Thursday, October 2, 2008

Who's the boss?

From Ken Davidoff:
But in their quest to regain the mantle as baseball's elite team, they still face a quandary that shows no sign of going away:

They're muddled at the top, above Cashman.

From speaking to employees up and down the organizational food chain, you still get the sense that no one knows who's truly in charge.

Whereas George Steinbrenner ruled all in his prime, obsessing over both $189-million agreements with Derek Jeter and uncollected garbage on the practice field in Tampa, the organization lacks clarity today. The power flows, very unevenly, through these four outlets:

1. Hal Steinbrenner. He has worked hard in the last year to establish a relationship with Cashman and the baseball people, commuting to Yankee Stadium from his Tampa home nearly every week. But he is human, unlike his dad, in that he can't get his tentacles over everything.

2. Hank Steinbrenner. The "advisory-board" comments - there will be no advisory board, Cashman confirmed yesterday - provide further proof that Hank is a highly entertaining fraud. As long as he's got his last name, however, Hank won't be ignored altogether.

3. Felix Lopez. The husband of George Steinbrenner's younger daughter Jessica, Lopez has exploited Hal's and Hank's limits to gain a surprising amount of power over the Tampa-based operations. Lopez is known as such a bully and a boor that he makes Hank Steinbrenner look like a gentleman and a scholar, in comparison.

4. Randy Levine. The head of everything in New York, including the Yankees' role in YES and the new Yankee Stadium, team president Levine used to be predictable in that he would carry out George Steinbrenner's wishes. Now, with The Boss largely resting in the background, Levine sits as more of a wild card.

From this, you have people wondering who really runs things. It's a question that, in reality, probably will fade only if, or when, the Steinbrenner family sells the team.
From everything I've read and heard, Hal has starting to become the main man, and has been handling most of the everyday stuff. I've also heard that they're trying to get Hank to shut up and fade a bit into the background. Apparently the rest of the organization is getting as sick of his comments as some of the fans.

The Yankees can not get to where they need to be if five people are trying to runs things. It's just not going to work, it's part of the problem that's led them to where they are right now.

However, I don't believe Cashman would have come back for three years if there wasn't some guarantee that he had total control. It's the only reason he came back in 2005, so why would he back off those demands now?

3 Comments:

Mike B. said...

I hope Hal exerts control over The Dweeb, but you never know. BC knows many of the fans wanted him out, so perhaps he was willing to give up a bit of control so that he could get one more contract extension. I for one think it might be a long three years.

Mike
Truly Hoping I'm Wrong

Greg Cohen said...

Supposedly Hal and Cashman see eye-to-eye on a lot of things.

Mike B. said...

OK, I didn't know this. Hmmm....

Mike