Tuesday 3 November 2015

Nationals hire Dusty Baker as new manager

The Washington Nationals, in a stunning reversal, have hired Dusty Baker to be their sixth manager, signing him to a two-year contract with incentives, after ending negotiations with Bud Black.

  Baker, who interviewed twice for the Nationals opening, was informed last week that he did not get the job.
The job was offered to Black on Wednesday by Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo, which he accepted, and negotiations began on Thursday. They never came close to reaching a deal.
The Nationals, according to a person with knowledge of the talks, originally offered Black a one-year deal for $1.6 million, and refused to guarantee more than two years. Black informed the Nationals’ ownership several days ago that he couldn’t accept a deal, which is considerably lower than he anticipated.
By contrast, Don Mattingly, who has less experience, just received a four-year deal for about $10 million from the Miami Marlins.
Matt Williams, who was fired by the Washington Nationals at the end of last season, received a three-year deal, and still will be paid $1 million in 2016.
Baker earned $4 million in the final year of his contract when he was fired in 2013 by the Cincinnati Reds. Yet, throughout most of his managerial career, Baker worked on two-year deals.
The hiring of Baker, 66, a three-time National League manager of the year winner who led three different teams to the postseason, also means Major League Baseball will again have at least one African-American manager, a streak that stretches to 1987.
Baker has a 1,671-1,504 career record in 20 seasons as a manger, having spent time with the Giants (1993-2002), Cubs (2003-2006) and Reds (2008-2013).

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