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Bucs should hire Kendall; sad bye to Rollison

By Rob Burchianti rburchianti@heraldstandard.Com 5 min read
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The Pirates are coming off a 93-loss season that left them dead-last in the National League Central, their pitching staff is a wreck and they’re currently looking for a new manager after firing Clint Hurdle while controversially retaining GM Neal Huntington.

ItĢƵ a bleak situation that calls for a splash move by the front office. Something must be done to shake up the clubhouse and reinvigorate the fan base. Bringing in a little-known manager or recycling an older one isn’t going to cut it right now.

The move should be hiring Jason Kendall as the Pirates’ new manager.

Kendall recently made it known heĢƵ interested in the job and was seeking a meeting with Huntington. The former Pirates catcher, who never played on a winning team during his nine years in Pittsburgh, said he feels like he owes the organization something.

Kendall was the face of the franchise most his time with the Pirates and was known as a hard-nosed, no-nonsense player. He has no managerial experience but he was a special assignment coach with the Royals when they went to back-to-back World Series, losing to the Giants in 2014 before defeating the Mets in 2015.

Nowadays you don’t need necessarily need experience to step in and manage a big league team, and the Pirates’ all-time leader in games played by a catcher probably wouldn’t demand an exorbitant amount of money to take the job.

KendallĢƵ style of play made him popular with fans and itĢƵ a good bet he would be a manager that demanded 100-percent effort from his players, and absolutely mean it.

Kendall wasn’t known as the most pleasant guy in the clubhouse at times, especially in his latter days with the Bucs — much of that was due to the frustration of playing on a losing team — but it can be assumed heĢƵ matured past that phase, and he was always an intelligent, fundamentally sound ballplayer.

The Pirates could use someone stressing the basics. They also need someone to stir up the pot.

The job, taking into consideration the current state of the team, doesn’t look all that attractive, but Kendall wants to be here, he wants to manage this team.

He would add to the entertainment value of the Pirates as well.

Can’t you envision Kendall jumping out of the dugout to scream at an umpire, benching a star player for not hustling, holding a closed-door meeting to rouse up his team, or lashing out at reporters while defending his players?

The bottom line is he was — and still is — a fierce competitor and a smart baseball mind who could breath new life into the organization.

Truth be known, it’d be easier for Huntington to bring in Jeff Banister or maybe Joey Cora or some young mind off another coaching staff. Odds are thatĢƵ what he’ll do. ThatĢƵ the safe move.

But the feeling here is tabbing Kendall would be worth the risk. It’d be a lightning bolt this team needs.

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Back in February of 2016 I made arrangements for a Uniontown native named Jason Rollison to publish a monthly sports story for the ĢƵ. The first one ran in the Feb. 24 edition of the newspaper that year and soon after I received the following email from Jason:

“Wanted to say thank you very much for giving me the opportunity to contribute to the HS. LetĢƵ just say my mother was thrilled! I didn’t tell her it was happening and she is an avid sports reader, so that was a fun little surprise!”

I could relate. My mother still collects any paper that has my byline in it and when I talk to her she’ll brightly say, “I saw you had a story in todayĢƵ paper!”

RollisonĢƵ column has called “Bucs by Numbers” and was an analytical look at statistics concerning the Pirates and how to interpret them.

Recently I was saddened to hear the news that Jason passed away on Sept. 23 after a brief but heroic battle with cancer.

Baseball was his passion and he was a sports blogger and writer specializing on the Pirates long before he became a ĢƵ contributor. He was editor in chief of the popular website RumBunter, wrote two books and more recently was working for DKPittsburghSports.com.

Jason was in tune with todayĢƵ MLB game much more than I am when it comes to statistics. I still focus on the old-school stuff, home runs, RBIs, batting average. Jason could break down things like BABIP and EV and ISO and FIP with equations that would make my head spin, but he would explain it all and what it meant.

Jason was ahead of the game. He was just 38 years old and left behind a wife, Jessica, and, of course, his mother Joyce.

Uniontown lost a unique and special native.

Rob Burchianti can be reached at rburchianti@heraldstandard.com or on Twitter at @Burch.

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