
While the talk around the Brewers circulating on this off day is who deserves the MVP more Ryan Braun or Prince Fielder (on both Brewers.com and SI.com), there's another award a member of the Brewers should be in discussions for. That man is Ron Roenicke, who has a great case for National League Manager of the Year in this, is rookie campaign as skipper of a Major League team.
Most coaches and managers are only as good as the talent they have on the field, but there have been certain defining moments that have put the talent on the Brewers roster in great position to win like they have in the last month. Here are the top moves made by "Running Ron" and his staff in order as they've occured this season.
1. The first order of business for Roenicke was changing the attitude a bit in the clubhouse, making sure the players that had to like him (read Braun and Fielder) like him. That made sure everyone else followed suit. It is something that has shown up throughout the season and may be the biggest reason things have gone as smoothly. He's let the guys be themselves. It may have had something to do with the prior manager being very "old fashioned" with certain things. Roenicke has let the personalities of this team (see Tony Plush) come out.
2. The move to go with Marco Estrada might go down as the best move Roenicke and the Brewers braintrust made all season. There were a couple choices the team could have made and Estrada made the Brewers look like geniuses. His starts in April for Zack Greinke surprised a lot of people and kept the seat warm until the 2009 AL Cy Young winner was right to return off the DL. He didn't pitch awful, but wasn't great in working out of the bullpen so when Chris Narveson had to miss a couple starts, Estrada again filled in nicely.
3. His belief in Yuniesky Betancourt at short stop may have been by default, but after the All-Star Break Yuni made that loyalty pay off by being named the "Brewers Player of the Month" for July. Roenicke has sat Yuni for a couple days a couple of times, and been public in saying he's giving other guys a shot at the position, but it all seems to have been done to serve as motivation for a man we in the 223 call "Yu Bet."
4. Casey McGehee's struggles this season may have been the surprise of the season. This is another time where Roenicke stuck with his player while questions were abound as to how long it would last. Roenicke has given Casey days off, as well, but gone to him in big spots and McGehee has delivered with pinch-hit homers and clutch hits. It couldn't have been easy with Taylor Greene tearing it up in Triple-A Nashville and Mat Gamel even getting some looks when he was up during Interleague Play, but McGehee has made the loyalty pay off, as well. Casey's batting average is on the rise (over *edit .240 as of Sunday).
5. The way Roenicke got Francisco Rodriguez to settle into his eighth inning role with this team might be the move that pushed the Brewers to the brink. It hasn't been discussed much, but the years the two spent together with the Angels had to have played a role in discussions upon K-Rod's arrival that helped him settle into the role. Having John Axford in the midst of a team-record saves-converted streak hasn't hurt either.
6. When Rickie Weeks went down with a severely sprained left ankle July 27, no one would have been surprised if the team scuffled a bit and stayed even with the pack in the NL Central. Instead, this team has reeled off 27 wins in 32 games, holds the biggest division lead in franchise history and is the only team in franchise history to sit 27 games over .500 at any point in a season.
When it comes down to it, Roenicke has pushed nearly all the right buttons this season. You'd have to figure his closest competition for the award is Kirk Gibson of the Arizona Diamondbacks. He has that team on the verge of unseating the Defending World Series champion Giants. The main talk around it is that since Gibson played, he's got the in on the award. I'd hope the BBWAA voters take note of Roenicke and what he's done with a team that was hovering around 5-10 games over .500 before taking off in late July to get where they are now. Where are they? Breathing down the necks of the "Big Bad" Philadelphia Phillies for the best record in the National League.



