On Oct 26, 1:43 am, "A" <
a...@att.net> wrote:
> x-no-archive: yes
>
>
http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/sports/stories.nsf/cardinals/story/2...
> 'St. Louis Post-Dispatch'
>
> "La Russa's back - with McGwire"
> by Joe Strauss
>
> 10/26/2009
>
> Tony La Russa this morning will announce his return as Cardinals manager
> along with the surprise addition of Mark McGwire, the former home run king,
> who will end an eight-year, self-imposed exile from the game to become the
> team's hitting coach.
>
> La Russa, 65, has agreed to come back for at least a 15th season as the
> team's skipper after taking two weeks to weigh the factors that contributed
> to the Cardinals' abrupt, offensively challenged exit from the postseason in
> a three-game Division Series sweep by the Los Angeles Dodgers. One of those
> factors apparently led to Friday's move to sever ties with hitting coach Hal
> McRae and to install McGwire as his successor.
>
> General manager John Mozeliak declined to comment Sunday, and La Russa did
> not return several messages. However, team sources indicated that Chairman
> Bill DeWitt Jr. would today confirm a two-year deal with La Russa, who
> arrived in St. Louis in time to attend Sunday night's Bruce Springsteen
> concert at Scottrade Center.
>
> La Russa acknowledged Saturday being close to a decision while a club source
> said the club would announce early this week his intention to return.
>
> The deal is for two years and includes a raise over his previous two-year,
> $8.5 million deal. A modest bump would allow La Russa to supplant the
> Dodgers' Joe Torre as the game's highest-paid manager.
>
> La Russa's verdict may be dwarfed by a move to pull McGwire from his
> relative isolation from the game.
>
> McGwire became a national hero when he eclipsed Roger Maris' single-season
> home run record by mashing 70 during the summer of '98. He abruptly retired
> after the 2001 season and maintained an increasingly lower profile as his
> ties to performance-enhancing drugs were detailed in a 2005 book by former
> Oakland A's teammate Jose Canseco. McGwire then offered uncomfortable,
> incomplete testimony on March 17, 2005, before a congressional subcommittee.
>
> Following an appearance at old Busch Stadium in 2006, McGwire insisted he
> would not discuss the topic again.
>
> During the interim, however, McGwire has made himself available to a select
> number of major-league hitters near his Orange County, Calif., home. His
> tutorials have drawn raves from those who have attended, including Cardinals
> second baseman Skip Schumaker and former Cardinals outfielder Chris Duncan.
>
> At La Russa's urging, the club repeatedly invited McGwire to spring training
> as a guest instructor. He came closest to accepting in 2007 before
> reconsidering due to a family matter.
>
> The Cardinals consider McGwire's hiring sensitive enough that they ordered
> team employees not to discuss it. Mozeliak refused to confirm the move
> Sunday. McGwire is not expected to attend today's press conference.
>
> As recently as the day following his team's elimination from the postseason,
> La Russa insisted he did not foresee changes to his coaching staff should he
> decide to return. He also gave McRae a vote of confidence as the club
> struggled through a low-scoring May.
>
> The Cardinals led the National League in batting while ranking fourth in
> runs scored in 2008 before dropping to fifth in hitting and sixth in runs
> this year.
>
> La Russa became increasingly hands-on with his hitters as the season wound
> down. However, his intervention did little to prevent the club from
> finishing a 91-71 regular season in an offensive funk before scoring six
> runs during its ill-fated Division Series, which included a 4-for-30
> performance with runners in scoring position.
>
> Mozeliak was scheduled to meet in New York this afternoon with free agent
> Cuban left-hander Aroldis Chapman but canceled to return to St. Louis in
> time for this morning's announcement. The Cardinals have likewise virtually
> abandoned hopes of signing Chapman, believed to be seeking a financial
> package worth at least $40 million.
>
> The club has not disclosed the future of its coaching staff beyond pitching
> coach Dave Duncan and McGwire.
>
> Duncan enjoys a mutual option with the club for next season and indicated
> earlier this month he would likely return if La Russa did likewise. The
> remainder of the staff was on one-year deals. All except McRae are likely to
> return pending completion of negotiations.
>
> McRae served for five years, the longest of any of La Russa's five hitting
> coaches with the Cardinals.
Well well, the fraud comes out of hiding.