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Jim Bowden (baseball)

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For the rugby league footballer of the 1950s for Great Britain, England, and Huddersfield, see James Bowden
For the American SCUBA diver, elite technical diver, cave diver, and deep diver, see Jim Bowden (diver)

James Goodwin Bowden IV (born 18 May 1961 in Boston, Massachusetts [1]) is a former Major League Baseball Senior Vice President and General Manager. He was named MLB Excecutive of the Year by Baseball America in 1999. His teams finished in first place in 1990, 1994, 1995 and 1999. He is currently co-host on MLB Network Radio's "INSIDE PITCH" on Sirius 210/XM 175. He also Co-Hosts for Fox Sports Radio on Saturday and Sundays and is a Baseball Analyst for FoxSports.com. Jim also Hosts the Show "GM's Corner" on FoxSports.com.

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 2000. However his deals also included the acquisitions of Denny Neagle, John Smiley, Pete Schourek, David Wells, Tyler Clippard, Jeff Brantley, Jeff Shaw, Danny Graves, Bret Boone, Ron Gant, Kevin Mitchell, Deion Sanders, Adam Dunn, Austin Kearns, Jose Guillen, Alfonso Soriano, Reggie Sanders and Ryan Zimmermann. He was a strong proponent of Instant Replay and trading draft picks.

After he was fired as GM of Cincinnati[4], 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 acquired such players as Ryan Zimmermann, Alfonso Soriano, Adam Dunn, Josh Willingham, Tyler Clippard, Luis Atilano, Jordan Zimmerman, Scott Olsen and Derek Norris during his 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 he was well respected for keeping low payroll clubs competitive. On the other side of the coin he was almost universally disliked by his peers as well as many Reds players and other members of the organization.[5]

Controversy

In 1993 Bowden fired rookie Manager Tony Perez after only 44 games.[6] Perez was a star player in Cincinnati and is immensely popular with Reds fans.

In 1998 Bowden traded Jeff Shaw to the Los Angeles Dodgersfor infielder Paul Konerko and left-hander Dennis Reyes. [7] This move was met with shock in the Cincinnati area as hometown player and All-Star Jeff Shaw re-signed with the Reds at a discounted rate prior to the season.[8] At the time Shaw was quoted as saying "We had a handshake deal that he wasn't going to trade me. Three months later, he traded me ... If I had been in the room with him, I would have killed him"[9]

In 2003, he made 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, and was fired from the Reds after the season.[10]

In 2006 Bowden traded Majewski was traded by the Washington Nationals to the Cincinnati Reds along with Bill Bray, Royce Clayton, and Brendan Harris for Austin Kearns, Felipe López, and Ryan Wagner.[11] The trade caused some controversy, as the Reds front office was apparently unaware of cortisone shots that had been given to Majewski because of arm pain before the trade.[12] It was alleged that Majeski was known to be injured by Washington GM Jim Bowden and the trade was an attempt to dump him for some value to some unsuspecting team. In his time with that Nationals Mejewski was very good, with a 2.93 ERA in 2005 and a 3.58 ERA with Washington up until he was traded.

With the Reds he had very little success, with a 7.28 ERA in parts of three seasons. He was not re-signed after the 2008 season and to date has not pitched in the major leagues again. A grievance was filed with MLB alleging misconduct by Jim Bowden and the Washington Nationals.[13] MLB has never revealed their findings and no punishment is on record.

In April 2006 Bowden was arrested for DUI.[14]

In February 2009, it was alleged that Bowden was part of an FBI federal investigation into the skimming of signing bonus money from Latin American baseball players.[15] He resigned from the Nationals on March 1, 2009.[16]

Sources

  1. ^ BR Bullpen page Accessed 4 March 2009
  2. ^ Robinson, Joshua, and Michael S. Schmidt. "Nationals’ G.M. Resigns as Scandal Deepens", The New York Times, 1 March 2009.
  3. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/1989/08/31/sports/yanks-dismiss-thrift-s-top-aide.html
  4. ^ "Reds clean house, ax Bowden, Boone". SFGate.com. Retrieved July 29, 2003.
  5. ^ Sullivan, Tim. "Bowden makes deals - and enemies". April 01, 2001. The Cincinnati Enquirer.
  6. ^ "BASEBALL; Ready, Blame, Fire: Just 44 Games for Perez". nytimes.com. Retrieved May 25, 1993. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  7. ^ "Reds Trade All-Star Shaw To L.A." cbsnews.com.
  8. ^ "Shaw trade another sign of what's ahead for Reds". LubbockOnline.com. Retrieved July 05, 1998. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  9. ^ Sullivan, Tim. "Bowden makes deals - and enemies". April 01, 2001. The Cincinnati Enquirer.
  10. ^ "Reds Send Bowden, Boone Packing"
  11. ^ "Reds swap Kearns to Nats for Clayton, pitchers". ESPN.com.
  12. ^ "Reds GM: Team got damaged goods from Nats". ESPN.com.
  13. ^ Kay, Joe. "Sports Writer". USA Today. Retrieved 5/19/2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  14. ^ "Nationals GM Bowden arrested, charged with DUI". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 19, 2006.
  15. ^ Nationals' Jim Bowden on FBI Probe: I'm Innocent SI.com, 23 February 2009
  16. ^ "Nationals general manager Jim Bowden resigns" The Associated Press via Yahoo! 1 March 2009 Accessed 4 March 2009

References