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Saturday, October 26
Updated: October 28, 1:30 AM ET
 
Agent: Piniella content; M's blocked Mets from talks

Associated Press

SEATTLE -- Lou Piniella's reason for taking over the Tampa Bay Devil Rays should be accepted at face value, his agent said Saturday.

Piniella simply wants to be closer to his family, agent Alan Nero said.

Elia added to list
Lee Elia might have a more permanent role in the Mariners' clubhouse.

According to a report Saturday in The Seattle Times, the Mariners' coaching consultant has been invited for an interview and is expected to talk to the club's brass next week regarding their managerial opening.

"I think the ballclub is setting a day to visit," Elia told the newspaper.

Elia, 65, has been a consultant-coach for the Mariners the past two seasons, his second stint with the club. He was also the team's batting instructor and bench coach from 1993-97. He then joined the Phillies from 1998-99 as a special-assignment scout before becoming a bench coach in Toronto in 2000.

"I think anybody that has an opportunity to manage a major-league club, let alone the Seattle Mariners, has to entertain that possibility," Elia told the Times. "I'll visit with my wife and see how it goes. I don't know how the interview might go."

Elia's professional baseball career spans 41 years as a minor-league player, minor-league coach/manager, big-league player and big-league coach/manager. He was a manager in the majors for two teams, the Cubs in 1982-83, where he posted a 127-158 record, and the Phillies in 1987-88, where he went 111-142.

It has been also reported that soon-to-be-former Seattle manager Lou Piniella might try and recruit Elia to Tampa Bay, where Piniella is expected to sign a four-year contract with the Devil Rays.
-- ESPN.com news services

"In the end, Lou got what he wanted,'' Nero said. "He got a great contract. He's going to be at home. He's going to be in the only major-league city where the team plays and also holds spring training.''

Piniella is expected to finalize the four-year, $13 million deal Monday. He left Seattle after the Mariners agreed to release him from the final year of a three-year contract that would have paid him $2.5 million next season.

Nero, though, criticized how the Mariners handled the situation. He said Seattle's front office touched off "two weeks of chaos'' by insisting on compensation before allowing interested teams to interview Piniella.

The Mariners reached terms only with the Devil Rays. Because they couldn't cut a deal with the New York Mets, Nero said Seattle blocked Piniella from interviewing there.

"What Lou wanted was to quietly and quickly talk to the Mets and Tampa Bay, and if a deal could be worked out, fine,'' Nero said. "What Seattle did was to make it all about business. It became about compensation, and it took on a life of its own.''

A Mariners spokesman refused comment on the allegation, citing commissioner Bud Selig's ban on discussing major issues during the World Series. The team has said all along it considered compensation a reasonable part of releasing Piniella.

The Mets subsequently reached a deal with Art Howe to manage their team.

The Mariners were unfair to Piniella, Nero said, because the manager gave them 10 years, during which he elevated a perennial also-ran into a team that reached the playoffs four times between 1995 and 2001. The Mariners tied a major league record with 116 victories in 2001.

"I'm personally disappointed with the way this was handled,'' Nero said. "I just don't think it was in keeping with what Lou gave the franchise.''

Nero said Piniella "loves Seattle, loves his players and loves the fans'' but felt he had to leave because of family issues that were complicated by the distance to Piniella's home in Tampa, Fla.

He declined to disclose the family matters.

Until reports surfaced of an agreement with the Devil Rays, there had been speculation that Piniella wouldn't work in Tampa because the team's woeful history wouldn't suit the manager's competitive personality.

The 59-year-old Piniella, though, sees it as a challenge.

"The reason for leaving Seattle was the family consideration, and certainly this job will take care of that,'' Piniella told the Tampa Tribune last week. "And honestly also, too, the challenge of doing basically what we did in Seattle 10 years ago.''




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