Casey Fien spends his time in the bullpen, so he doesn't know much, he freely admits, about what Paul Molitor is like in the dugout. But the Twins righthander became convinced that Molitor would succeed as a manager by observing him someplace almost as important: The lunch room.
"Everyone on the team went to him with questions. I'd sit there in the cafeteria before games and watch guys come up to him all the time," Fien said Monday after the team confirmed Molitor's promotion to manager, just the 13th in Twins history. "I mean, if you had a baseball question, no matter what it's about, he's the guy you went to. I mean, a Hall of Famer, he's seen everything — how many teams have a guy like that?"
By that criteria, only two do now. Molitor, a St. Paul native who agreed to a three-year contract and will be introduced Tuesday as Ron Gardenhire's successor, joins Philadelphia's Ryne Sandberg as a baseball rarity: A Hall of Fame player who accepted his first major league managerial job after being inducted to Cooperstown. Interim assignments aside, only Sandberg and long-ago Senators/Rangers manager Ted Williams have stepped into such a role.
The track record for world-class players trying to replicate their success in the dugout isn't good, and the Twins took five weeks to consider and interview several other candidates before choosing a man who had long been considered the obvious replacement for Gardenhire. General Manager Terry Ryan said the lengthy process reflected a schedule overloaded with postseason meetings and obligations, and a desire to be thorough, not any hesitation about the 58-year-old Molitor.
"It's a little difficult to make sure everyone involved gets to the places, [but] it worked out fine," Ryan said. "I know there are people who wanted it sooner, and I understand that. Overall, I think it was about the right amount of time."
And, according to some of the Twins players, it was the right decision, too. Third baseman Trevor Plouffe said via Twitter: "I'll tell you this much, there won't be a team anywhere in the league with a better leader than Moli. Very excited to battle with him!"
Second baseman Brian Dozier, who got to know his new manager five years ago when Molitor was a minor league tutor, said no team will have a better mind for the game in the dugout, either.
"His knowledge of baseball is off the charts. He's got a knack for figuring out ways to get an advantage, figuring out things that put you ahead of what happens next," Dozier said. "It makes you a better player, and ultimately, it results in wins."