Ruben Amaro Jr. has strong feelings about the famous baseball movie Moneyball. The former Philadelphia Phillies general manager spoke this week about why he believes the film changed the sport in the wrong way. He said the movie made many people believe analytics were the only thing that mattered, while real on-field talent was pushed into the background.
Ruben Amaro Jr. shared his views on Wednesday’s episode of the “Phillies Show,” hosted by Todd Zolecki and Jim Salisbury. The film, released in 2011 and starring
Brad Pitt, told the story of the 2002 Oakland Athletics and their data-driven approach under executive Billy Beane. While the movie received major praise and award nominations, Amaro believes it failed to tell the full story.
Ruben Amaro Jr. says “Moneyball” ignored star players and real baseball balance
“Ruined the game for like 20 years,” Ruben Amaro Jr. said. “Great, entertaining movie. But they forgot about the three Cy Young Award winners in the rotation.”
He explained that the 2002 Oakland Athletics were not just a team built on numbers. They were loaded with real stars.
The pitching staff included Tim Hudson, Barry Zito, and Mark Mulder. Barry Zito won the American League Cy Young Award in 2002. Tim Hudson and Mark Mulder both finished as Cy Young runners-up in nearby seasons.
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Ruben Amaro Jr. also said the movie ignored how strong the team’s hitters were. Miguel Tejada, the team’s shortstop, hit 34 home runs and won the American League MVP award that season.
Eric Chavez also hit 34 home runs and finished near the top of MVP voting. “Other than that, it was a great movie,” Amaro said with a laugh.
He admitted the Athletics did succeed with a smaller payroll. But he believes the film made it seem like data alone won games, which he strongly disagrees with.
Ruben Amaro Jr. has shared similar thoughts before. On a January 2025 episode of the same show, he said the movie pushed baseball too far toward numbers and away from feel.
“That’s what disappointed me the most,” he said. “In many ways, I think it took baseball backwards. The analytics part took over so much that now they’re making rules to try to get the game back.”
More than a decade after its release, Ruben Amaro Jr. believes Moneyball still shapes how fans and front offices look at baseball today.
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