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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Sport
Steve Greenberg

David Ross will be Cubs’ next manager

Former Cubs catcher David Ross could become the team’s new manager this week. | Jamie Squire/Getty Images

David Ross will be the Cubs’ next manager, the Sun-Times has confirmed.

The former catcher could be named to the post as soon as Thursday, the first World Series off day. Other candidates have been informed of the decision.

Ross, 42, a special assistant with the Cubs, will be the team’s youngest manager since Jim Riggleman was hired a couple of weeks before his 42nd birthday in 1994. He has not been a manager at any level and has no coaching experience.

The Twins’ Rocco Baldelli and the Rays’ Kevin Cash are the only current managers who are younger than Ross, though that could change with several jobs still open across the league.

“I always have greater comfort hiring for roles in which the person has done the role, but there are ways that can be overcome,” team president Theo Epstein said at the end of the 2019 regular season. “Belief, skills, personal attributes can all outweigh a lack of experience.”

Ross won two World Series as a player, with the Red Sox (2013) and Cubs (2016). Especially close with Anthony Rizzo, Jon Lester and Jason Heyward, he is considered an exceptional leader.

“Rossy is a very attractive candidate, and he’s going to be evaluated on the merits for what he can bring to the table as a major-league manager given his skills, given his experiences, given his worldview, given what he knows about winning,” Epstein said.

Instant critics of the move will point to Ross’ lack of experience. It will make him — and Epstein — an easy target as the Cubs strive for another World Series title while the so-called championship window is open.

Ross has been most visible as an ESPN broadcaster — and as a contestant on Dancing with the Stars — since hanging up his catching gear after the 2016 season.

“If it was Rossy, we’d obviously sit down. I’ve talked to him about it before,” first baseman Rizzo said on the final weekend of the season. “He’s in a really good place right now at home with his family, what he’s doing; he’s happy. It’s the pros and the cons. He’s my biggest mentor in this game, player-wise, him and [former Cubs coach Eric] Hinske. Can it work? Yes, but I don’t know which direction we’re going in.”

In recent days, Astros bench coach Joe Espada seemingly became a strong candidate for the job. He interviewed twice, traveling to Chicago on off days each time as the Astros gun for a championship.

The Cubs also interviewed veteran manager Joe Girardi, recently fired Phillies manager Game Kapler and internal candidates Mark Loretta and Will Venable.

Ross will be charged with, among other things, getting more from the Cubs’ young core of position players than predecessor Joe Maddon was able to get over the last couple of seasons. Epstein has emphasized the word “accountability,” which for Ross will mean getting players to work harder, work together more and improve their attention to detail.

Lester played with Ross in Boston — Ross was his personal catcher with the Red Sox — and on the North Side.

“If it’s Rossy, then I’m sure we’ll butt heads just like I butted heads with [Maddon],” Lester said. “But, at the same time, I’ll respect the hell out of him and he’s my boss. He makes a decision, you have to respect that.”

Ross will make a whole bunch of decisions now, and he’ll be under the microscope throughout a critical 2020 and beyond for the Cubs.

His popularity, stemming from his sizable role in an unforgettable championship, will help his cause publicly, but only to a point. The Cubs are in win-now mode, and there will be a low tolerance among fans, at least, for rookie mistakes or any other signs of weakness from the manager.

Speaking of fans, a Twitter poll conducted Tuesday showed a clear preference for Espada over Ross.

#Cubs fans: If it comes down to David Ross or Joe Espada, who's your guy?

— Steve Greenberg (@SLGreenberg) October 22, 2019

That wasn’t personal, of course. It likely was about coaching experience as well as moving on from 2016.

If the Cubs go down in one-and-done history with Kris Bryant, Javy Baez, Rizzo and the rest of their core, it will be seen as an enormous opportunity missed. Like the 1985 Bears, this team was intended to win it all more than once.

Now, it’s on Ross to find all the right buttons to press.

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