Francona was an extremely patient manager and his patience and nerves of steel rewarded us with 2 rings. He generally avoided panic moves and tended to push back against a GM who wanted to make them, preferring to trust his players to work things out on the field. That bore fruit as often as not, I'll give you the example of Dustin Pedroia who started out very VERY cold before putting on the laser show in his rookie season. The panic move would have been to swap roles and ride Alex Cora, who was super hot at the time, and sit Pedey for a few weeks until Cora cooled down. Instead, Cora did get some extra playing time because he was murdering the baseball, but Pedroia was never out of the lineup for multiple days in a row.
It's one of the things I was actually very pleased with about Tito, his ability to judge how much adjustment is necessary and how much is overadjustment. A lot of our more panicky fans considered him to be asleep at the switch at times, and the "Francoma" nickname stuck, but that's because there's times when the smartest move is to make no move.
What I'm worried about right now, is that there are a few situations where the smartest move is no move right now, and leadership's already getting twitchy. I'll give the example of Rusney castillo in left field which has not had the time to gel or give any positive answer about whether it will or will not work longterm, and they're already talking about a Young-Holt platoon. It's way too early for that. Some things do need to be tried under live fire before you know whether they will or will not work -- Castillo in left being one of them. it's one thing to light a fire under a rookie and another to leave them in perennial doubt whether they'll be on the lineup card tomorrow. The latter just stresses them out for no good reason, especially while they're still figuring it out, and make no mistake, castillo is still figuring it out.
Give Castillo a good 2-3 week experiment this April, before rushing to judgment -- do have a plan on hand for what you're going to do if it fails but don't be a prat and make it public and add pressure to a guy who's still learning on the job how to play at the big league level..