Jim Bowden (baseball): Difference between revisions
DEFAMATION OF CHARACTER, HARASSMENT CHARGES ARE FORTHCOMING ON SEVERAL USERS THAT ARE EDITING THIS CONTENT. Tag: references removed |
m Reverted edits by 12.147.22.105 to last revision by Elen of the Roads (HG) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{for|the record setting [[technical diving|technical diver]]|Jim Bowden (diver)}} |
|||
'''James Goodwin Bowden IV''' (born 18 May 1981 in [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], [[Massachusetts]] <ref>[http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Jim_Bowden BR Bullpen page] Accessed 4 March 2009</ref>) is a former MLB Senior Vice President and General Manager with over 15 years experience at that position for Major League Baseball Teams including the Cincinnati Reds, Montreal Expos and Washington Nationals [[Major League Baseball|Major League Baseball]], and was named Executive of the Year by Baseball America in 1999. He is presently a Baseball Analyst for Fox Sports. His video's can be seen on FoxSports.com (then click on MLB, then click VIDEOS on the drop-down) and search "Jim Bowden". His FoxSports.Com segments include a creative and innovative proposed method to improve the parity of Major League Baseball through realignment, the title of the video is "Changes coming to MLB?"; a look at the 2010 Free Agent Class; and in depth look at the trade deadline; analysis of potential post-season rotations and weekly break-downs of each league. In 2009, he Co-Hosted on Fox Sports Radio with Steve Hartman, Dan Moriaty, Sean Farnham and Bruce Jacobs. His guests included: Jim Leyland, Lou Piniella, Matt Cain, Barry Zito, Chris Paul, Kobe Bryant, Trevor Ariza, Mick Jones, Kelly Hanson, Gary Bettman, Derrick Mason, Brian Cushing, Mark Gubicza, Jay Glazer, Eric Karros, Shawn Johnson, Dan Finnerty, Mike Riley and Jeff Tedford. <Fox Sports Radio Archives>. He has also co-hosted for XM/Sirius Radio with Casey Stern during the NLCS and interviewed Shane Victorino, Scott Boras and Pat Gillick. Jim is best known for his trades in acquiring players like Ken Griffey Jr., David Wells and Ryan Zimmerman. He was Baseball America Executive of the Year in 1999. |
|||
'''James Gordon Bowden IV''' (born 18 May 1961 in [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]], [[Massachusetts]] <ref>[http://www.baseball-reference.com/bullpen/Jim_Bowden BR Bullpen page] Accessed 4 March 2009</ref>) is a former [[Major League Baseball|Major League Baseball]] executive. |
|||
==Early life and career== |
==Early life and career== |
||
Bowden was raised in Weston, Massachusetts |
Bowden was raised in [[Weston, Massachusetts|Weston]], [[Massachusetts]]. He graduated from [[Rollins College]] in 1983.<ref name=robinson_schmidt>Robinson, Joshua, and Michael S. Schmidt. "[http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/02/sports/baseball/02bowden.html?ref=sports Nationals’ G.M. Resigns as Scandal Deepens]", The New York Times, 1 March 2009.</ref> His entry to professional baseball came as an assistant in the [[Pittsburgh Pirates]] media relations department in 1985. He was a former college roommate of Squire Galbreath, whose father Dan and grandfather [[John W. Galbreath|John]] were the principal owners of the Pirates. General manager [[Syd Thrift]] was impressed with Bowden and asked him to join the Pirates' baseball operations department as an administrator. Bowden computerized the Pirates' scouting files, and became a protege to Thrift. He followed Thrift to the [[New York Yankees]],<ref>http://www.nytimes.com/1989/08/31/sports/yanks-dismiss-thrift-s-top-aide.html</ref> and eventually moved to the [[Cincinnati Reds]] as an assistant to the general manager. |
||
==General manager== |
==General manager== |
||
His first role as a general manager was with the Cincinnati Reds at age 31 in 1992. When he took this position, he was the youngest general manager in the history of [[Major League Baseball]] |
His first role as a general manager was with the Cincinnati Reds at age 31 in 1992. When he took this position, he was the youngest general manager in the history of [[Major League Baseball]]. He continued with the Reds until being fired in 2003. |
||
Bowden is perhaps best known for his acquisition of OF [[Ken Griffey, Jr.]] from Seattle in February of 2000. His Reds teams |
Bowden is perhaps best known for his acquisition of OF [[Ken Griffey, Jr.]] from Seattle in February of 2000. His Reds teams made just one playoff appearance in 1995, when they lost in the NLCS to the Atlanta Braves. |
||
After his time in Cincinnati came to an end, Bowden worked as a commentator on [[ESPN]] before being hired by Major League Baseball to serve as GM of the Montreal Expos, who were soon to become the [[Washington Nationals]]. |
|||
Bowden was the |
Bowden was the general manager of the Washington Nationals beginning in November 2004. The team never finished over .500 during Bowden's tenure. |
||
Bowden is known for his frequent roster moves, accessibility to the media, willingness to sign players with track records for personal problems, and affection for athletic outfielders. In his 16 years as an MLB general manager, his teams have made the playoffs just once (the aforementioned '99 Reds did play in a one-game playoff). |
|||
Bowden is known for his wheeling and dealing, completing over 168 trades during his tenure. He was also accessible to the media, and showed a willingness to sign players with proven track records (Larkin, Gant, Fernandez, Wells, Neagle, Brantley, Zimmerman Mitchell, Griffey etc) and affection for athletic outfielders like Ken Griffey Jr., Ron Gant, Reggie Sanders, Deion Sanders as well as offensive outfielders like Adam Dunn, Kevin Mitchell and Dmitri Young <Reds and Nationals media guides>. In his 15 years as an MLB general manager, his teams finished first three times. To put it in perspective of small market payrolls, the Reds never finished over .500 the following seven years without the leadership of Bowden despite doubling their payroll during that span. Bowden always had competitive Reds teams when he was running them despite never having a competitive budget. <Reds Media Guide, Baseball America, The Sporting News, Baseball Weekly, USA TODAY>. He has a chapter named after him Syd Thrift's book called, "The Bowden Brain" ; as well as prominently mentioned by David Wells in his book, respecting him for his honesty and straight forwardness. |
|||
He has met several Presidents of the United States including: George Bush Sr., George Bush Jr., Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter. He and his family have been guests at the White House on several occasions. |
|||
===Controversy=== |
===Controversy=== |
||
Bowden has been involved in several controversies: |
|||
Bowden was with the Reds for 14 consecutive years and the Expos/Nationals for 5 consecutive years with loyal followings at both organizations. His drive to have fun and great sense of humor is appreciated by all of his family and friends who surround him wherever he goes. However, he also has his distractors and haters. As most people around him say, you either love or hate him, but always respect his brain power and love of life. However, he also has had controversy surround him, most of his life. For example: |
|||
*In 1993, he fired Reds manager and former star player [[Tony Pérez]] after just 44 games. Coming on the heels of racially charged comments by Reds owner [[Marge Schott]. |
*In 1993, he fired Reds manager and former star player [[Tony Pérez]] after just 44 games. Coming on the heels of racially charged comments by Reds owner [[Marge Schott]], the firing prompted criticism of Bowden and the team for treating Pérez, one of the league's few minority managers, unfairly. |
||
*In 1998, he traded All-Star reliever and Cincinnati native [[Jeff Shaw]] to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Shaw claimed at the time that Bowden had agreed not to trade him as part of a contract that involved Shaw taking less money from the Reds than he could have gotten elsewhere. |
*In 1998, he traded All-Star reliever and Cincinnati native [[Jeff Shaw]] to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Shaw claimed at the time that Bowden had agreed not to trade him as part of a contract that involved Shaw taking less money from the Reds than he could have gotten elsewhere. “We had a handshake deal that he wasn't going to trade me,” Shaw said. “Three months later, he traded me. ... If I had been in the room with him, I would have killed him.” |
||
*In 2000, Reds coach [[Ron Oester]] reportedly was offered the job of manager by Bowden, but that when Oester didn't accept |
*In 2000, Reds coach [[Ron Oester]] reportedly was offered the job of manager by Bowden, but that when Oester didn't accept immediately, Bowden offered the job to [[Bob Boone]] without contacting Oester. |
||
*In 2003, he was fired as general manager of the Reds following comments comparing the MLB players union to the terrorist organization [[al Qaeda]]. Commenting on the possibility of a strike by the players, he said, “If they (the players) do walk out ... I encourage all of them, "Make sure it's Sept. 11th. Be symbolic about it. Let [union head] [[Donald Fehr]] drive the plane right into the building, if that's what they want him to do,'" Bowden later apologized for the remarks. |
|||
*On 17 April 2006, Bowden was arrested for drunk driving in Miami, Florida |
*On 17 April 2006, Bowden was arrested for drunk driving in Miami, Florida. |
||
*As the GM of the Nationals, he made a deal with the Reds in mid-season 2006 involving [[Gary Majewski]], who received a cortisone shot shortly before the trade. In May 2007 the Reds filed a grievance |
*As the GM of the Nationals, he made a deal with the Reds in mid-season 2006 involving [[Gary Majewski]], who received a cortisone shot shortly before the trade. In May 2007 the Reds filed a grievance claiming they didn't know they were getting damaged goods. However, after an indepth and time-consuming investigation, MLB cleared Bowden and the Nationals. |
||
*As of 23 February 2009, Bowden is being investigated by the FBI for [[Skimming (fraud)|skimming]] signing bonus money from Latin American baseball players.<ref>[http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/baseball/mlb/02/23/bowden.investigation.ap/index.html Nationals' Jim Bowden on FBI Probe: I'm Innocent] SI.com, 23 February 2009</ref> He resigned from the Nationals on 1 March 2009. <ref>[http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090301/ap_on_sp_ba_ne/bbn_nationals_bowden_resigns_9 "Nationals general manager Jim Bowden resigns" The Associated Press via Yahoo! 1 March 2009] Accessed 4 March 2009</ref> |
|||
He continues to be involved in extensive charitable work. |
|||
===Family=== |
|||
Bowden is engaged to actress/model Joy Jolise and has five sons: James, Tyler, Chad, Trey and Chase. |
|||
==Sources== |
==Sources== |
||
Line 39: | Line 35: | ||
*''[http://video1.washingtontimes.com/chatter/2008/02/jim_bowdens_segway_mark_zucker.html "Jim Bowden's Segway"]'', [[Washington Times]]. 19 February 2008. |
*''[http://video1.washingtontimes.com/chatter/2008/02/jim_bowdens_segway_mark_zucker.html "Jim Bowden's Segway"]'', [[Washington Times]]. 19 February 2008. |
||
*''[http://reds.enquirer.com/2001/04/01/red_bowden_makes_deals_-.html "Bowden makes deals--And enemies"]'', [[Cincinnati Enquirer]]. 1 April 2001. |
*''[http://reds.enquirer.com/2001/04/01/red_bowden_makes_deals_-.html "Bowden makes deals--And enemies"]'', [[Cincinnati Enquirer]]. 1 April 2001. |
||
*''[http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050814/REPOSITORY/508140445&template=single "Boos for Bowden"]'', [[Concord Monitor]]. 13 August 2005. |
|||
*''[http://reds.enquirer.com/2002/08/02/red_reds_gm_sorry_for.html "Reds GM sorry for remarks"]'', [[Cincinnati Enquirer]]. 2 August 2002. |
|||
{{Cincinnati Reds general managers}} |
|||
{{Washington Nationals general managers}} |
{{Washington Nationals general managers}} |
||
Revision as of 01:01, 26 October 2009
James Gordon Bowden IV (born 18 May 1961 in Boston, Massachusetts [1]) is a former Major League Baseball executive.
Early life and career
Bowden was raised in Weston, Massachusetts. He graduated from Rollins College in 1983.[2] His entry to professional baseball came as an assistant in the Pittsburgh Pirates media relations department in 1985. He was a former college roommate of Squire Galbreath, whose father Dan and grandfather John were the principal owners of the Pirates. General manager Syd Thrift was impressed with Bowden and asked him to join the Pirates' baseball operations department as an administrator. Bowden computerized the Pirates' scouting files, and became a protege to Thrift. He followed Thrift to the New York Yankees,[3] and eventually moved to the Cincinnati Reds as an assistant to the general manager.
General manager
His first role as a general manager was with the Cincinnati Reds at age 31 in 1992. When he took this position, he was the youngest general manager in the history of Major League Baseball. He continued with the Reds until being fired in 2003.
Bowden is perhaps best known for his acquisition of OF Ken Griffey, Jr. from Seattle in February of 2000. His Reds teams made just one playoff appearance in 1995, when they lost in the NLCS to the Atlanta Braves.
After his time in Cincinnati came to an end, Bowden worked as a commentator on ESPN before being hired by Major League Baseball to serve as GM of the Montreal Expos, who were soon to become the Washington Nationals.
Bowden was the general manager of the Washington Nationals beginning in November 2004. The team never finished over .500 during Bowden's tenure.
Bowden is known for his frequent roster moves, accessibility to the media, willingness to sign players with track records for personal problems, and affection for athletic outfielders. In his 16 years as an MLB general manager, his teams have made the playoffs just once (the aforementioned '99 Reds did play in a one-game playoff).
Controversy
Bowden has been involved in several controversies:
- In 1993, he fired Reds manager and former star player Tony Pérez after just 44 games. Coming on the heels of racially charged comments by Reds owner Marge Schott, the firing prompted criticism of Bowden and the team for treating Pérez, one of the league's few minority managers, unfairly.
- In 1998, he traded All-Star reliever and Cincinnati native Jeff Shaw to the Los Angeles Dodgers. Shaw claimed at the time that Bowden had agreed not to trade him as part of a contract that involved Shaw taking less money from the Reds than he could have gotten elsewhere. “We had a handshake deal that he wasn't going to trade me,” Shaw said. “Three months later, he traded me. ... If I had been in the room with him, I would have killed him.”
- In 2000, Reds coach Ron Oester reportedly was offered the job of manager by Bowden, but that when Oester didn't accept immediately, Bowden offered the job to Bob Boone without contacting Oester.
- In 2003, he was fired as general manager of the Reds following comments comparing the MLB players union to the terrorist organization al Qaeda. Commenting on the possibility of a strike by the players, he said, “If they (the players) do walk out ... I encourage all of them, "Make sure it's Sept. 11th. Be symbolic about it. Let [union head] Donald Fehr drive the plane right into the building, if that's what they want him to do,'" Bowden later apologized for the remarks.
- On 17 April 2006, Bowden was arrested for drunk driving in Miami, Florida.
- As the GM of the Nationals, he made a deal with the Reds in mid-season 2006 involving Gary Majewski, who received a cortisone shot shortly before the trade. In May 2007 the Reds filed a grievance claiming they didn't know they were getting damaged goods. However, after an indepth and time-consuming investigation, MLB cleared Bowden and the Nationals.
- As of 23 February 2009, Bowden is being investigated by the FBI for skimming signing bonus money from Latin American baseball players.[4] He resigned from the Nationals on 1 March 2009. [5]
Sources
- ^ BR Bullpen page Accessed 4 March 2009
- ^ Robinson, Joshua, and Michael S. Schmidt. "Nationals’ G.M. Resigns as Scandal Deepens", The New York Times, 1 March 2009.
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/1989/08/31/sports/yanks-dismiss-thrift-s-top-aide.html
- ^ Nationals' Jim Bowden on FBI Probe: I'm Innocent SI.com, 23 February 2009
- ^ "Nationals general manager Jim Bowden resigns" The Associated Press via Yahoo! 1 March 2009 Accessed 4 March 2009
References
- Bowden, Jim. "Scouting our way to the top", The San Francisco Examiner. 5 April 2006.
- "Nationals extend GM Bowden's contract through April", USA Today. 27 October 2005.
- "Jim Bowden's Segway", Washington Times. 19 February 2008.
- "Bowden makes deals--And enemies", Cincinnati Enquirer. 1 April 2001.
- "Boos for Bowden", Concord Monitor. 13 August 2005.
- "Reds GM sorry for remarks", Cincinnati Enquirer. 2 August 2002.