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- Joined: Sun Aug 26, 2012 8:00 pm
PATRICKCASSIDY wrote:
I apologize for imposing on this august body,
Good one! I'm sorry if I came on like a ton of bricks.
But please bear with me for one more minute while I talk about about how even betting on his own team to win might negatively affect a manager's performance--and his team's. Let's think about relief pitchers and injured players.
According to reports, Rose typically bet $10,000 or more on a single game. Now let's say you know you've bet $10,000 in 1989 dollars (almost $19,000 today) on your own team to win tonight, and you have a one run lead going into the 7th inning. You might just bring in your best reliever and let him pitch the last three innings. Why worry about saving him for tomorrow. Knowing your best reliever will be on ice for tomorrow, you just won't bet on your team to win that day.
Let's say, going into this same game, your best right hand hitter—who murders lefties— is recovering from a minor injury. Today your team is facing a lefty. You would normally rest this injured player for another game. But today, you've got $10,000 on the line, so you put your lefty-killer in and he gets two hits but then pulls a ligament because his injury puts him off stride. Now your recovering player is back on the DL for a month.
That's how betting on your own team to win, when you're the manager, can hurt your team and hurt baseball.