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November 14, 2007
Eric Wedge of the Cleveland Indians won the American League Manager of the Year award today, after taking his team from noncontention to the brink of the World Series.
The Red Sox' Terry Francona finished fourth in the voting with 13 points. In addition to Wedge (116 points), Francona finished behind Mike Scoscia of the Angels (62 points) and Joe Torre, formerly of the Yankees (61 votes).
Bob Melvin of the Arizona Diamondbacks won the National League Manager of the Year award.
NEW YORK (AP) - Eric Wedge and Bob Melvin, former backup catchers who found far more success in the dugout than on the field, were honored Wednesday as managers of the year.
Wedge became the first Cleveland manager to win the AL award, picked by a wide margin after the Indians tied Boston for the best record in baseball. Melvin won the NL prize for leading the young Arizona Diamondbacks to the top mark in the league.
Wedge received 19 of the 28 first-place ballots and got 116 points, finishing ahead of the Angels' Mike Scioscia (62 points). Joe Torre, fired by the Yankees, was next with 61 and Terry Francona of the World Series champion Red Sox got 13.
Melvin was chosen on 19 of the 30 first-place ballots and got 119 points. Philadelphia's Charlie Manuel (76), Colorado's Clint Hurdle (58) and the Cubs' Lou Piniella (25) followed.
Wedge, a no-nonsense guy with a John Wayne calendar in his office, guided the Indians to a 96-66 record. Cleveland made its first playoff appearance since 2001, then lost to the Red Sox in Game 7 of the AL championship series.
Melvin was chosen for his steady hand in leading a team that sometimes started six rookies and finished 90-72.
Posted by Mike McDermott
at 2:12 PM | Permalink