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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, July 16, 2009

Nats' Riggleman says he won't make many changes


Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Jim Riggleman

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WASHINGTON — To hear Jim Riggleman talk, it's a wonder that the Washington Nationals didn't give Manny Acta a contract extension — instead of firing him.

Riggleman took the reins yesterday of the worst team in baseball, holding his first team meeting, running his first practice and holding his first news conference. He spent much of his time praising his predecessor and former boss, who was dismissed Monday after 2 1/2 seasons and a 26-61 record in 2009.

"Manny did all the right things," said Riggleman, who joined the Nationals this year as bench coach, "so there's not a lot of changes to make. We've got to get some results. We feel like if we continue with what Manny was trying to do on the field and his strategy, certainly sooner or later this talent that we have is going to surface and produce the results we want to produce. We're not going to reinvent the game."

So while the lineup tinkerings will be minor, if there are any at all, the main difference will be the change in voice from a 40-year-old manager in his first job to a 56-year-old journeyman who managed the San Diego Padres and Chicago Cubs in the 1990s and last year did the interim thing with the Seattle Mariners.

"Jim's the right man," slugger Adam Dunn said. "He's going to jump-start us. He brings a totally different kind of demeanor, a more serious, tough, demeanor to the team, and I think that's what we need right now."

Riggleman dismissed the notion that he is fiery — "I feel like I'm a bit of softy," he said — but almost anyone the Nationals hired would be more animated than Acta, who was sometimes criticized for a calm, even-keel manner, even as his players' fundamentals suffered during a tough season.

Riggleman said the few times he has been caught on camera in a player's face resulted from lack of effort.

"I've got no problem if you miss a ball," Riggleman said, "but if you don't chase it after you miss it, I've got a problem."

Riggleman said his first message to the team would be to get refocused. Not a bad idea for a club that leads the majors in errors and has the highest ERA in the National League.

"There's a lot of season left," he said. "There's a lot of opportunity to make a move in the standings. Let's chase a club, let's get after that club to see if we can close in on them."

ALL-STAR GAME

TV RATINGS DROP SLIGHTLY

The All-Star game's television ratings are down slightly from last year.

Fox said yesterday that the American League's 4-3 win Tuesday night earned a 8.9 fast national rating and 15 share. That's down 4 percent from the 9.3/16 for the first nine innings of the 15-inning marathon in 2008.

Ratings were up 3 percent for the pregame show, which included President Barack Obama throwing out the first pitch.

Ratings represent the percentage of all households with televisions, and shares represent the percentage of all homes with TVs in use at the time.

TWINS

BULLPEN GETS A BOOST

The Minnesota Twins will recall right-hander Kevin Mulvey from Triple-A Rochester to add some depth to their bullpen.

Mulvey was 3-6 with a 3.93 ERA in 17 starts for the Red Wings this year. He came over from the New York Mets in the trade for Johan Santana before last season.

The Twins have carried 11 pitchers and three catchers for the last few weeks. But manager Ron Gardenhire said before the break that he would need some help for his tiring bullpen.