I am sure that we are going to credit Cherington for having constructed this WS Championship team and well we should. But if the view from Management including Cherington was that he had constructed a team that had a legitimate shot to end up here then we would not have heard the guy with the most marketing intent of the group, Larry Lucchino calling it a bridge year. I very much expect that priority one was to clean out the poison in that clubhouse and return to respectability. In doing so, I would be willing to bet they thought they might end up with an outside chance to get here. But that is not what this team did.
This team was the best team in baseball. It did not squeak into the post season and get hot at the right time as we often discuss here. They were the best team this season and they went out and beat the other best teams of the 2013 season. No way Cherington thought he was constructing that from scratch in one year and no way anybody else thought so either.
I just don't want the players to get lost in any BC, Boy Genius stuff we might consider here. The players did this....not Cherington...not Farrell and the rest of the coaches though Cherington, Farrell and the Coaches did a terrific job.
We caught lightning in a bottle in the sense that we ended up with a very high percentage of the total team in that clubhouse that were veterans that had something to prove to themselves and to everybody else and we had the incredibly unusual experience to have had all of those questions answered in the affirmative with few exceptions.
Consider the following:
-Jon Lester, not only had Jon at the time anticipated not accepted the role of rotation leader, he actually went a bit backwards, until this year. He had even gotten to the point where he was making noise about not understanding what more he could do, what other level there was for him to seek. Here is the correct answer Jon. This is what we expected of you. This is what we wanted you to expect of yourself. Questions answered.
-John Lackey, Could he and had he come all the way back from personal problems, from health problems, from TJ? Could he resist the temptation to go ballistic on the mound when a teammate made an error? Questions answered
-Buch, started the 2013 season with lingering questions about his durability and at the end of 2013, those questions still linger. However, in those four innings in game 4, Buch clearly learned things that he did not even know about himself. Did he have what it takes to go out there with a quarter of an arm in the high intensity environment of the WS and battle through four or five innings? If you looked at Buch in the dugout when he came off the mound, it was plainly obvious that he did not know when he took the mound that night what to expect of himself. He was IMO in fact, close to tears in that dugout, very close to being overwhelmed by the emotions of the moment, finally content that he had proved something to himself, never mind anybody else. At that moment I don't think he gave a crap about anybody but himself and his teammates. Question answered
-Felix, Could Felix take the next step forward in his young career, having shown up for ST out of shape and ill prepared to start the 2013 campaign? Questions answered
-Victorino, Was he now the player of the 2012 campaign or was 2012 the anomaly in what has been otherwise a very good career. Questions answered
-Napoli, Could he play more games in this regular season than he had played in years? Could he be a full time 1st baseman? Would his hip hold up? Questions answered
-Drew, Would he or could he get back to the player he was before his ankle shattered? Questions answered
-Gomes, Was he the everyday LFer? Was he the platoon LFer? What the hell was he? Questions answered
-Nava, Was he truly a ML player? Questions answered
-Ells, What was Ells? Is he a great lead off hitter? Is he a lead off hitter with exceptional power? Has he enough power to be considered moving out of the 1 hole to something like a 3 hole? We and he and his agent now know what he is. Questions answered.
That is ten of the twenty-five guys that broke camp that had major major questions mainly for themselves that answered them for the most part in the affirmative.
Even when the question did not receive the answer we wanted, it worked out. Was Bailey durable enough to be the closer for a full season...No. Was Hanrahan good enough to come over to the AL East and Close....No. But the answers we did not want to those questions yielded..... Koji.
But it is even better than that because in reality. With the exception of Ells who took the early season before he climbed aboard, every member of this team put his personal goals and aspirations on the shelf and those that had real fundamental questions about themselves found their answers within a team concept that once they found, they never abandoned. They were monumentally consistent in their approach to playing games which in large part is why they never suffered a major losing streak.
Not only do I what the players to get the bulk of the credit here because IMO they deserve it, I don't want BC to be put in some position of being another Boy Genius expected to pull off something he was incapable of doing in the first place. He has done a terrific job. We are lucky to have him. But lets not make more of the GM's role than it was just like we should not make more of the Manager's role than what it was. Farrell's best quality is an ability to make the players responsible for themselves while demanding and gaining their respect, that and impeccable game preparation are his true strengths as a Manager.
The players did this....your Boston Red Sox did this behind the veteran leadership of Pedey and Popi.