Monday, January 13, 2020

BLOG: Dead Manager On Campus

Image result for alex coraThere was the iconic image of Alex Cora walking across the overpass of the Mass Pike when he was first hired by the Red Sox in October 2017. Wearing aviator sunglasses, blue dress pants, white shirt, and a red tie with a blazer and his phone up to his ear, he was walking towards his new job inside Fenway Park with an "I'm the man" swagger.

Cora was supposed to be the savior for the Red Sox. A young Alex as supposed to come in and rejuvenate a Red Sox clubhouse that the veteran manager, John Farrell lost. The common conception after the 2017 season was Farrell was out of touch with young, upcoming Red Sox superstars and the younger, more energetic Cora would be the spark they need. And it was ... for 2018.

The managerial change worked. The Red Sox used their new energy to secure their ninth World Series in 2018 with a thrilling five-game series against the Dodgers. But after raising the banner and handing out rings on Opening Day, 2019 the partying was quickly died. The Sox performed poorly in 2019 and did not show the same life they exhibited a year prior. They were a boring team.

Red Sox nation was duped.

What we thought was "swagger" coming from Cora crossing the David Ortiz Bridge was, in 20/20 hindsight, cockiness. Cora was coming off a World Series championship with Houston and was flaunting it. But unbeknownst to everyone in baseball, Cora was hiding a secret. He was, believed to be, the mastermind behind the Astros and Red Sox use of technology to steal opponents' signs.

I for one was in a similar camp as Michael Holley when Cora first signed. Neither one us liked the hiring of Cora. While for Michael his problem was Cora's lack of managerial experience, my issue was abstract. I saw through that "swagger" he had while walking down Brookline Ave. That was not a Bill Belichick, seven rings type walk, that was the walk of a cocky, young 16-year-old who just got his driver's license and was handed the keys to a brand-new Mustang. No good can come from that.

But Sox fans loved it. Remember that image of him walking across the bridge, it quickly became a Gif that was circulating Twitter. And long-time Red Sox fanatic, moonlighting as a writer, Jared Carrabis was engrossed with Cora. In Carrabis' eyes and the eyes of many Sox fans, Cora could do no wrong and still can't.
But I for one was not fooled by the Alex Cora mask. He made a mistake. We all make mistakes, bu this one, Alex is going to cost you. And it is going to cost you big.

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