CHICAGO -- The simplest approach would be to dismiss Milton Bradley as a worthless, miserable, psychotic, no-good jerk who somehow would sour the happy vibes at a Boy Scouts meeting, all of which is inarguably true. But the bigger problem in Cubdom, which is experiencing a more acute depression than usual in its 101st consecutive season without a World Series title, is the brainiac who signed him last winter. That would be Jim Hendry, the general manager. Once so driven by his job that he signed pitcher Ted Lilly to a $40 million contract while in his hospital bed following a heart procedure, Hendry overthought himself on Bradley to the point of wrecking a potentially historic team. He gambled that Bradley could be the offensive threat to push the Cubs past the first round of the postseason, ignoring the long, poisonous pattern of Bradley distracting or downright disrupting every team that has employed him. Rather than savor a healthy clubhouse chemistry mix, Hendry dumped the popular and versatile Mark DeRosa and replaced him with Bradley, the antithesis of good vibes, selflessness and 162-game peace.
Fletcher: Former Manager Would Welcome Bradley Back
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More Coverage: Slugger Suspended for '09 | Cubs Will Try Moving Him
The result was a human implosion not often seen, even in the vat of hopelessness that is Wrigley Field. In a wicked five-month swoop, Bradley ripped Cubs fans as racists, engaged in a confrontation with manager Lou Piniella, threw a ball into the stands when there were only two outs in the inning, alienated himself from his teammates and, over the weekend, took a blowtorch to the entire franchise and was suspended for the remainder of the season. If Milton Bradley, the old board game company, had a game for Milton Bradley, the baseball malcontent, it surely would be Trouble.
"It's just not a positive environment," said Bradley, one of the most negative people on God's green earth, in an interview with a suburban Chicago newspaper called the Daily Herald. "I need a stable, healthy, enjoyable environment. There's too many people everywhere in your face with a microphone asking the same questions repeatedly. Everything is just bashing you. You go out there and you play harder than anybody on the field and never get credit for it. It's just negativity.
"And you understand why they haven't won in 100 years here, because it's negative. It's what it is."
If he wasn't such a troubled soul, I would LOL! Bradley needs a stable, healthy, enjoyable environment? Um, the Cubs needed a stable, healthy, enjoyable right fielder and instead got a mope. And if they're ever going to climb from their 101-year black hole, it's certainly won't be with 25 Milton Bradleys. What they must do, as soon as possible, is either cut him and eat the remaining $21 million on his contract or ship him to a team that at least will pay $3 million of the bill. The Cubs have done some real dumb things in their history, but considering their payroll was the third-highest in the majors and they're barely above .500 after a season of injuries and gross underachievement, the Bradley idea ranks among the worst.
"There are issues that we¹ve had throughout the year that in the last few days became too much for me to tolerate," Hendry said in announcing the suspension. "I'm certainly not going to let our great fans become an excuse. I'm not going to tolerate not being able to answer questions from the media respectfully. Whether you feel like talking or not, it's part of all of our jobs. There's a right way to do it and a wrong way. I'm not going to allow disrespect to other people in that locker room and uniformed personnel, and I'm certainly not going to let a player, as was mentioned in the article, [talk about] negativity of the organization."
Yet shouldn't Hendry (right) whose every offseason move backfired woefully, be sent on his way right behind Bradley? With a new owner finally in place in Tom Ricketts, who hopes to pare a $140 million payroll by $40 million and create some semblance of a farm system, the time is right for a new front-office boss with fresh ideas to tackle the toughest job in baseball. Jon Daniels, the young Texas GM who built a farm system and melded kids with veterans, might be ripe to leave with the Rangers fighting money and attendance issues. Same goes for Josh Byrnes, another youthful GM who could be pried from the Arizona Diamondbacks. If Ricketts wants to think real large, how about Theo Epstein, who might want a new challenge -- and an identity of his own -- after winning two World Series in Boston and having to share credit with his three bosses?Chicago is a city of soft, homerish media who have allowed too many franchises to slide while busy brown-nosing management. From what I've seen, no one in the dying print media here has demanded Hendry's hide. But if he were working in New York and wasting money on Bradley -- not to mention his lavish overspending on Wrigleyville pariah Alfonso Soriano ($136 million), perpetual problem child Carlos Zambrano ($91.5 million), disappointing outfielder Kosuke Fukudome ($48 million), always-injured third baseman Aramis Ramirez ($75 million), inconsistent pitcher Ryan Dempster ($52 million) and former Notre Dame football player Jeff Samardzija ($10 million) -- they'd have run him out of town long ago.
Bradley should be the last straw. He wasn't the first to suggest echoes of racism in the stands; he could trade notes with former Cubs manager Dusty Baker, outfielder Jacque Jones and reliever LaTroy Hawkins, among others. "I'm talking about hatred, period," Bradley said. "I'm talking about when I go to eat at a restaurant, I have to listen to waiters bad-mouthing me at another table. Sitting in a restaurant, that's what I'm talking about -- everything." And what exactly happens in the Wrigley stands?
"You can't do nothing. You listen to them yell at you," he said of the alleged racial taunts. "All I'm saying is that I just pray the game is nine innings, so I can be out there the least amount of time as possible and go home. ... It's nothing brand-new. It's nothing that just started when Milton Bradley came here. It's the same stuff [the media] wrote about at the beginning of the year. It's not like it's a surprise or a shock or brand new to me or anyone else. That's the way it has been. It's not a brand new story. There's nothing new to write about." Do understand that Cubs fans are equal-opportunity critics, having heaped abuse upon white flops such as Todd Hundley and Kent Mercker and all sorts of managers. I'm not saying a few idiots wouldn't drop an n-bomb or something similarly ignorant, but the problem isn't racism. The minute Bradley was signed, I predicted a dreadful season in which he'd feud with fans, fight with Piniella and not produce. How right I was -- .257 batting average, 12 home runs, 40 runs batted in, .378 on-base percentage. The year before in Texas, in a relaxed environment compared to defeat-scarred Wrigleyville, he hit .321 with 22 homers, 77 RBI and a dynamic .436 on-base percentage. Hendry fooled around and fell in love with Good Milton.
Bad Milton should cost him his job. His moods sucked the fun out of a ballpark that at least had hosted two postseason series the previous two autumns, however brief. His teammates can't wait to see him leave. "At the end of the day, he was provided a great opportunity to be part of a really great organization with a lot of really good guys," Dempster told beat reporters. "It just didn't seem to make him happy -- anything. Hopefully, this is a little bit of a wake-up call for him, and he'll realize how good of a gig you have. It probably became one of those things where you start saying things that you're putting the blame on everybody else. Sometimes, you've just got to look in the mirror and realize that maybe the biggest part of the problem is yourself."
"If you don't want to be here, send him home," Ramirez said.
All of which was known about Milton Bradley during his volatile days with the Rangers, Padres, Athletics, Dodgers and Indians, all since 2002. There's always a general manager out there ready to play risk/reward, thinking he can solve the psychological puzzle and reap the benefits. Hendry played the game and whiffed badly.
"When you have high expectations, it's just the way the world is in professional sports," he said. "When you don't produce and there are high expectations on the club, individually, you're going to get some criticism. We all live in that world. There's more scrutiny in the world now."
Amid that scrutiny, someone has to pay for making poor decisions. The Cubs, entering Year No. 102 of an eternal rebuilding plan, should reboot a creaky, old system with a new boss.













Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
9-21-2009 @ 9:47PM
ongos4me said...
HEY JAY ...PART OF THE CUBS FIRE IS BURNING OUT...LIKE HAVE LOU BE A LITTLE MORE CALM....THATS NOT THE LOU THE CUBS WANTED....WHAT KIND OF FUN IS THAT...LIKE WHAT KIND OF FUN WOULD YOU BE...IF YOU SAID STUFF THAT EVERYBODY WOULD LIKE TO HEAR....NO FUN AT ALL....JUST GET RID OF ANYBODY THAT IS NOT GOING TO HAVE ANY FIRE BURNING IN THEM....GREAT STORY...KEEP UP THE GREAT WRITING...
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9-21-2009 @ 10:10PM
janandrick84 said...
We had him in Cleveland and sorry but the man is wacked.
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9-21-2009 @ 11:07PM
jlewcrew said...
If I was the general manager of any organization (sports, business, whatever) the last thing I would do is bring on board another head case as the likes of Milton Bradley on a team full of head cases. I think the next move the Cubs should make is hiring a full time shrink to deal with the Cuckoos nest that is the Chicago Cubs. I have never seen a bigger bunch of babies and malcontents in any organization as the likes of the Chicago Cubs.
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9-21-2009 @ 11:10PM
htc6600 said...
I was visiting a friend in KC and saw Bradley play in a Royals/Ranger game. What a hopeless doofus. Where he gets the belief that everyone owes him their undying loyalty and efforts to create the perfect atmosphere while he is the center of the universe is beyond me. If there is one player in BB that should be blacklisted, I can't think of a more deserving candidate than Bradley.
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9-21-2009 @ 11:13PM
htc6600 said...
Don't the Cubs have a farm system developing home-grown talent? Why are they fishing for so many risky players rather than developing good ones? There doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to their player acquisitions and Bradley is a perfect example.
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9-22-2009 @ 1:19AM
Fatchef said...
FIRE HIM!
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9-22-2009 @ 2:42AM
jaaprice said...
If this guy Bradley brains were dynamite,he
would't have enough to blow his nose.He has
been a cancer and brought nothing but bad
times to every team he's been with !! Baseball,
and especially the Cubs are all the better with
him gone,He's also ugly as hell !!!
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9-22-2009 @ 5:19AM
cmsuiter said...
tell that henry is stupid and should be fired also not know how runs. Worst Carlos Zambrano had fight with some players and his audience is bad than bradley. Cubs paid carlos a lots than bradley.
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9-22-2009 @ 7:01AM
Lance said...
i think jay is right we got kevin gregg you sucks got rid of mark derosa,i know kerry wood is getting older but he didn't blow many saves last year at least kerry was a little intimadating to hitters gregg looks like he just throws fastballs right down the middle a good high school player could hit him i agree with you jay hendry finally screwed up this year there was nothing wrong with last years team if it ain't broke don't fix it bobby scales should have been brought up and left bradley alone in texas
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9-22-2009 @ 7:27AM
John Marshall said...
It is fairly obvious that a high percentage of AOL subscribers are functionally illiterate.
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9-22-2009 @ 8:04AM
T said...
“The time is right for a new front-office boss with fresh ideas to tackle the toughest job in baseball. Jon Daniels, the young Texas GM” you mean that young genius who signed Bradley and said he wished he could keep the ALL STAR but couldn’t match the Cubs offer?
“how about Theo Epstein, who might want a new challenge -- and an identity of his own -- after winning two World Series in Boston and having to share credit with his three bosses?” you mean Theo the EGO? Who essentially took credit for winning a world series with Dan Doquette’s team plus Kurt Schilling and Minus Nomar. Then in his infinite wisdom didn’t resign anyone in that deal? Then pouted when he didn’t get all the credit for world series win and QUIT. While the people left behind traded Hanley Ramirez MR untouchable to Theo, for Beckett and Mike Lowell setting up a second world series win that he takes credit for. Theo who from the day he got here alienated the greatest hitter of his generation and ran him out of town with his propaganda bullies at NESN on the payroll? Theo? Who signs a 5 year 16 million per contract for part time cant hit lefty’s player and permanent trainers room fixture Just Dreadfull Drew ? that Theo? trust me I could go on.
I know Jay you’re the only person who can call out the morons in Chicago. Who is Milton to horn in on your gig? And why shouldn’t he put up with that blow hard Lou. most overrated manager in MLB history AND LASTLY. WHO THE HELL IS MILTON BRADLEY TO NOT PUT UP WITH THOS DRUNKEN RACISTS IN THE BLEACHERS OF WRIGLEY ?
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9-22-2009 @ 9:38AM
dbementtex said...
I think that you guy's should confer with the
Pink Hat Guy in row 1 of every Cubs game that I have seen. He seems to really Know his stuff and is a true Cubs fan. He would be the perfect GM. I have his number if you need it. The Pink Hat Guy has been to more Cubs games than most people have spent days breathing.
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9-22-2009 @ 10:00AM
huskersmf said...
Jay, since all of your columns now are about Chicago or Chicago teams, why don't you go back to the Sun-Times instead of wasting space on AOL. I thought that you were supposed to be a national sports columnist, not a Chicago sports columnist who quit his job and now writes the same columns on AOL that he used to write in the Chicago papers.
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9-22-2009 @ 10:01AM
nickcherryl said...
I think Obama should make Bradley a Czar.
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9-22-2009 @ 11:16AM
Jim said...
As a Clevelander who has ALWAYS been a Cubs fan (so don't accuse me of jumping ship)and a fan who has seen Bradley's antics up close,should the Cubs really be surprised that the TO of baseball is back to being himself? The only thing that got me more mad than the Indians for trading DeRosa was the Cubs trading him to the Indians. A real great guy who shows up everyday and gives 100%. However this is not the only bad move Jackass Jim has made in the last 3 years. How about signing Fukudome? How about the big contract to Alfanso, I can't hit a slider,Soriano? How about the big contract to Carlos, I am a nutcase,Zambrano? It's quite obvious who has to go!!!! Bye, Bye Jimmy Boy!!
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9-22-2009 @ 11:19AM
firebowler257 said...
Teams that consistently underwhelm and fail always suffer from the same problem: Bad Management.
Considering the many different ways you can win a World Series in this sport, it's all the more astounding. Someone could win a World Series by taking the crown of a bad division and suddenly getting hot in the playoffs (Cardinals in 2006). You can have what basically amounts to a one-year wonder (White Sox in 2005). You can have horrible attendance and no money yet still win titles thanks to great scouting and the perfect mix of players (Marlins in 1997 and 2003). Or you can meet expectations in a big market while shrugging off the swarming media (Yankees, Phillies).
But all these teams have one thing in common: Chemistry. It's more important in baseball than any other sport because there are 162 games. Hendry's ignoring of this basic fact should be enough to get him run out of town. You can't win on talent alone.
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9-22-2009 @ 11:24AM
Ted said...
Jay-
Thanks for finally saying what needs to be said. With new ownership coming in now is the perfect time to clean house and start over fresh much like the then lovable loser Red Sox did back in 2000. Hendry has made his whole career on catching fire with the Ramirez/Lofton trade back in 2003, and since has let every "can't miss prospect" come up through the organization and fail instead of trading when they had the most value.
I completely agree with it being time to get rid of Hendry, Bradley and a lot of others. However I will say this, having been a season ticket holder for 25 years now, the fans are insanely negative these days and was clearly evident during last year's playoffs when the boos came out in the first game...THE FIRST GAME. The "new" cub fans are the most fair weather fan base in the country and can't wait to boo their team instead of support them.
Either way, a great article and you are dead on, it's time for a change and has been since we hired Dusty Baker, a manager who had a notorious reputation for killing young arms out in San Francisco. So much so, that control of the pitchers was given entirely to Dave Righetti. So does hiring him when the franchise rested on Mark Prior and Kerry Wood's arms?
Long overdue for a fresh start.
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9-22-2009 @ 11:37AM
Bernie Biagini said...
Yes, Bradley is (and was) a cancer to this and most of the teams he has been on. If firing Hendry is the arguing point Marrioti should have brought up the Kevin Gregg debacle and noted that keeping Kerry Wood was desirable. Yes, Wood has had a rough go of it in Cleveland but he is a guy who took an incentive laden contract to stay in Chicago, changed roles to that of a closer and PRODUCED. That should have been rewarded with a new contract AND Hendry should have approached Soriano and other highly paid vets about restructuring to make another run of it with largely the same team. I take issue with some of the writer's comments on other players. While I agree Soriano is overpaid he has produced in years past. Knocking Aramis Ramirez is just plain stupid, however. Look at his record as a Cub. I submit the Chicago media should look at getting rid of the self-indulgent Marrioti far before unloading the Cubs third baseman! The question now is can the bad moves be undone in a way that restores some semblance of a team to make a run while not burying the new ownership in debt to that point they are hamstrung. Can Hendry do that? I have my doubts that he or any GM has that ability given the current hand dealt by Hendry.
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9-22-2009 @ 11:38AM
wrsle said...
Someone out there will have an answer for this ... Is it possible to just send him to the minors for the 2010 season. Pay him and leave him there.. If he quits, would they still have to pay him?
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9-22-2009 @ 12:28PM
ptcruisindad said...
The Cubs
should hire Dan Evans as their G.M. , He was a pretty fair G.M. when he was with the Dodgers, considering, he wad pretty much handcuffed those last couple of years there,towards the end or his tenure. it was Evans,not Depodesta, that assembled that '04 division champ team ! Let Bradley GO !!! he's a cancer in the club house,the Dodgers were a much better club with out him,I klnd of winced when the Cubs Signed him!
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