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Larry Beinfest is the President, Baseball Operations of the Florida Marlins, a Major League Baseball franchise in the National League East.[1]

Contents

[edit] Early Life & Playing Career

Beinfest was born on March 3, 1964 in Encino, California and raised in Chatsworth, California. Playing baseball at Chatsworth High School, Beinfest made the varsity as a sophomore, the only one on rookie Coach Bob Lofrano's squad. By the end of the season, Beinfest was Lofrano's starting shortstop. The next year, as captain, Beinfest led Chatsworth to its first league title since 1972, its first of nine in a row. Beinfest batted .364, was exceptional in the field, an All-Los Angeles selection as a shortstop, and shared West Valley League MVP honors in 1982 with two-time MLB Cy Young Award winner Bret Saberhagen.[2]

The turning point of Beinfest's athletic career came in the seventh inning of the 1981 City Section quarterfinals at West Los Angeles College, when a Grant High baserunner roll-blocked Beinfest's leg, breaking it in two places. Beinfest writhed in pain as rescue crews delayed in reaching him, argued with one another, and eventually took him to the wrong hospital. After nine days in the hospital and three months of lugging a bulky full-leg cast around, Beinfest ended up with a permanently shorter left leg.[2]

Before his injury, Beinfest had numerous recruiting letters from baseball powers like Stanford, UCLA and Arizona State. After his injury, interest waned, even as Beinfest came back strong in 1982, batting .349, leading Chatsworth to another league title and another trip to the City semifinals, and sharing the league MVP award with Saberhagen. Beinfest accepted the only Division I scholarship offered to him, a free ride to Nevada-Reno. He tore up the Northern California Baseball Association his freshman year, batting .375 and earning rookie of the year and all-conference honors. But in 1984, shuttling between shortstop and third base, his average dropped, and he relinquished his dreams of playing professional baseball.[2]

After his sophomore season, he transferred to the University of California, Berkeley, where he failed to make the baseball team. Beinfest graduated from Berkeley in 1986 with a degree in international business and finance. He spent a year working for an area radio station selling air time and then set off for Syracuse University where he would earn a Master's degree in Public Communications, envisioning a career in sports broadcasting. Those plans changed a few months after graduation when the Seattle Mariners offered him a job in their front office.[2]

[edit] Early Front Office Career

In 1989, Beinfest began his career in Major League Baseball as a Player Development and Scouting Assistant in the minor league operations of the Seattle Mariners. He helped coordinate the Mariners' farm system, organized spring training, and dealt with equipment problems, medical arrangements, and scouting schedules.[2] The Mariners promoted Beinfest to Assistant Director of Player Development in 1994. Starting in 1996, Beinfest climbed his way up through the Mariners' front office receiving promotions in three straight years. He became the Mariners' Minor League Director in 1996, Director of Player Development in 1997, and then Assistant to the Vice President of Baseball Operations in 1998. In 2000, Beinfest joined the Montreal Expos as its Assistant General Manager. He held that position for two years and served as the Interim General Manager of the Expos from October 2001 to February 2002.[3]

[edit] General Manager

Following an ownership change, the Marlins, led by new owner Jeffrey Loria, hired Beinfest as its General Manager and Senior Vice President on February 12, 2002.[4]

Through a number of trades and free agent acquisitions, Beinfest built upon the Marlins' existing foundation of young talent and improved the roster into an eventual World Series champion in 2003. In 2002, Beinfest traded for Dontrelle Willis, who would become the 2003 NL Rookie of the Year. Prior to the 2003 season, Beinfest acquired Juan Pierre, who would later be named the team's most valuable player that year, and also signed catcher Pudge Rodriguez, who would lead the Marlins in RBI in the 2003 Playoffs. On May 11, 2003, Beinfest replaced manager Jeff Torborg with Jack McKeon. The Marlins went 75–49 under McKeon's leadership, finish with a final record of 91–71, and made the playoffs by clinching the NL Wild Card. Before the 2003 trade deadline, Beinfest made two key trades that strengthened the Marlins for its championship run. He traded for then-American League saves leader and closer Ugueth Urbina, who recorded saves in Games 1 and 5 of the 2003 World Series. And after third baseman Mike Lowell broke his left hand on August 30, Beinfest acquired Jeff Conine just before the midnight deadline on August 31.

The Marlins defeated the San Francisco Giants, 3-1 in four games in the 2003 NLDS, and the Chicago Cubs, 4-3 in seven games in the 2003 NLCS, to win the 2003 NL Pennant. In the 2003 World Series, the Marlins became the champion of Major League Baseball by defeating the AL Pennant winning New York Yankees 4-2 in six games. Following their championship season, Baseball America named the Marlins Organization of the Year and the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum recognized Beinfest as the 2003 winner of the Rube Foster Legacy Award for NL Executive of the Year.

Prior to the 2006 season, Beinfest re-tooled the Marlins' roster by acquiring numerous talented young players via trades, the Rule 5 Draft, and free agency. He traded for Hanley Ramirez, Anibal Sanchez, Ricky Nolasco and others. Ramirez went on to become the 2006 NL Rookie of the Year, the second NL Rookie of the Year Beinfest has acquired via trade during his tenure (also Willis in 2003). Sanchez tossed the fourth no-hitter in Marlins' history on September 6, 2006 blanking the Arizona Diamondbacks at then Dolphin Stadium. Sanchez was also one of four rookie pitchers on the Marlins to win 10+ games in 2006, along with Nolasco, Josh Johnson, and Scott Olsen, making the Marlins the first team ever to have four rookie pitchers record 10 wins in a season. Beinfest selected Dan Uggla in the December 2005 Rule 5 Draft. In 2006, Uggla established the Major League record for home runs by a rookie second baseman and became the first player in Major League history to be selected to the MLB All Star Game the season after he was taken in the Rule 5 Draft. Uggla was honored as the NL's Most Outstanding Rookie by Major League Baseball's players.

During Beinfest's tenure the Marlins have posted all but one of their top single-season win totals (91 in 2003, 2nd; 87 in 2009, 3rd; 84 in 2008, 4th; and 83 in 2004 and 2005, tied for 5th).

[edit] President, Baseball Operations

On September 29, 2007, the Marlins promoted Beinfest to President, Baseball Operations.[5] Following the start of the 2008 season, Beinfest signed Hanley Ramirez to a six-year seventy-million dollar contract extension that runs through 2014 and is the richest contract in franchise history.[6]

[edit] Reputation

Beinfest is widely regarded as one of the best executives in Major League Baseball because he consistently works with the league's lowest player payroll and fields a competitive team, having a World Series title and five winning seasons in the past seven.[7][8][9][10][11][12] Beinfest is credited for his strong ability to identify the players he wants and work with executives from their organizations to complete a deal. He is notorious for being a tough negotiatior and maximizing his return in trades.[13]

[edit] References

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Jim Beattie
Montreal Expos General Manager
2001
Succeeded by
Omar Minaya
Preceded by
Dave Dombrowski
Florida Marlins General Manager
2002-2007
Succeeded by
Michael Hill
Preceded by
'
Florida Marlins President, Baseball Operations
2008-present
Succeeded by
'



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