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Andrew Friedman Cost Me Many Friends

About ten years ago, when Andrew Friedman was hired by the Los Angeles Dodgers, I was ecstatic, but most Dodger fans were not! In fact, not only were most fans not happy, but they were flat-out opposed to Andrew Friedman and blasted and ridiculed him at every opportunity they…

By Mark Timmons2 min read9 comments

About ten years ago, when Andrew Friedman was hired by the Los Angeles Dodgers, I was ecstatic, but most Dodger fans were not! In fact, not only were most fans not happy, but they were flat-out opposed to Andrew Friedman and blasted and ridiculed him at every opportunity they had. Now, wait just a minute… I want to tell you why I was so excited:

In 2003, Friedman met Stuart Sternberg, the new owner of the Tampa Bay Rays. They realized they had similar ideas about the game and wanted to work together.

From 2004 to 2005, Friedman served as the director of baseball development for the Rays. He was promoted to the position of executive vice president of baseball operations and general manager after the 2005 season, at the age of 28, replacing the club’s first general manager, Chuck LaMar, who was fired following the club’s eighth losing season in its eight years of existence.

Friedman gradually rebuilt the team. It ultimately paid off in 2008 when the Rays made the postseason for the first time in franchise history, and advanced all the way to the World Series. For his efforts, he was named as Baseball Executive of the Year by The Sporting News. They also made the playoffs in 2010, 2011 and 2013 under his tenure.

If he could do that with a payroll under $79 Million, I thought he would be a shoo-in for the Dodgers. Unfortunately, Dodger fans revolted, and much of that was against me. If you know anything about me, it’s that I live by the Mantra of the Marines: “No better friend, no worse enemy.” Translation: I do not play well with others! Attack me… I will be right back at you! So, that is what happened. I turned over this website, and they migrated to another one that tolerates morons. That’s my weakness: I do not play well with morons.

Anyway, to put it bluntly: These morons are elsewhere. A few (very few) came back, but most were just too stupid! Shut up already! We have a new bunch of commenters, and most do not wear Depends and have Dementia!

Long story short, it turns out that I was right, and the morons were wrong. Ten years later, that’s why we have many new commenters, and the others are at another site. All I have to say is “Sorry if I offended you… but fuck you if I did!”

Discussion (9)

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  1. BumsrapMarch 13, 2025

    I wonder how Friedman will weave Zaiti back into the team.

    The GM i didn’t like from the getgo was Paul DePodesta

  2. IlliniDodgerMarch 13, 2025

    As Mark likes to say, AF has been playing chess while the rest of us are playing checkers!

  3. ChicagoDodgerMarch 13, 2025

    When I first read Moneyball, my main takeaway was that this was a great strategy for “all” teams, not just small market teams. I have never thought it a good idea to waste money, no matter how much you have.

    So I initially lamented the Cubs getting Theo and not the Dodgers. But when they got Friedman I was ecstatic. And I’m still waiting for a move he makes that I don’t see the wisdom in or don’t agree with.

    The Dodgers are in great hands with Andrew running the show, and Shohei saw that in his contract demands as well making sure Friedman never leaves the Dodgers while he is playing.

    Every facet of the team is running at the top right now, and Andrew is a huge reason for that. He is no doubt, at least in my book, at the top of the game and he deserves all the acclaim he has received.

  4. Old Bear 48March 13, 2025

    I was among those who were very skeptical about AF. I even went as far as calling him FRAUDMAN. I just thought he made so many signings of fringe players. Then he traded Kemp for Grandal, and I was livid. At the time I thought that trade ranked right up there with Martinez to the Expos, and Piazza being dealt to Miami for spare parts. I was not as harsh as some on Colletti because to me, Ned was operating with his hands tied behind his back. He also made a couple of huge mistakes signing Jason Schmidt and Andruw Jones. But AF’s first free agent signings were nothing to write home about. The Kemp trade came after he traded the fastest player on the team to the Marlins.

    I really could not understand the Gordon to Miami deal. But as a fan, I am not supposed to understand why a trade is made. And then he traded one of the players he received for Howie Kendrick. I at that point just did not see how he was making the team better. All this of course happened after they had won the division but then been knocked out of the playoffs in the first round.

    I was very skeptical all during that first season he was at the helm. The team won the division again but again were beaten in the first round. To me, that was not progress. To be very honest, it took several years for me to finally see what he was doing. The team kept winning, and he kept making moves. It seems like he never stands pat. Now with the success of an unprecedented nature over his tenure as President of Baseball Operations, I see that it is wiser to watch the master, than to consistently second-guess him. AF knows what he is doing. Ownership has allowed him to build a baseball juggernaut. One that is constantly morphing.

  5. DanoMarch 13, 2025

    I get the feeling that the 13th position player will be an outfielder. If it’s Bote that will take away Tommy’s versatility. And leave us only Kike and CT3 as viable outfield help. I know spring numbers are worthless and so does Doc. He’ll pick either James or Andy. Outman is the better defender. But if they want to build up his trade value, stick him in OKC. So that leaves Andy Pages as the opening day CF. Ha ha now they’ll pick Bote.

    Book em

  6. Andrew Vincent ForteMarch 13, 2025

    SPRING BREAKOUT GAME TONIGHT 9PM ET DODGER PROSPECTS VS THE CUB PROSPECTS

    PITCHERS

    Jackson Ferris, LHP, No. 4 (MLB No. 70)

    Hyun-Seok Jang, RHP, No. 17

    Jose Rodriguez, RHP, No. 29

    Chris Campos, RHP, NR

    Carson Hobbs, RHP, NR

    Ronan Kopp, LHP, NR

    Kelvin Ramirez, RHP, NR

    Lucas Wepf, RHP, NR

    Reynaldo Yean, RHP, NR

    CATCHERS

    Carlos Rojas, C, NR

    Yeiner Fernandez, C, NR

    Nelson Quiroz, C, NR

    INFIELDERS

    Emil Morales, SS, No. 7

    Kellon Lindsey, SS, No. 8

    Joendry Vargas, SS, No. 12

    Chase Harlan, 3B, No. 20

    Logan Wagner, 1B/3B, No. 26

    Kyle Nevin, 3B, NR

    Nico Perez, SS, NR

    Joe Vetrano, 1B, NR

    OUTFIELDERS

    Josue De Paula, OF, No. 3 (MLB No. 40)

    Zyhir Hope, OF, No. 6 (MLB No. 74)

    Eduardo Quintero, OF, No. 9

    Kendall George, OF, No. 15

    Ching-Hsien Ko, OF, No. 16

    Mike Sirota, OF, No. 21

    Jaron Elkins, OF, No. 24

    MLB.TV, MLB.com, MLB App, Gameday

    MLB NETWORK DELAYED 10 PM ET

  7. Duke Not SniderMarch 13, 2025

    Got that, morons?

    Oh wait–all the morons are gone….even if I’m still here.

    Anyway, I wasn’t visiting LADT back then, but I mostly recall a sense of gratitude among fans when Friedman came aboard.

    Ned Coletti had been part of the horrible McCourt regime, and AF represented a fresh start. And before that we suffered other owners who pissed a lot of us off by trading Piazza.

    The Guggenheim group and AF have had quite a track record of success, and the Dodgers may now be the most admired franchise in all of pro sports.

  8. Andrew Vincent ForteMarch 13, 2025

    “In Andrew Friedman We Trust” With a first name like that, how bad could he be?

  9. BlutoMarch 13, 2025

    He’s been amazing, not enough fans appreciate his work or the work of the team.

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