50th birthday: Billy Beane
Today, one of the most well-known and controversial GMs in sports history celebrates his 50th birthday: Billy Beane of the Oakland A’s.
How many sports GMs have ever become the lead character in a major Hollywood movie? Off the top of my head, I can only think of one, Brad Pitt’s portrayal of Beane in last year’s Academy Award nominated Moneyball.
Let’s take a little bit of time to review his career in Oakland. He’s run the A’s for 14 straight seasons, making him currently the second longest tenured GM in the game. As it happens, he’s also the second longest tenured GM in the Bay Area, as San Francisco’s Brian Sabean is the only one whose been around longer. Beane narrowly edged Brian Cashman for second place.
In that time, Oakland has posted a 1,206-1,060 win-loss record for a .532 winning percentage. Not bad. Overall, it’s the seventh best record by any team in that span. He’s done it while spending “only” $691 million in that period. As huge as that number would look in my bank account, it’s still just the 25th most spent by any team. He’s outspent the Royals, Expos/Nationals, Rays, Pirates, and Marlins. That’s it.
The Bay Area is anything but a small sample size, but the A’s despite their success just can’t draw fans. In Beane’s tenure, they rank 25th overall in attendance. They only teams below them are the ones Oakland outspends.
For perspective, here are how all the records, attendance, and payroll for all teams in the Beane Era, ordered by winning percentage:
Tm W L Pct Attendance Payroll New York Yankees 1369 895 0.605 51,322,316 $2,250,097,312 Boston Red Sox 1285 982 0.567 39,145,041 $1,612,223,731 Atlanta Braves 1281 985 0.565 37,642,146 $1,235,520,754 St. Louis Cardinals 1247 1019 0.550 45,507,278 $1,146,887,994 Anaheim Angels 1221 1047 0.538 40,753,998 $1,223,135,021 San Francisco Giants 1208 1058 0.533 42,094,720 $1,096,661,143 Oakland Athletics 1206 1060 0.532 24,968,705 $691,682,891 Philadelphia Phillies 1201 1066 0.530 37,021,149 $1,178,338,229 Los Angeles Dodgers 1184 1083 0.522 47,049,011 $1,329,229,120 Chicago White Sox 1179 1089 0.520 28,955,888 $1,073,519,832 Houston Astros 1163 1104 0.513 37,731,351 $1,038,700,351 New York Mets 1156 1111 0.510 39,943,233 $1,465,690,348 Minnesota Twins 1153 1114 0.509 28,660,536 $765,234,204 Cleveland Indians 1151 1117 0.507 33,185,050 $897,281,014 Texas Rangers 1145 1123 0.505 34,900,419 $1,038,996,922 Toronto Blue Jays 1143 1124 0.504 27,843,667 $900,066,297 Arizona Diamondbacks 1129 1139 0.498 36,109,901 $948,176,895 Seattle Mariners 1120 1147 0.494 38,128,018 $1,164,266,790 Chicago Cubs 1110 1157 0.490 41,857,571 $1,290,494,258 San Diego Padres 1102 1167 0.486 34,018,968 $724,830,642 Cincinnati Reds 1094 1175 0.482 29,027,251 $790,854,221 Florida Marlins 1081 1185 0.477 19,650,689 $530,838,679 Colorado Rockies 1074 1195 0.473 38,641,011 $893,893,457 Milwaukee Brewers 1062 1204 0.469 32,999,563 $773,368,076 Detroit Tigers 1039 1228 0.458 31,125,219 $1,052,904,735 Tampa Bay Rays 1013 1252 0.447 21,195,863 $579,093,003 Montreal Expos 993 1273 0.438 20,579,468 $616,918,761 Baltimore Orioles 990 1276 0.437 35,679,071 $1,040,841,965 Pittsburgh Pirates 957 1307 0.423 24,583,214 $559,327,156 Kansas City Royals 946 1320 0.417 21,943,846 $647,640,543
The A’s stick out there a bit, don’t they? They’re the only club in the top dozen to spend under a billion, and they’re under $700 million.
But, of course, the Beane era can arguably be cut into two parts. As everyone who read or saw Moneyball knows, Beane succeeded in creating a team that won a ton of games with a meager payroll at the turn of the century. In 2001, they won 102 games with baseball’s second-lowest payroll. A year later, they won 103 with the third-lowest salaried squad.
This was the glory days for Beane and if you were active on the internet back then you can remember all sorts of people who were convinced he was and would always be the smartest GM of them all. You don’t here too much of that talk these days.
The A’s had a great run but that came to an abrupt end after 2006. The A’s enjoyed their eighth straight winning season that year, and finally advanced to the ALCS—only to be swept by the Tigers. Since then, the A’s haven’t had a single winning season. They usually aren’t too bad, and in fact haven’t lost 90 games in a season under Beane, but they keep losing 80-some games a year. Overall, they’ve gone 381-428 (.471) since their last October hurrah.
OK, so the A’s are that good, but let’s compare their win-loss record to their payroll. Here’s the same chart as above, only now restricted to 2007-2011. Again, we’ll organize it by winning percentage:
Tm W L Pct Attendance Payroll New York Yankees 478 332 0.590 19,708,583 $1,024,613,440 Philadelphia Phillies 473 337 0.581 17,589,641 $615,216,897 Boston Red Sox 465 345 0.574 15,182,15 $721,972,056 Anaheim Angels 457 353 0.564 16,359,900 $585,683,698 Tampa Bay Rays 434 376 0.536 8,468,738 $244,234,173 St. Louis Cardinals 431 379 0.532 16,723,521 $477,414,004 Texas Rangers 427 383 0.527 11,907,675 $357,759,607 Milwaukee Brewers 426 384 0.526 14,822,957 $398,712,112 Detroit Tigers 424 387 0.523 13,920,225 $576,135,869 Los Angeles Dodgers 423 386 0.523 17,846,703 $527,004,667 Atlanta Braves 422 388 0.521 12,534,731 $457,809,040 Chicago Cubs 411 397 0.509 15,802,460 $624,481,494 Colorado Rockies 412 399 0.508 13,476,570 $370,272,571 Minnesota Twins 411 401 0.506 13,406,807 $403,967,698 Toronto Blue Jays 410 400 0.506 9,950,144 $385,076,800 San Francisco Giants 409 401 0.505 15,373,908 $466,679,672 Chicago White Sox 407 404 0.502 11,664,701 $559,248,665 New York Mets 403 407 0.498 15,976,905 $655,669,277 Arizona Diamondbacks 401 409 0.495 11,126,067 $305,743,923 Florida Marlins 394 415 0.487 7,215,152 $203,126,219 Cincinnati Reds 394 416 0.486 10,139,282 $363,909,851 Cleveland Indians 391 419 0.483 9,444,393 $332,203,031 San Diego Padres 388 423 0.478 11,412,004 $258,790,323 Oakland Athletics 381 428 0.471 7,891,065 $311,035,466 Houston Astros 365 444 0.451 12,719,474 $441,751,721 Seattle Mariners 362 448 0.447 11,179,409 $495,652,081 Kansas City Royals 347 463 0.428 8,333,457 $302,998,543 Washington Nationals 340 468 0.421 9,849,982 $276,679,428 Baltimore Orioles 336 473 0.415 9,510,540 $394,389,258 Pittsburgh Pirates 326 483 0.403 8,489,899 $215,910,616
The A’s winning percentage ranks 24th overall. If you want to be nice, you can note that their .471 clip is closer to 20th place than 25th, but the point is they’ve done rather poor.
Also, if you look at the payroll, the A’s don’t really stick out like a sore thumb. The team just above them in winning percentage, the Padres, won more despite spending less. Over $50 million less. And north of them the Marlins have spent over $100 less than Beane and won 113 more games. And Arizona has won more than the Marlins despite spending less than Oakland. And if you look way up there, you can see the current sabermetric darling franchise, Tampa, with a lower payroll than Oakland.
Overall, the A’s earned their 24th best record with the game’s 23rd highest payroll over the last five years. Yeah, that’s bad. You should rank lower in record than in payroll. While it’s tough to be the GM of a team that draws poorly, the A’s are still less than what they should based solely on economics.
Yet he’s still around. In fact, in February the team extended his contract through 2019.
To be fair, the 2007-2011 numbers are a bit distorted by the big disappointment of 2007. That year, the A’s raised their payroll to a mid-range level of $79 million, only to fall flat with 86 losses. They immediately slashed payroll after that year.
Right now, Beane is a guy who helped remake baseball by aggressively using and promoting sabermetrics a decade ago to build a consistent winner. But since the league adapted, he’s had trouble finding his footing. Maybe he’ll turn it around again. Only time will tell. For now, it’s a big round number of a birthday for him to celebrate.
Aside from that, many other baseball events celebrate their anniversary or “day-versary” (which is an event occurring X-thousand days ago) today. Here they are, with the better ones in bold if you just want to skim things.
Day-versaries
1,000 days since Ramon Vazquez belts the 10,000th home run in Pirates franchise history.
1,000 days since Albert Pujols belts his 10th career slam. It’s his fourth of five on the season.
1,000 days since Manny Ramirez returns from his 50-game PED suspension.
4,000 days since the Phillies retire Jim Bunning’s number.
5,000 days since Kerry Wood outduels Greg Maddux in a 1998 season start.
6,000 days since Anhesuer-Busch announce plans to sell the Cardinals after 42 years of ownership.
7,000 days since Tom Brunansky as a free agent.
8,000 days since the Red Sox trade Lee Smith to the Cardinals for Tom Brunansky.
9,000 days since Steve Carlton posts his 329th and final win.
20,000 days since Baltimore signs amateur free agent Milt Pappas.
40,000 days since the Braves beat the Giants 2-1, with both Boston runs scoring against New York ace Christy Mathewson on wild pitches.
Also, at some point today it’ll be 1,000,000,000 seconds since the birth of C.C. Sabathia.
Anniversaries
1849 George Hall, future Louisville player banned for helping to throw the 1877 pennant race, is born.
1867 Cy Young, all-time win leader, is born.
1889 Washington trades one-time ace fireballer Jim Whitney to Indianapolis for John “Egyptian” Healy.
1910 Bill Dietrich, pitcher, is born.
1921 Ferris Fain, hitter, is born.
1933 Kiki Cuyler, Cub outfielder, breaks his leg. He’ll miss nearly three months.
1935 The Cardinals release pitcher Dazzy Vance.
1938 Former Yankees co-owner Captain Tillinghast L’Hommedieau Huston dies at age 71.
1944 Denny McLain is born.
1945 Jim Hughey, a member of the 120-loss 1899 Cleveland Spiders, and the last pitcher to lose 30 games of the season, dies.
1954 Cubs manager Phil Cavarretta gives his ownership his honest opinion of the team’s chances that season. They fire him for defeatism.
1955 The Red Sox sign free agent Eddie Joost.
1960 Kid Carsey, former 1899 Spider, dies. That leaves only three players left from the 40-120 team: Sport McAllister, Harry Colliflower, and Otto Krueger.
1960 The Giants trade Al Worthington to Boston.
1971 Oakland signs free agent Tommy Davis.
1973 Orange baseball are used in an A’s-Indians exhibition game.
1975 The Yankees release longtime ace Mel Stottlemyre.
1977 Toronto trades John Lowenstein to Cleveland.
1979 63-year-old former ballplayer Luke Easter dies.
1980 Rico Carty is released by Toronto.
1983 The Dodgers become the first team to shut off season ticket sales before the season begins.
1988 The White Sox sign free agent pitcher Jerry Reuss.
1988 Detroit returns John Wetteland to the Dodgers.
1988 Ted Kluszewski dies at age 63.
1989 Atlanta purchases Mark Eichhorns from Toronto.
1991 Texas releases Pete Incaviglia.
1995 The Players’ Association votes to return to the diamond IF the federal courts uphold the NLRB complaint of unfair labor practices against the owners.
1999 Anaheim trades Phil Nevin to the Padres, where he’ll blossom.
2000 The Cubs and Mets open the season in Japan’s Tokyo Dome. The Cubs win, 5-3.
2000 Tampa Bay release starting pitcher John Burkett
2005 Andres Galarraga announces his retirement.
2006 Marquis Grissom announces his retirement.
2008 Houston trades Woody Williams.
2011 MLB creates a new seven-day DL for players who have suffered a concussion.
1945 and 1960; the 1899 Spiders were 20-134. Much worse than the ‘62 Mets who were 40-120.
1979; wasn’t Easter shot and killed in a robbery?
kds – D’OH! That’s one I knew really well, too. Just wasn’t thinking when I typed them out.
I think you’re right about Easter.
We all know that the AL has been more competitive than the NL, so looking within the specific leagues is a fairer comparison. And if you look just within the AL, only the phenomenal Rays have a better winning percentage and lower payroll than the A’s from 2007-2011.
He’s pulled off the 11th best record in the AL, despite the 12th biggest payroll and the worst AL stadium attendance in that time. Not even close to Beane v1.0, but far from what I’d call ‘bad.’