- Larry Himes
Larry Himes (born
October 7 ,1940 inRiverside, California ,USA ) was a general manager for twoMajor League Baseball teams: theChicago White Sox (from 1986 until 1990) and theChicago Cubs (from 1991 until 1994). He is best known for trading forSammy Sosa during each tenure.Tenure with White Sox
Himes was hired by White Sox chairman
Jerry Reinsdorf to succeed Ken "Hawk" Harrelson in 1986. Harrelson, a longtime broadcasterfor the White Sox, had a tenure of just under a season, and Himes was charged with rebuilding the franchise.Himes built the White Sox farm system, drafting All-Stars
Jack McDowell ,Robin Ventura , Frank Thomas and Alex Fernandez in the first round in consecutive years (from 1987 until 1990). By late 1990, all four were integral parts of the White Sox.Himes also traded one of the Sox franchise's most popular players,
Harold Baines , in July 1989. With the White Sox so far out of the pennant race, Baines and second basemanFred Manrique were sent to the Texas Rangers for second baseman Scott Fletcher, pitcherWilson Alvarez and a 20-year-old player namedSammy Sosa . Baines' bat wasn't enough to lift the Rangers to anAmerican League West title, and Fletcher and Sosa found starting jobs with the White Sox in 1990. Alvarez made his Major League debut in 1991, no-hitting theBaltimore Orioles in his first start. He later became a key member of the White Sox' staff. Sosa blossomed into a star several years later, causing then-Rangers managing partnerGeorge W. Bush to muse that his approval of the trade was one of the worst mistakes he ever made.Thanks in part to Himes' moves, field manager's Jeff Torborg's performance, and strong seasons from veterans like Iván Calderón,
Ozzie Guillén ,Carlton Fisk andBobby Thigpen , the White Sox won 90 games in 1990, contending with the eventualAmerican League championOakland Athletics into the final week of the season. The season was the last in oldComiskey Park , as the White Sox were scheduled to move into a new ballpark with the same name across the street (now namedU.S. Cellular Field . Himes was not there to see the White Sox make the move, as he and his director of scoutingAl Goldis were fired after the 1990 season.Tenure with Cubs
Cubs chairman
Don Grenesko hired Himes to succeedJim Frey as general manager on the sameOctober 1991 day that he fired Frey. The Cubs had come off of a season where three expensive free-agent acquisitions (George Bell,Danny Jackson , and Dave Smith) failed to lift the Cubs over .500.Himes immediately hired his field manager, former
Oakland Athletics coachJim Lefebvre .Trading for Sammy Sosa, again
Himes' biggest move with the Cubs came just before the end of Spring Training 1992, when Himes sent Bell to the White Sox for Sosa and left-handed pitcher
Ken Patterson . While this trade has been mentioned as one of the Cubs' best in franchise history, it did not look so lopsided when it was made. Sosa had struggled in 1991, spending some time with the White Sox' Triple-A affiliate. White Sox brass questioned if Sosa would ever harness his raw talent. Meanwhile, Bell is a formerAmerican League MVP and was a National League All-Star in 1991.After battling injuries in 1992, Sosa quieted criticism of the trade by hitting 30 home runs and stealing 30 bases in 1993 and 1994. Meanwhile, Bell was out of baseball by 1994.
Contract Negotiations with Greg Maddux
While Himes' tenure with the Cubs will surely be remembered for the acquisition of Sosa, it will also be remembered for the departure of pitcher
Greg Maddux following the 1992 season, a season in which Maddux won 20 games and his first of four consecutive National League Cy Young Awards.Maddux had emerged back in 1988, when he made the National League All-Star team for the first time and won 18 games. He won 19 games in 1989 and 15 in 1990 and 1991, staking his claim as the Cubs' ace, and one of the National League's best pitchers. As he was eligible for free agency in 1992, Himes negotiated with Maddux and his agent
Scott Boras during the first half of 1992. In July 1992, Himes offered Maddux a contract that would pay him more than $7 million per year. Maddux indicated that he wanted to test the free agent market first, so the offer was withdrawn.After Maddux filed for free agency, he fielded offers from the
New York Yankees and theAtlanta Braves . After he received his offer from the Braves, he contacted Himes to see if Himes would match the offer. Himes declined, stating that he spent Maddux's money onRandy Myers ,Jose Guzman ,Dan Plesac andCandy Maldonado .Maddux made his Braves' debut on Opening Day 1993 at
Wrigley Field , beating the Cubs and his former teammateMike Morgan 1-0. He went on to play in every postseason from 1993 until 2003, win three more Cy Young Awards, three National League pennants and one World Series. Guzman's Cubs career was marred by injuries and Maldonado and Plesac did not make significant contributions to the club either. Myers became the Cubs' relief ace, and he helped the Cubs finish .500 in 1993.Maddux's departure is regarded as one of the Cubs' franchise's worst moves, on par with the trading of future
Baseball Hall of Fame inducteeLou Brock to theSt. Louis Cardinals for sore-armed pitcherErnie Broglio .Other Stars Depart
Himes also presided over the exodus of other popular stars on the club.
Rick Sutcliffe departed after the 1992 season and managed productive seasons with theBaltimore Orioles . Right fielderAndre Dawson was not offered a contract after 1992 and signed on with theBoston Red Sox , playing four more seasons.Catcher
Joe Girardi was left unprotected during the 1992 expansion draft, allowing theColorado Rockies to select him. Girardi later helped theNew York Yankees win the 1996, 1998 and 1999 World Series.Disastrous 1994 Season
Himes' era reached a nadir during 1994. The Cubs started the year losing their first 10 home games, causing new manager
Tom Trebelhorn to conduct a "Town Hall" meeting on a park bench in front of the fire station onWaveland Avenue . The Cubs floundered throughout the season before a strike mercifully ended it in August 1994.Sandberg Walks Away
The low point of the 1994 season came in June, when perennial All-Star second baseman
Ryne Sandberg , now a member of the Hall of Fame, abruptly announced his retirement. Sandberg had slumped the first two months of 1994, and days after announcing his retirement, his wife filed for divorce. Still, Sandberg cited Himes' draconian clubhouse rules and management style as one of the reasons for his departure in his autobiography 'Second to Home,' co-authored byBarry Rozner .Sandberg came out of retirement to play in 1996 and 1997. By then,
Ed Lynch was general manager andAndy MacPhail team president.
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