Legendary manager Joe Torre isn't interested in returning to the dugout. Torre is now Major League Baseball's executive vice president of baseball operations. "Managing takes its toll," Torre said. "When I decided to not do it anymore, it was something I felt was in my best interest, and I felt if it's in my best interest, then it has to help the team. Because you need somebody who has an enormous amount of energy and has the patience and the fortitude to go forward. It takes a lot out of you. "When you do it for a number of years, and all of a sudden the expectations are sky-high, you've got to realize that the guy who's doing it has a great deal of responsibility." Torre ranks fifth all-time with 2,326 wins. Above him on the list are No. 1 Connie Mack with 3,731, John McGraw with 2,763, Tony La Russa with 2,728 and Bobby Cox with 2,504. "Nobody's made a call to me to ask me to manage," he said. "When I talk to people about other things, they want to know if I'm still interested. I'm really not." Then Torre quickly added: "Let's put it this way, 'I'm not.' I don't want that to be misconstrued. I like what I'm doing. The winning and losing part of it, I think Tony, there's an answer. He retired. At some point you say, 'That's enough.'"