Cubs manager Joe Maddon is expected return for a fifth season despite his team losing the NL Central tiebreaker and NL wild-card games on back-to-back days this week, sources familiar with the situation told ESPN on Wednesday.Maddon is set to make $6 million next season.
So, he won't be going anywhere, however there hasn't been any word about a contract extension. Earlier on Wednesday there was a report by Ken Rosenthal in The Athletic pointing to some tension between Maddon and Theo Epstein. Via The Athletic.
Maddon, though, is a celebrity manager, more difficult to control than less-experienced types, and perhaps not as much of a grinder as some. He also has given Epstein a number of reasons to be irritated this season – reasons that, if Epstein was so inclined, might push him to make a managerial change.However, Rosenthal also wrote this.
Whatever Maddon’s faults, it’s difficult to imagine the Cubs firing him if their biggest complaint is that Epstein finds him annoying or difficult to work with. Any manager who replaced Maddon would be hard-pressed to match his success, not to mention his charisma and popularity.And well by now, we know that Maddon won't be fired. Yet, with no extension, not even one more year added, this still creates an awkward situation for the Cubs and Maddon in 2019. What happens if the team starts off slow? Questions will be raised again about his job security. We'll know more later today, when Epstein will have his end of the season press conference with the media. At no point did I ever think Maddon was on the hot seat. I mean, look at what Anthony Rizzo, the captain of the team, said after the Wild Card Game loss.
He wasn't alone strongly defending Maddon.
Pretty simple take here by me. If they Cubs fire Maddon, they lose the clubhouse.
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