MLB

Don Mattingly out as Dodgers manager

Manager Don Mattingly and the Los Angeles Dodgers have agreed to part ways.

L.A. lost to Mets in NLDS

The Los Angeles Dodgers reportedly parted ways with manager Don Mattingly despite the team being 446-363 under his management. (Frank Franklin II/The Associated Press)

Don Mattingly won't return as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers next year after agreeing with his bosses that he and the team needed a fresh start.

Before they came to that decision, the parties discussed extending Mattingly's contract beyond next year, its final season.

"When we started on Friday we expected him to be our manager in 2016," Andrew Friedman, president of baseball operations, said Thursday at a Dodger Stadium news conference. "I think that was his thought process also."

But things clearly changed as the discussions wore on. Friedman and general manager Farhan Zaidi repeatedly declined to specify why the sides parted ways, all the while expressing their respect and admiration for Mattingly.

"If there is a reason that this happened we would share it," Friedman said. "It's not so black-and-white here. There's a huge middle, and it's grey there. We're not hiding anything. It really is how things played out."

Los Angeles was 446-363 in five years under Mattingly, finishing with a winning record in every season and claiming the last three NL West titles. But the Dodgers have not reached the World Series since winning the championship in 1988.

The 54-year-old former Yankees star ranks sixth in wins among Dodgers managers.

Friedman said he expects to hire a manager by the start of baseball's winter meetings that run Dec. 7-10 in Nashville, Tennessee. He and Zaidi began discussing possible candidates on Wednesday, including those with and without previous managerial experience. They declined to reveal names.

"We expect to have a younger team going forward," Zaidi said.

The contracts of Mattingly's coaches are expiring, and they have been told they are free to look for new jobs, Friedman said.

Mattingly said in a statement distributed by the team that it's "the right time and right move for both parties."

He was scheduled to discuss his departure in a conference call later Thursday.

Zaidi said a contract extension was discussed, but no official offer was made.

"I've had my own level of cynicism hearing about people mutually parting ways," he said. "We can sit up here with all level of sincerity and say that's how it came about."

Friedman called the circumstances of Mattingly's departure "a little bit of an unusual situation. To boil it down to one thing, it just wasn't that simple."

After the Dodgers lost 3-2 to the New York Mets in a decisive Game 5 of the NL Division Series, Mattingly met over the last week with Friedman, Zaidi and Josh Byrnes, senior vice-president of baseball operations.

"I never appreciated hearing the way Game 5 developed was Don Mattingly's fault," Friedman said.

The franchise with baseball's highest payroll, a record $289.6 million as of the end of the regular season, managed just two playoff victories before losing to the Mets.

Los Angeles reached the post-season in three straight years for the first time but the Dodgers won just one series, beating Atlanta in the Division Series two years ago, while losing three.

Mattingly was a holdover from the previous front office regime, having been manager Joe Torre's hand-picked successor in 2010 after he coached under the Hall of Famer for seven seasons in New York and Los Angeles.

Mattingly returned to his off-season home in Evansville, Indiana, earlier this week.

"I'm honoured and proud to have had the opportunity to manage the Los Angeles Dodgers," he said in a statement distributed by the team. "I've enjoyed my experiences and relationships with the organization's staff and players throughout my eight years in LA."