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Saturday, November 21, 2009

So much of the focus during the MLB free agency period is on what the teams are doing, it's easy to lose sight of the players' perspective. Fans, quite naturally, want to hear all about their team's priorities, who they're targeting and how much they're willing to spend. But the process is a complicated one for the players as well, and there's usually a lot more to consider than just dollar signs.

Former Phillies center fielder Doug Glanville, in a guest column posted online by the New York Times last night, provides a window into how -- and why -- he left Philadelphia via free agency after the 2002 season.

Glanville, whose blue-collar worth ethic made him a fan favorite during his years with the Phillies, recalls the difficulty he had leaving the city where he played both collegiately (at Penn) and professionally. He roamed center for the Phillies for five seasons, setting career highs with a .325 batting average, 204 hits, 73 RBI and 34 stolen bases in 1999.

The column reveals the angst that the average player can feel over changing teams. Glanville, who was struggling with a career slump and the death of his father at the time, even sought out Phillies great Garry Maddox for advice before ultimately signing with the Texas Rangers.

Especially interesting is Glanville's description of offseason conversations with ex-Phils GM Ed Wade and former manager Larry Bowa, including a phone conversation with the hard-nosed Bowa in which the manager tried to persuade the veteran outfielder to stay.

"A couple weeks before Christmas, Larry called me," Glanville writes. "He made his best pitch to get me to stay. I appreciated that call, but I realized right after I hung up that I was leaving."

If you have a few minutes, give Glanville's column a read. With all the talk of "hot stove" rumors and big-money contracts, it's worth taking some time to think about what free agent castoffs like Pedro Feliz and Eric Bruntlett might be struggling with right about now.

Posted by Mike Potter @ 4:52 PM  Permalink | 16 comments
16
Comments   
Comment removed.
Posted 07:39 PM, 11/21/2009
JimG
What a miserable life you must lead. Continually getting banned and creating new screen names just so you can post the same nonsense over and over. You probably even get off on thinking that you're the "villain" of the site. Pathetic. As for Glanville, that was an interesting column. A good reminder of what a mess the team was when Bowa and Wade were in charge. Full of potential but couldn't cross the barrier to a playoff caliber team.
Posted 08:33 PM, 11/21/2009
fakeplastic
As a columnist, Doug is doing a great job, this article being another example. And while I am certainly no Bowa or Wade fan, to say Glanville and Travis Lee did not warrant starting roles was the right decision in retrospect. both ahd lost bat speed and did nothing after that. At the sane time the Phil's cubbard was bare and we were still a few years away from Aaron Rowland playing a CF in comparable to Glanville in his hey day.
Posted 09:09 AM, 11/22/2009
brian stewart
POOR DOUG YOU COULDN'T HIT ANYMORE LOST YOUR BAT SPEED, WELCOME TO THE BIG LEAGUES BOO HOO ABOUT YOUR DADDY DIEING PARENTS DIE ALL THE TIME STOP USEING HIM AS A EXCUSE ITS INSULTING TO HIS MENORY ITS NOT HIS FAULT YOU COULDN'T HIT ANYMORE.
Posted 09:51 AM, 11/23/2009
phillynupe4
brian you are a jerk
Posted 10:29 AM, 11/23/2009
hillerman
Any wonder why some (perhaps all at some level) major league ball players snub and even detest fans. The above is a G-rated sample of what they put up with at the ballpark and in public. Good God.
Posted 02:47 PM, 11/23/2009
AsValidAsYours
I remember Glanville fondly, thought he had archetectural desires ... and now I can purge those brain cells wasted on him. This article of his, shows me how immature and one sided his thinking was. He uses words like Mentor and childhood favorite, and repays his kindness by ignoring his advice, and that of a friend, until he twists the scenario to where she agrees with what he wants to hear. I saw where he mentioned his stats against certain pitchers, but saw no mention of the stats of the player who replaced hi, and what of a mangers gut feelings ? Doug I hope it was worth it in Texas, now we know you felt stronger about being in a starting role, than you did about being part of a winning team. That in and of itself defines you, self centered and clueless. Never thought I would put you and T.O. in the same sentence, but he is another one who could have stayed here (quietly renegotiated) and been a hero in this town, making more on endorsements and appearances, he too chose to follow the money, and like you left a town better off.
Comment removed.
Posted 08:56 AM, 11/24/2009
Realistic One
Hope those 80 games he played prior to coming back here anyways in '04 were worth it.
Posted 08:56 AM, 11/24/2009
Realistic One
Hope those 80 games he played prior to coming back here anyways in '04 were worth it.
Comment removed.
Comment removed.
Posted 01:20 PM, 11/24/2009
nizzies
Brian must have been molested as a young child
Posted 01:41 PM, 11/24/2009
Todd Pratt
Doug Glanville cost me an oppertunity to see a no hitter.
Posted 02:57 PM, 11/24/2009
Briarwood
Boo hoo. He hit a brisk .264 in 80 games after leaving the Phillies. Then he came back with a dazzling .210 average with the Phils in '04. The guy had two or three decent years for some dreadful Phillies teams in the late '90's. To read his column you'd think he was Joe Dimaggio, Willie Mays, and Garry Maddox all tied up into one. If the point of his column was to make us feel bad for him, then he blew it. This is one of the few good moves made by Ed Wade.
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