Robinson Getting the Silent Treatment

Unsure of His Future, Manager Says He'd Like to Return

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By Barry Svrluga
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 22, 2006

It is getting on to the end of the baseball season, to autumn in the winter of Frank Robinson's career, and the manager of the Washington Nationals wants to know: Tonight, when he sits in the dugout at Shea Stadium and guides his last-place team against the playoff-bound New York Mets, is he beginning the final 10 games of his career?

"I thought at least they would say, 'Frank, let's sit down and talk,' " Robinson said this week.

Yet the men who run the Nationals -- President Stan Kasten and General Manager Jim Bowden -- have not discussed Robinson's future with him in detail. That, in part, leads to a growing feeling around the club that the 71-year-old Hall of Famer won't be back next season, that he will be dismissed soon after this season ends on Oct. 1 -- if not told before then -- and that the club's significant rebuilding process will continue under someone new.

Kasten, who took over as the club's president when Major League Baseball sold the Nationals to the family of real estate mogul Theodore Lerner, consistently has said that the decision is the general manager's. Bowden didn't return phone calls or e-mail messages yesterday, and has not publicly addressed Robinson's status over the course of the summer. The manager, in his fifth year at the helm of a franchise that is headed to its third consecutive last-place finish in the National League East, is working on a one-year, $650,000 contract.

Robinson's status is a topic in the Nationals' clubhouse more than occasionally. As one prominent player said: "We're wondering. Who coaches this team is a big deal -- not just the manager, but the whole coaching staff. It's not a distraction, but we'd like to know."

For now, though, the players and coaches and Robinson himself wait. During a 30-minute interview in his tiny office on Wednesday -- a framed jersey commemorating his 1,000th victory as a manager hanging only a few feet from a gnarly scrap of flypaper -- Robinson said his situation had changed from the time when MLB owned the club. Then, Robinson said, he felt comfortable calling Commissioner of Baseball Bud Selig in the offseason to discuss his future.

"If I wanted to come back, I had a good feeling that I would be able to," he said. "But here, with ownership here now, and a new group here, new management up there and whatever, the thing that is different from that situation is that they usually tell you before the season's over -- talk to you about your future, about whether they want you to come back or not. . . .

"I think I have a feel for these things, that in time these things will be taken care of at the right time and the proper time. But what is a little different here -- and I'm a little taken aback by it a little bit -- is that lack of communication to me about the possibility of when they will sit down with me. That's the only thing."

Robinson is well aware that his reputation as a manager is less than sterling, though he defends both his ability and his commitment. Still, sources inside and outside the organization question, to varying degrees, his strategic acumen, his use of the pitching staff, his work ethic and his communication with his players. Daryle Ward, a role player whom the Nationals traded to Atlanta last month, told reporters after his departure, "With Frank Robinson, you never know where he's at or what he's thinking."

When 17 percent of 470 players surveyed in a Sports Illustrated poll earlier in the summer named Robinson as the majors' worst manager -- a higher percentage than any other -- Robinson dismissed it, saying, "I know better." But one front-office member -- who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity surrounding Robinson's future -- said the results were telling, adding, "It would have been more if his own players could have voted for him."

Robinson, though, is unapologetic, and he bristles at suggestions that he doesn't work hard. As he said, "I know that this thing is not going to go for another 10 years." But he would like a three-year deal so he could see the current rebuilding process through. He admits that the season, at times, wore on him. Not the baseball, but the off-field issues, dealing with players' personal lives and with the front office.

"I can't sit here at this time and say [retiring] didn't cross my mind a couple of times," he said. But he said that his stance all year -- that he wants badly to return -- hasn't changed.


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