “Jeff gets in the middle of everything that’s going on, and
he ends up doing more damage. He
meddles. I can’t come up with a more appropriate term.’’
There’s a huge difference between the NY Mets and Coca
Cola. After 79 days of the disaster of
New Coke, the Atlanta-based corporation took corrective action to ensure it
would once again return to respectability and profitability. It’s been 15 years now and Mets fans are
still waiting for a reason to sell the bags they customarily wear over their
heads during the Wilpon reign of terror. Kudos to Brian and Good Fundies for bringing this issue to light and he, in turn, thanked me for carrying the torch. I volunteered that I'd willingly carry the pitchfork as well.
9 comments:
I read the post - it’s a sobering/disturbing reinforcement of what we already know about ownership
A successful organization does not have the philosophy that "we've deserved a D grade at best for 15 years, so we'll double down on our wrong approaches."
Change is extremely needed.
Oddly, a friend of mine sent me this unsolicited this morning - how coincidental:
“...funny that a lot of Yankee fans are delusional about DeGrom being dealt from The Mets for the lower tiered Yankee prospects...I’d rather the Mets do a few things that would restore my faith in them.
1. The obvious is for The Wilpons and Saul to sell their share of the Mets to a owner that knows about baseball; Doubleday knew baseball and was bought out by the lesser owner.
2. Clean house of everyone person that’s involved with baseball decisions and cut ties with all of the deadweight affiliated with this franchise.
3. Forge your own destiny. Stop living in the shadows of The Dodgers and The Yankees to an extent, learn to build a team like The Cardinals, learn to groom them like The Yankees, learn to scout like The Dodgers and let the ghosts of Tom Seaver and 1969 rest...”
My friend was being kind.
Simply put, we need regime change.
What a great article about a great big dilemma we have
we are the IHOB of baseball
Wilpons are and have been problem #1 for decades now. The Mets’ park can’t even have its own identity because of Fred’s childish obsession with the Dodgers.
They’re our curse and I don’t see them going anywhere soon. The group that owns the Sixers and Devils would be a fantastic replacement.
If the Wilpons are the true problem......then fans are just fooling themselves with any thoughts of hope for the franchise during the next 20 years.
We had an upper level boss like that and life was miserable. Then, one beautiful day, he was removed from the organization and things immediately got better.
It is amazing how much damage a MIC type can do.
I agree that the team will continue to struggle until change is made....where it counts (ownership).
Problem: Fan bases do not have the patience to wait around for 20+ years anymore.
Too much instant gratification when you can watch any team every night no matter how far away they are.
If Alderson is not responsible for the Mets mess....
If any replacement will produce the same results.....
The Mets fan base will be non-existent in the next 20 years.
Post a Comment