Everything about Theo Epstein totally explained
Theo Nathan Epstein (born
December 29,
1973 in
New York City) is the
Executive Vice President/
General Manager of the
Boston Red Sox. In November 2002, the Red Sox made him the youngest GM in the history of
Major League Baseball by hiring him at the age of 28. In 2004, he engineered the first World Series championship by the Red Sox in 86 years and a second in the 2007 season. Epstein resigned in October 2005, but was rehired as GM and Executive Vice President on
January 24,
2006.
Early life and family
Epstein was raised just a few miles from
Fenway Park in
Brookline, where he attended
Brookline High School (a 1991 graduate), played baseball for the Warriors, and dreamed of working for the
Red Sox. Epstein's fraternal twin brother is Paul Epstein.
Epstein's grandfather
Philip G. Epstein and great-uncle
Julius J. Epstein won
Academy Awards for the screenplay of
Casablanca, while his father served as head of an English department at Boston University.
Epstein's brother-in-law is the actor
Dan Futterman, best known for his role as Judge Amy Gray's brother Vincent in the television series
Judging Amy. Futterman also wrote the award-winning screenplay for the film
Capote. He is married to Epstein's sister,
Anya Epstein, a writer for the television series
Commander in Chief.
On
January 1 2007, Epstein married Marie Whitney, a volunteer at Horizons for Homeless Children. An early report on the marriage from
Boston Globe sportswriter
Gordon Edes reported the site of the wedding was
Nathan's Famous hot dog stand at
Coney Island. Edes later published a correction, noting that he'd fallen for a prank by Theo's father Leslie. The site and actual date of the wedding was never released, but the
Boston Herald later published a story claiming the wedding took place on Red Sox owner
John Henry's yacht in
Saint Thomas.
On
December 12,
2007, Epstein's wife gave birth to the couple's first child, Jack, in
Boston, Massachusetts.
Early career and education
Epstein began interning with the
Baltimore Orioles in 1992. Meanwhile, Epstein attended
Yale University where he lived at
Jonathan Edwards College and served as sports editor of the
Yale Daily News, and graduated in 1995 with a degree in
American Studies. Eventually he took a job in the
PR department of the
San Diego Padres; soon Epstein would become the team's Director of Baseball Operations. While working for the Padres, he studied full-time at the
University of San Diego School of Law, where he earned a
Juris Doctor degree and passed the
California bar exam in 1999.
Red Sox
Larry Lucchino became President and CEO of Red Sox in 2002 and hired Epstein to work underneath him. At the end of the
2002 season, Lucchino appointed Epstein to replace interim GM
Mike Port.
Under the direction of Henry, Werner, Lucchino, and Epstein, the Red Sox supplemented more traditional baseball analysis with
sabermetrics (named derived from the Society for American Baseball Research,
SABR), or the analysis of baseball through more objective evidence and methods. In 2002, they hired the father of sabermetrics,
Bill James, to be a special advisor to the team, and also hired statistical analysts such as
Eric Van and
Voros McCracken. This devotion to the new wave of talent evaluation has seen the team stress on-base ability as the most important ability of a hitter, and not-so-coincidentally the 2003 Red Sox led MLB in runs scored. They led the majors with a .289
batting average, set a team record with 238
home runs, and set a new record with a
slugging percentage of .491, breaking the .489 mark of the 1927
Yankees.
Epstein crafted the Red Sox team that finally ended the
World Series title drought for the
New England Nine in
2004. Excelling in the early part of the 2004 season due to Epstein's 2003 offseason trade for pitcher
Curt Schilling, as well as the key
free agent acquisition of closer
Keith Foulke, the Red Sox stumbled at the season's mid-point. Shortly before the
July 31 trading deadline, Epstein completed one of the riskiest trades in modern Red Sox history by sending star
shortstop and Boston icon
Nomar Garciaparra to the
Chicago Cubs in a multi-team deal that brought
first baseman Doug Mientkiewicz from the Minnesota Twins and shortstop
Orlando Cabrera from the Montreal Expos. Epstein then brought speedy outfielder/pinch runner
Dave Roberts from the Los Angeles Dodgers to the team, who played a significant role in the Red Sox' ALCS victory. After the trading deadline, the Red Sox advanced into the playoffs, sweeping the
Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim in the first round. In the ALCS, trailing three games to none against their rivals the
New York Yankees, the Red Sox won four games in a row to move on to the World Series for the first time in 18 years. It was the first time in MLB playoff history that a team had rallied from a 0-3 series deficit to win a series. In the World Series, the Red Sox swept the
St. Louis Cardinals in four games, for a historic eight game post-season winning streak, led by Epstein acquisitions of Schilling and Foulke.
On
October 31,
2005, Epstein rejected a three-year, $1.5 million per year contract for personal reasons, and walked away from his position. According to
The Boston Globe, "This is a job you've to give your whole heart and soul to," he said. "In the end, after a long period of reflection about myself and the program, I decided I could no longer put my whole heart and soul into it." The night he resigned from the Red Sox, Epstein was reported to have left Fenway Park wearing a gorilla suit in an attempt to avoid reporters. It was Halloween, and he may have decided that was the best way to leave the office without attracting press attention. A witness reported a gorilla was driving a Volvo similar to Epstein's that night. It couldn't be confirmed if Epstein had rented the suit, or if he owned it and planned to use it regularly.
But he remained in contact with the team's front office, and on
January 19,
2006, Epstein and Red Sox management announced he'd return. Five days later, the team announced that he'd re-assume the title of General Manager and add the title of Executive Vice President.
Partly because Epstein grew up a short distance from
Fenway Park, and partly because he constructed the team that brought Boston a World Series championship for the second time in eighty-six years, Epstein remains wildly popular among members of
Red Sox Nation. In 2007 Epstein helped the Red Sox win their second World Series in 4 years.
Mitchell Report
In December 2007, Epstein was mentioned in the
Mitchell Report regarding a November 2006 email exchange he'd with Red Sox scout Marc DelPiano on the possible acquisition of then
free agent closer Eric Gagné. In the email, Epstein asks DelPiano: "Have you done any digging on Gagne? I know the
Dodgers think he was a steroid guy. Maybe so. What do you hear on his medical?". DelPiano replied that "steroids IS the issue" with Gagné, questioned his "poise and commitment" and expressed questions about his durability "without steroid help". Despite the reservations expressed by Delpiano, Epstein traded
pitcher Kason Gabbard and minor league
outfielders
David Murphy and
Engel Beltre to the
Texas Rangers for Gagné on
July 31,
2007.
Musical career
On
May 25,
2006, Epstein made an appearance on stage with
Pearl Jam at
TD Banknorth Garden playing rhythm guitar on the concert's penultimate song,
Neil Young's "
Rockin' in the Free World." Part of that concert's ticket prices went to local charities, and, as announced from the stage by
Eddie Vedder, Epstein agreed to meet the amount that the band paid to the charities.
In January 2007, Epstein joined
ESPN baseball analyst
Peter Gammons's band the
Hot Stove All-Stars to play at the Hot Stove Cool Music benefit concert held at the Paradise club in Boston. The event raised over $200,000 for the
Jimmy Fund and Epstein's Foundation to be Named Later. The event also featured former Red Sox pitcher
Bronson Arroyo.
Further Information
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