Socks slouching, clad in athletic shorts and a T-shirt, George Tsamis wraps up an end-of-practice simulated game by a pitcher making a bid for a spot in the St. Paul Saints starting rotation, weaves through the dugout and plops himself down in a prime CHS Field seat just behind home plate.
The Saints' manager, now in his 16th season at the helm, is approaching a milestone. After Sunday's 4-3 victory over the Gary SouthShore Railcats, he needs just 14 more triumphs to reach 1,000 for his career. Most of those victories, 803 to be exact, have come while piloting the Saints, the most famous independent league baseball organization in America.
His mannerisms are casual, right down to his easy baseball drawl. It's downright impossible to tell that the 50-year-old Tsamis, relaxed and comfortable in this environment, spent the fall and winter at his home in Connecticut bedeviled by coulda-beens.
"The only thought I've had about it," Tsamis said of his approaching milestone, "is that I wish it would have happened last year. Because that would have meant we had a good season, and that didn't happen."
Winning has never been the biggest chapter of the St. Paul Saints handbook. The team routinely sells out CHS Field, its fabulous four-year-old home in St. Paul's trending Lowertown neighborhood, and has always leaned heavily on promotions from ball pigs to neck-rubbing nuns to Friday night fireworks to draw a crowd. Ask fans how the Saints fared last year and there's a good chance they won't know.
But Tsamis knows. He may project an old-school acceptance of baseball's fickle nature, but 2017's 48-52 record has weighed on him since the day the season ended. "It was embarrassing," Tsamis said.
Fun is good. Winning is better.
What eats at Tsamis is that his managerial career arc was front-loaded with success. He won back-to-back Northern League championships while managing the New Jersey Jackals in 2001 and 2002. He made his return to Minnesota baseball (he pitched in 43 games for the Twins in 1993) a triumphant one when he led the Saints to a championship in 2004, his second year back.