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Tuesday, October 22
Updated: October 24, 7:08 PM ET
 
Indians to interview Skinner, two Triple-A managers

ESPN.com news services

CLEVELAND -- Joel Skinner will lead off the last round of interviews in the Cleveland Indians' search for a manager.

Halloween offer for Thome
Indians general manager Mark Shapiro said Monday the team will make Jim Thome and agent Pat Rooney an offer on Oct. 31 at a meeting in Cleveland, the Plain Dealer reported.

Rooney has made it clear that any Indians contract would have to take Thome through the rest of his career.

The Indians are expected to offer Thome a four- to six-year deal. If the deal goes six years, it could be four guaranteed seasons with two vesting options, the newspaper said.

"We're still putting the offer together," Shapiro told the newspaper. "It's very complex. There are a lot of components and parts. We're going all out to sell Jim Thome on staying in Cleveland. We're going to pitch him as hard as we can."

Incentives will be part of the proposal, and Thome will be offered a job in the organization after he retires, according to the report. The Indians have also talked about naming part of Jacobs Field "Thome Terrace" and paying him a bonus if he makes the Hall of Fame after he retires.
-- ESPN.com news services

Skinner, the club's interim manager for this season's last 76 games after Charlie Manuel was fired, will meet with owner Larry Dolan and general manager Mark Shapiro on Wednesday.

Eric Wedge, manager of Cleveland's Triple-A Buffalo affiliate the past two seasons, will be in Thursday. Fredi Gonzalez, manager of Atlanta's Triple-A Richmond club, will interview Friday.

According to a report Tuesday in the Cleveland Plain Dealer, sources said Wedge has emerged as the favorite since Anaheim pitching coach Bud Black withdrew his name from consideration last week.

At 34, Wedge would be the majors' youngest manager. He played in 39 games as a major leaguer and was hired in 1998 by Shapiro -- then in charge of minor league operations -- to manage the Indians' Class A team in Columbus, Ga.

Shapiro wants his manager in place within a week after the World Series ends. The new manager will likely get a two-year deal with a club option for a third year, he said.

Shapiro has taken his time with the search.

"What I'm hoping is, whomever we hire as manager, is that this guy is going to be in this job for 10 years for a championship run," he said.

Wedge is a little more fiery and energetic than Skinner and Gonzalez. He led Kinston (N.C.) to a first-half title in 1999 and was named Carolina League manager of the year. He managed at Double-A Akron in 2000 before being promoted to Buffalo.

In two seasons, he led the Bisons to a 178-108 record and was honored as The Sporting News' minor league manager of the year.

Shapiro said he's not necessarily looking for a manager with big league experience. He wants a communicator.

"That's the one skill that can transcend," he said. "You can take a guy who has 10 years of experience and someone else who may have far less but is an outstanding communicator and may be a better choice."

Shapiro's list of candidates was trimmed to three last week when Anaheim pitching coach Bud Black removed his name from consideration so he could concentrate on the World Series. Black was believed to be Shapiro's top choice.

Skinner was credited by Shapiro for keeping things together during a turbulent 2002 season. Just before Manuel was fired, the Indians scrapped plans of competing for a seventh AL Central title in eight years in favor of rebuilding. And just a few days after Skinner took the job, longtime trainer Jimmy Warfield died.

Skinner, a former major league catcher for the Indians and Yankees, seemed to get more comfortable in the role as the season progressed.

The Indians were constantly shuffling players between Cleveland and the minors during most of his tenure, but the club still went 35-41 under their former third-base coach.

If Skinner has any shortcomings, it could be that he's not the dynamic leader Shapiro envisions guiding his team back into contention.

Gonzalez, 37, recently completed his first year in the Braves' organization after spending 10 with the Florida Marlins. The Cuban-born Gonzalez also interviewed for the Cubs' managerial vacancy.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.




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