"Son, we'd like to keep you around this season but we're going to try and win a pennant"
About this Quote
It lands like a compliment until the knife turns. Stengel’s line is baseball’s most elegant brush-off: a paternal “Son” that pretends intimacy, followed by the administrative reality that sentiment doesn’t make a roster. The phrasing is pure clubhouse diplomacy. “We’d like to keep you around” dangles belonging, loyalty, even a future. Then comes the pivot - “but” - and the real mission statement: “we’re going to try and win a pennant.” Translation: you’re likable; you’re also expendable.
What makes it work is how it frames a personnel decision as a moral necessity. Stengel doesn’t say the player can’t hit, can’t field, can’t keep up. He elevates the choice to the level of destiny, as if cutting you is simply what the pennant demands. It’s managerial rhetoric at its slickest: the team becomes a higher calling that absolves the speaker of cruelty. The insult is outsourced to ambition.
The context matters. Stengel came out of an era when baseball sold itself as both business and family, and managers were expected to perform both roles at once: tactician and father figure. His genius was turning that tension into a one-liner. You can hear the postwar Yankees worldview in it: winning isn’t just an objective; it’s the atmosphere. If you don’t help produce it, you’re still welcome - just not here, not now, not in the story they intend to write.
What makes it work is how it frames a personnel decision as a moral necessity. Stengel doesn’t say the player can’t hit, can’t field, can’t keep up. He elevates the choice to the level of destiny, as if cutting you is simply what the pennant demands. It’s managerial rhetoric at its slickest: the team becomes a higher calling that absolves the speaker of cruelty. The insult is outsourced to ambition.
The context matters. Stengel came out of an era when baseball sold itself as both business and family, and managers were expected to perform both roles at once: tactician and father figure. His genius was turning that tension into a one-liner. You can hear the postwar Yankees worldview in it: winning isn’t just an objective; it’s the atmosphere. If you don’t help produce it, you’re still welcome - just not here, not now, not in the story they intend to write.
Quote Details
| Topic | Coaching |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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