JEFF BANISTER IS
BACK
The Pittsburgh Pirates have hired Jeff
Banister to serve as a special assistant to baseball operations.
This is their second hiring of a special assistant in consecutive days.
Yesterday, the Pittsburgh Pirates hired David Eckstein as a special
assistant to baseball operations. In a 2014 piece, Gabe Lacques wrote about Eckstein and his visions of the
game, writing:
Eckstein says he envisions squaring up sabermetric
principles with what he calls the “geometry” of baseball that only trained eyes
can see: The spin of a pitch, how to position defenders based on how the ball
comes off a right-handed hitter’s bat as opposed to a lefty…
He still espouses many theories that align with traditional
scouting, such as clubhouse chemistry. “It’s very important to have that
locker room with everyone on that same page, and fighting for that same cause,”
he says.
That marked the first move of hiring special assistants to
the baseball operations department. Today, the Pirates have hired Jeff
Banister in the same role. Banister spent 29 years in the Pirates
organization before becoming the manager for the Texas Rangers, where he saw
his club go 325-313 including two AL West championships in four seasons.
Jeff Banister returns to the Pirates as a valuable resource,
instructor and advisor for our front office, Major League team and player
development system. Banister f brings a wealth of knowledge, experience
and a passion back to the Pirates the organization.”
The Pirates are bringing in prototypical baseball men,
lifers in the industry. This could go back to what David Freese was saying last spring training, when he
brought up analytics and urgency, stating,
In an age in which big data has taken over, scouting and
baseball lifers still bring in information that can be used in methods.
But what Freese was saying the urgency to win hasn’t been there. Eckstein
who played for the Angels during their World Series year along with his time in
St. Louis was groomed with expectations. Banister, similarly as an ex
player and manager, has similar insight.
Neal Huntington couldn’t necessary change the culture within
front office and on field staffing during spring, with most of the options set
in place, but early in 2019 it seems that Huntington is trying to bring in more
personnel that will hold players and staff accountable to go with their
analytics department. Eckstein was the first move, and the next is the
bringing back of long time member of the organization Jeff Banister.
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