Division rival's changes to coaching staff highlight Pirates' lack of urgency
The back-to-back NL Central champs are still trying to get better, and the Pirates look like they're trying to get worse.
In a 2024 season in which the National League Central Division was anyone's to win, the Milwaukee Brewers were the only team to rise to the occasion. With all due respect to the Brewers, they clinched the division with far more ease than they should have, given their current roster, racking up 93 wins on the season and earning a spot in the NL Wild Card Series (which they promptly lost to the New York Mets).
But even a 93-win season and an NL Central title weren't enough to leave the Brewers feeling content after the 2024 campaign, prompting them to fire hitting coach Ozzie Timmons and promote Al LeBeouf and Eric Theisen from within.
Mind you, this coaching change comes after a 2024 campaign in which the Brewers' offense ranked No. 6 in the league in terms of run production, carried by a breakout season from rookie slugger Jackson Chourio, as well as others in the Milwaukee lineup. The Brewers were the best in their division and among the best in the league, and yet they still believe they can be better; so, they made some personnel changes.
Then, at the bottom of the NL Central, we have the Pittsburgh Pirates, who finished at the bottom of the division standings and at No. 24 overall in total run production. Sure, they fired hitting coach Andy Haines after the season, but they gave him far too long of a leash in the first place, and the damage had already been done.
Brewers' changes to coaching staff highlight Pirates' lack of urgency
These personnel changes by the Brewers, even after a 2024 season that was, by all accounts, a success are a sign of a team that actually cares about winning. The fact that Milwaukee spent roughly $30 million more on team payroll than the Pirates did is also evidence to that effect.
And yet, after five failed seasons, Pittsburgh general manager Ben Cherington and field manager Derek Shelton somehow still have jobs as owner Bob Nutting sits idly by, content with perennial mediocrity. The Haines firing should have happened a long time ago, and for it to happen now simply isn't enough.
In case you're not already riled up about the ineptitude of the Pirates' leadership group, we saved the best part for last. Matt Arnold, the Brewers' senior vice president and general manager who is calling the shots in Milwaukee and actively trying to improve the club's playoff chances year over year, was a finalist for the job Cherington now holds in Pittsburgh. Of course.
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