Whether Rockies’ Bud Black stays or goes, he’s deserved better

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Harry Ralston “Buddy” Black has managed more games than anyone in Rockies history, bypassing Clint Hurdle on Thursday when the Rockies lost to the Nationals.

But Black’s future is cloudy. Whether he stays or goes is the biggest issue hovering over the club as we near the season’s final month.

Although Black and owner Dick Monfort had some preliminary talks about a contract extension during spring training, Black remains in limbo. I was told that something might be worked out in the second half of the season. However, general manager Bill Schmidt recently told me that Black’s future will be discussed after the season.

That’s a red flag.

I honestly don’t know what’s going to happen.

Some days, I get the feeling the Black is eager to captain a ship that will be loaded with fresh new talent in the coming seasons. On other days, I’m not so sure.

Black turned 67 on June 30, but he’s still young at heart. He loves interacting with players and thinks of himself as a teacher. He loves throwing batting practice. He loves the in-game chess match. Heck, he even enjoys talking to us schlubs in the media. Go figure.

But I also sense he’s simply tired of losing. Who can blame him? I sense that he’s tired of filling out a lineup he knows is less talented than the opposition’s. I sense he’s tired of “wait ’til next year.”

Black hasn’t said it, but I think he agrees with veteran left-hander Kyle Freeland, who spoke from the heart last August.

“We all want to win, and we all want to have success, and we all want to be in the playoffs playing meaningful baseball,” Freeland said after the Rockies were drubbed by the Padres at Coors Field. “Right now, it seems like every time you look down that tunnel, looking for that light, it just keeps getting further and further away.”

The Rockies are an inordinately patient organization, much to their fans’ chagrin. The Seattle Mariners have been run in a similar fashion. But on Thursday, as he saw his team’s playoff chances slip-sliding away, Jerry Dipoto, the Mariners president of baseball operations, fired longtime manager Scott Servais, who’d been the skipper for nine years.

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