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Report: D'backs to Fire Manager Melvin

Bob MelvinBob Melvin will not be manager of the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday, according to a report in the Arizona Republic. Melvin has already been fired, a source who spoke on the condition of anonymity told the Associated Press.

A.J. Hinch, a catcher who played seven years in the majors, will replace Melvin, according to a report by SI.com.

Arizona is 12-17 after Thursday's 10-inning loss at San Diego and in fourth place in the NL West. The Diamondbacks' core of young talent has not progressed as some had expected after the team reached the 2007 NLCS under Melvin. He was NL Manager of the Year for that season.

Kalas Leaves 'Perfection' in Wake

Harry KalasWASHINGTON -- Ruben Amaro Jr. can hardly remember listening to anyone but Harry Kalas call a Phillies game. Neither can Pennsylvania native and Phillies starting pitcher Jamie Moyer. And at 46, he's the oldest active player in the major leagues.

That tells the story of Kalas' connection to Philadelphia in years alone.

It only superficially explains how he became a Philadelphia institution on par with cheesesteaks, the Liberty Bell and sports fans so passionate that they'd boo Santa Claus.

"He's been a part of my life since I was born," Amaro, the Phillies' general manager, said.

Phillies Vote Against Change


FanHouse continues its 2009 MLB Preview with a look at the Philadelphia Phillies.

The City of Brotherly Love's long championship drought came to an end when Brad Lidge struck out Eric Hinske in Game 5 of the World Series last October. The city exploded in appreciation of a team that's a blueprint for success in the modern game, with homegrown stars studding the lineup and top of the rotation, and a handful of savvy acquisitions, like Lidge, sprinkled around to fill holes.

Ruben Amaro is the New GM of the Phillies, Already Has Big Hole to Fill

It wasn't a secret that Pat Gillick was going to step down as Phillies general manager after this season which meant the team had plenty of time to figure out his successor. The only problem was they had two top-notch candidates in house as replacements. Assistant general managers Ruben Amaro and Mike Arbuckle both played a big role in building the world champions but one was going to be left holding the bag.

It wound up being Arbuckle. Amaro was named the team's new GM at a press conference today. Amaro played for the Phillies and served as Gillick's public face on many occassions the last couple of years. He was widely seen as the former GM's protege. Arbuckle handled scouting and player development and, upon learning he wouldn't get the top job, informed the team that he'd be leaving for other opportunities.

It's a big loss. The Phillies lean heavily on players that Arbuckle brought into the organization. Six of the nine players who started Game 5, in fact, were drafted under Arbuckle and the guy who closed the game was acquired in exchange for three players Arbuckle selected. That's a big loss as will be the other guys Arbuckle poaches when he lands another job.

Transition Ahead for World Champion Phils

Last year, the Red Sox celebrated their championship by re-signing World Series MVP Mike Lowell and bringing back several other role players. Their only major addition from outside the organization was bench bat Sean Casey. Needless to say, that kind of stability in the era of free agency has become increasingly rare, and the Phillies won't be an exception.

Of course, the Phillies aren't exactly the 1997 Marlins either. They have a strong young core intact. Cole Hamels, Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins, Ryan Howard and Brad Lidge are all under contract or the club's control for the near future. That five-player spine should be enough to make Philadelphia one of the favorites in the National League next season.

But the status of some of the second-tier players who were integral in the championship run is up in the air heading into the winter. Pat Burrell is at the top of that list. The left fielder is a woeful defender and will never hit for average, but his patience and power will be sorely missed if he signs somewhere else.

Jamie Moyer is also a free agent. He could pitch until he's 50. He could walk off into the sunset. Either way, he made 33 starts for the Phillies during the regular season and three more in the postseason. That too will not be easy to replace.

Playoff Pulse: Bask in the Glow, Philly

In the Playoff Pulse series, our MLB editor takes on a hot October topic.

Things move fast in the Internet Age. That's the nature of a 24-hour news cycle or maybe just the short attention span of Americans. Either way, before you know it we're going to be talking about CC Sabathia and Mark Teixeira (And Jake Peavy and Manny Ramirez and maybe even Prince Fielder).

So let's take the chance, while we still can, to pay tribute to the 2008 champions. With a cheesesteak in one hand and a Yuengling in the other, here's to you Philadelphia.

- Here's to the Phillies fans, first and foremost. You're not always the easiest folks to understand. You've booed just about everyone including many of your own players. Even among East Coast baseball fans you can seem like a cynical, sour bunch. But your passion and loyalty is undeniable.

In frigid temperatures and pouring rain on Monday night, Citizens Bank Park was packed to the hilt. In more than 100 years of existence, you've been rewarded for your devotion with a title only twice. It hardly seems like enough.

- Here's to Cole Hamels, who at just 24 has established himself as one of the best pitchers in baseball, and just maybe its greatest changeup artist.

Until his magical October run, Hamels wasn't widely recognized by casual fans for his dominance. He wasn't even an All-Star this year. Hope you enjoyed the relative anonymity while it lasted, Cole.

The Phillies Are in the Series Because Jose Reyes Likes to Dance

Well, the dancing and celebrations that the Mets embrace is a mere part of it. But Phillies GM Pat Gillick so much as admitted, although somewhat jokingly, that part of the reason that the Phils are in the World Series is that they, and the rest of the NL East, hate the Mets.
"If you want to know the best thing we had going for us this year, it was the fact that all the other teams in our division hated the Mets' guts. It started with Atlanta and all the hostility they had with the Mets through the years. Then Fredi Gonzalez left Bobby Cox to manage the Marlins and he didn't forget everything that went on between the Braves and Mets. Look what Florida did for us the past two years (beating the Mets two out of the three in each of the last series of the season to prevent them from making the postseason)! Washington doesn't like them very much either, and all those teams seemed to really get up for the Mets."
The lesson here: Take your hatred of the Mets and channel it into something positive like the rest of the NL East has. Heck, right now I'm sure a lot of Met fans hate their team right now ... or at least their bullpen. If there was a way that Met fans can channel their hate into doing positive things, who knows what can be accomplished. Better marriages, better jobs, better all around lives. For example, maybe if the people in charge of Wall Street hated the Mets a little more, the stock market wouldn't be in such disarray.

There's a Reason Seattle Hasn't Hired a New General Manager

So the Seattle Mariners fired general manager Bill Bavasi back in June, yet they still haven't made any ground in figuring out who their next general manager is going to be. They've interviewed four candidates for the job, including Kim Ng who would be the first female general manager in baseball history. Aside from Ng, they've also talked to Arizona's Jerry DiPoto, Toronto's Tony LaCava, and Milwaukee's Jack Zduriencik.

Now there was some speculation that the Mariners would announce their choice today, but at the moment it doesn't look like that's going to happen, which could be a problem once the World Series starts tomorrow night. MLB isn't too fond of major announcements during the World Series.

Of course, if the Mariners want to they can ask Bud Selig for a waiver to allow them to dare interrupt the World Series, and though team President Chuck Armstrong says he isn't sure whether or not he's going to ask, I am. He's not, and the Mariners won't have their general manager before the World Series is over anyway.

The reason for this is because they're waiting for Pat Gillick. Gillick is a former Mariners GM, and he's currently the Phillies general manager. He has made it clear, though, that he'd like to retire at the end of the year. I have no doubt that Seattle's plan is to wait out the Series and then gauge Gillick's interest in returning to Seattle as head of baseball operations, and then having him choose the new general manager.

Adam Eaton: Not Pat Gillick's Favorite Mistake

Adam Eaton, he of the three year $24.5 million contract, was recently made a September callup after being sent to the minor leagues in late July. If that didn't make it painfully obvious that maybe that Eaton contract was a mistake, then I don't know what will.

Oh, maybe this will:
"You go back and you look at it, and you kind of evaluate how you may have screwed up," Gillick said of signing Eaton to a three-year, $24.5 million free-agent contract before the 2007 season. "I don't think Adam is happy with what has gone on. Certainly, we thought he'd pitch better. But you kind of have to forget about it and move on."
I'm sure a lot of Phillie fans have already gone back and evaluated how Pat Gillick may have screwed up, and would have gladly helped him come to this realization much earlier.

Moving on while Eaton has another year to go on that contract might be tough, but at least I give Gillick credit for not waiting until Eaton was out the door to admit it might have been a mistake. Besides, signing him hasn't really hurt on the field, as the Phillies were the division champs last season ... and you can't blame Eaton for the playoffs, he didn't even pitch.

Arm bash: Phillies Nation

Who Won and Lost During Trading Season?

Take a deep breath, baseball fans. The dust has settled after another trading deadline, and what a deadline it was. Three future Hall of Famers were moved. So was a reigning Cy Young winner and two former All-Stars. And we haven't talked about Rich Harden yet. Undoubtedly, 2008 was the most entertaining trading season in recent memory for baseball fans.


Truth be told, it will take years before we know who helped themselves or hurt themselves at the 2008 trade deadline. That's just the way it is when boom-or-bust prospects are involved. But here's an educated (and roughly ordered) guess anyway at which teams won and which teams lost now that the July 31 deadline has come and gone.

Winners

Angels: With a double-digit lead in the AL West, the Angels didn't need to do anything to get to October. They went out and got slugging first baseman Mark Teixeira anyway, and it's nothing short of a coup. For all the praise heaped upon Mike Scioscia's throwback run-at-all costs strategy, it hasn't done much for Los Angeles in the postseason. The Halos have scored 17 runs in their last eight postseason games dating back to 2005, and they don't have single regular slugging over .500 this year. They needed a bat to go all the way in October, and that's just what they got in Teixeira.

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