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Cubs fire Rick Renteria to make way for new manager Joe Maddon

Rick Renteria and Joe Maddon (Getty)
Rick Renteria and Joe Maddon (Getty)

 

Amid speculation that the Chicago Cubs already have agreed to bring Joe Maddon aboard as their new manager, the team announced Friday afternoon it has fired Rick Renteria from the position he held for one season. Cubs team president Theo Epstein even said in a statement that Renteria "deserved" to stay on as manager — he was under contract for 2015 and 2016 — but that's not what is happening.

UPDATE: The Cubs also announced that Maddon will be introduced at a press conference Monday at the Cubby Bear, a pub across the street from Wrigley Field, which is undergoing a renovation. He's the 54th manager in Cubs history, and the fourth since 2011.

The Cubs went 73-89 in Renteria's first season, using mostly a roster of untested young players and medicore veterans.

 

 

Renteria has, in fact, declined the offer.

Maddon announced Oct. 24 he was exercising an option in his contract that allowed him to leave the Tampa Bay Rays. Earlier in the month, Andrew Friedman announced he was leaving the Rays for the Los Angeles Dodgers in order to run their baseball operations, which triggered Maddon's opt-out clause after nine seasons in Tampa Bay.

Not long before Game 7 of the World Series, reporter Jon Heyman of CBS Sports wrote that the Cubs had hired Maddon  — though the team denied a deal was finalized. Maddon would be the Cubs' third manager in as many seasons, and fourth since 2011. Mike Quade and Dale Sveum also have been fired by the Epstein regime.

Yahoo Sports' Tim Brown wrote that the Cubs' pursuit of Maddon was cold with Renteria still in good standing, but it's the cost of doing business sometimes if you want to win — which the Cubs haven't done in more than 100 years.

Here is Epstein's full statement on the changes:

(AP)
(AP)

 

Today we made the difficult decision to replace Rick Renteria as manager of the Chicago Cubs. On behalf of Tom Ricketts and Jed Hoyer, I thank Rick for his dedication and commitment, and for making the Cubs a better organization.

Rick's sterling reputation should only be enhanced by his season as Cubs manager. We challenged Rick to create an environment in which our young players could develop and thrive at the big league level, and he succeeded. Working with the youngest team in the league and an imperfect roster, Rick had the club playing hard and improving throughout the season. His passion, character, optimism and work ethic showed up every single day.

Rick deserved to come back for another season as Cubs manager, and we said as much when we announced that he would be returning in 2015. We met with Rick two weeks ago for a long end-of-season evaluation and discussed plans for next season. We praised Rick to the media and to our season ticket holders. These actions were made in good faith.

(AP)
(AP)

 

Last Thursday, we learned that Joe Maddon —  who may be as well suited as anyone in the industry to manage the challenges that lie ahead of us — had become a free agent. We confirmed the news with Major League Baseball, and it became public knowledge the next day. We saw it as a unique opportunity and faced a clear dilemma: be loyal to Rick or be loyal to the organization. In this business of trying to win a world championship for the first time in 107 years, the organization has priority over any one individual. We decided to pursue Joe.

While there was no clear playbook for how to handle this type of situation, we knew we had to be transparent with Rick before engaging with Joe. Jed flew to San Diego last Friday and told Rick in person of our intention to talk to Joe about the managerial job. Subsequently, Jed and I provided updates to Rick via telephone and today informed him that we will indeed make a change.

We offered Rick a choice of other positions with the Cubs, but he is of course free to leave the organization and pursue opportunities elsewhere. Armed with the experience of a successful season and all the qualities that made him our choice a year ago, Rick will no doubt make an excellent major league manager when given his next chance.

Rick often said he was the beneficiary of the hard work of others who came before him. Now, in the young players he helped, we reap the benefits of his hard work as we move forward. He deserved better and we wish him nothing but the best.

We have clung to two important ideals during our three years in Chicago. The first is to always be loyal to our mission of building the Cubs into a championship organization that can sustain success. The second is to be transparent with our fans. As painful as the last week was at times, we believe we stayed true to these two ideals in handling a sensitive situation. To our fans: we hope you understand, and we appreciate your continued support of the Cubs.

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David Brown is an editor for Big League Stew on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at rdbrown@yahoo-inc.com and follow him on Twitter!

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