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Haugh: Cubs president will discard short-term assets willingly

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Epstein still has the right answers because he asks the essential question nobody in charge ever dared: Why not try building a winner from the bottom up by revamping the minor league system? If anything has changed about Epstein since he arrived in Chicago billed as the savior, it might be the 39-year-old has become less guarded and even more introspective as he embraces the city’s “Midwestern sensibility.”

That term came up during an easygoing conversation when Epstein explained why Cubs fans readily accept sacrificing seasons in the name of winning in 2015. Why can Epstein get away with placing minor league development ahead of major league success in a major market?

“We’re being transparent and they’re responding by giving back faith, belief and energy,” Epstein said.

Credit fans who enjoy watching young players grow up and the Cubs’ failure to win the other way by investing in overpriced free agents, Epstein reasoned. It says everything about the state of the Cubs that the highlight of Epstein’s tenure came last fall in Arizona when he attended an instructional league workout and finally detected “The Cubs Way.”

“It was really invigorating,” Epstein said. “I know this sounds silly coming off the year we had, but we are really clicking on all cylinders in scouting and player development.”

Baseball America agrees, ranking four Cubs prospects among the game’s top 100. One baseball executive projected the Cubs could have six by next spring. Everybody in Cubdom has heard of phenoms Jorge Soler, Albert Almora and Javier Baez. Most days, Epstein stares at his computer watching video of minor leaguers in search of the next Starlin Castro or Anthony Rizzo.

Speaking of Rizzo, Epstein invoked his name during one of those intermittent bouts of introspection. Apparently trading for Rizzo, a former Red Sox draft pick, represented one of two things every new executive does after taking over a team.

“Typically, they make a pretty good trade with a player they’re familiar with (Rizzo) and, two, they’ll screw up a trade because they won’t have the firsthand knowledge you need with some players in their own organization,” Epstein said. “We definitely did that.”

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