Colonel Angus wrote:
Maybe they should bring Scott Servais out of retirement, so he could be Ted Lilly's personal catcher...


No can do. He has a MLB ball club to manage.
http://www.cbssports.com/mlb/eye-on-bas ... as-managerThe Mariners on Friday introduced Scott Servais as their new manager.
Servais, 48, was an assistant general manager for the Angels, and was the leading candidate for the Seattle job, as Heyman recently noted. While current Mariners GM Jerry Dipoto filled the same role for the Angels, Servais worked under him in his current role. Here's part of Dipoto's statement released by the team:
“Through the course of the 20-plus years I've known Scott, I've come to see him as one of the most complete, well balanced and inclusive baseball people in the industry. I've been fortunate enough to call him a teammate as a player, while also having worked closely with him as an organizational leader in both Colorado and Los Angeles. He is a communicator with strong baseball acumen and leadership skills. I truly believe his strong character and career experiences as a player, coach and executive have prepared him for this opportunity.”
Servais was a major-league catcher for parts of 11 seasons with the Astros, Cubs, Giants, and Rockies. He retired from playing following the 2001 season. Prior to joining the Angels' front office, Servais worked for six seasons Rangers' Senior Director of Player Development. Before that, Servais was a scout for the Rockies and a roving catching instructor for the Cubs. His comments upon being announced as Seattle's new manager:
“I am excited and grateful for the opportunity to manage the Seattle Mariners. It has long been my goal to manage a big league team and while I took a slightly different path than many, I am confident in my ability to lead. We have a terrific core of players and I'm looking forward to bringing in a coaching staff that will help me establish a winning culture here as we work toward putting a championship-caliber team on the field for the fans of the Northwest.”
Not long after Dipoto took over the Mariners in late September, he fired incumbent manager Lloyd McClendon. McClendon across two seasons was two games above .500 with Seattle, but the Mariners in 2015, despite some high expectations, finished 76-86 and in fourth place in the AL West.
Servais is poised to inherit a roster that includes Felix Hernandez, Robinson Cano, Kyle Seager, and Nelson Cruz, among others.
