Several teams don’t publicize contract details for their top front office executives or even for their managers, so this list of skipper and execs (any head of a baseball operations department, whether titled as a president of baseball ops, general manager, chief baseball officer, etc.) entering the final year of their deals may not be entirely complete or accurate. Still, since MLBTR so often focuses on players entering their “contract year,” this post provides a rough outline of which notable team personnel may be feeling some extra pressure as their own deals may be close to expiring.
It is quite possible some of these names may have already quietly signed extensions weeks or months ago, or will sign new deals during Spring Training once clubs turn their attention away from offseason roster-building. A shorter-term extension may not necessarily indicate much extra job security, as some teams tack an extra year (or at least a club option) onto an executive or managerial contract just to avoid the appearance of that person entering a lame-duck year. Of course, even a longer contract is no guarantee of job security, as a rough season can instantly put a manager or a front office on the hot seat.
As always, thanks to Cot’s Baseball Contracts for reference information on some of these contract terms.
Angels: Ron Washington is already heading into the final season under contract, as he signed only a two-year deal to manage the Halos in November 2023. While the Angels were only 63-99 last season, it could hardly be considered Washington’s fault given the subpar state of the roster. Expectations will be higher in 2025 since the team has been aggressing in adding talent this winter, and since GM Perry Minasian got a contract extension last August, Los Angeles might also look to add a year onto Washington’s deal to at least keep him on line with the guaranteed portion of Minasian’s new contract. It should be noted that Washington turns 73 this coming April, so he might also prefer to just take things year-to-year if he has any thoughts about retirement.
Astros: Dana Brown is entering his third season as Houston’s GM, and the terms of his contract weren’t made public when he was hired in January 2023. It is possible Brown might only be working on a three-year deal since his predecessor James Click also received just a three-year commitment, though Click was hired in the singular aftermath of the Astros’ sign-stealing scandal. This probably isn’t a situation to monitor too closely since the Astros have kept winning during Brown’s tenure, with the caveat that owner Jim Crane and his advisors are known to weigh heavily on baseball operations decisions. Click was let go within days of winning a World Series due to reported acrimony with Crane, but there hasn’t been any indication of any heat between Crane and Brown.
Athletics: Mark Kotsay’s initial contract covered the 2022-24 seasons, and the A’s picked up Kotsay’s 2025 club option over a year ago. GM David Forst said in October that “there’s no one I would rather have managing this team,” and that Kotsay “wants to be here,” though there hasn’t been any public word about any extension talks. As comfortable as Kotsay seems with the organization, it is possible he might be willing to let the season play out and then explore his options, if he has any uncertainty over continuing to manage the A’s through their stint in West Sacramento before their planned move to Las Vegas for the 2028 season. While no public details were revealed about Forst’s latest contract, the GM has obviously signed some kind of extension since his last deal expired after the 2023 season, and said in November that “I’ve been here for 25 years. There’s not a thought that I wouldn’t be in this for the long run.”
Blue Jays: Manager John Schneider is entering the last guaranteed season of his three-year contract, as the Blue Jays hold a club option on Schneider for 2026. It is fair to guess that the Jays might not exercise that option too far in advance, as there is widespread speculation that another disappointing season (or even a slow start) will cost Schneider his job. The same could be true of general manager Ross Atkins, even though Atkins is under contract through 2026. Team president Mark Shapiro is also entering the final season of his five-year contract, and while Shapiro’s focus has been more towards bigger-picture projects like Rogers Centre’s renovations, his possible departure might also trigger a larger overhaul unless the Jays turn things around on the field in 2025.
Braves: Manager Brian Snitker is entering the last year of his contract, so the Braves might well look to tack at least one more season onto Snitker’s deal this spring. Snitker has led Atlanta to the postseason in each of the last seven seasons, highlighted by the team’s World Series victory in 2021. He has stuck to just shorter-term deals and extensions during his tenure, which is probably due more to his age (Snitker turned 69 in October) than any dissatisfaction on the organization’s part, so no change seems imminent in the Braves dugout.
Cardinals: John Mozeliak’s exit plan is already in place. The longtime head of the St. Louis front office is stepping down after the 2025 season, with Chaim Bloom already inked to a long-term contract to become the Cardinals’ next president of baseball operations.
Cubs: The Cubs have posted 83-79 records in each of the last two seasons, but they still haven’t reached the postseason during Jed Hoyer’s four-year tenure as president of baseball operations. 2025 is the last year of Hoyer’s original five-year contract, and acquiring Kyle Tucker (who is a free agent next winter) in a big-ticket trade might indicate that Hoyer is feeling some heat to win as soon as possible. It can be argued that Hoyer has been somewhat hamstrung by ownership’s reluctance to spend at the top of the market, but that might also indicate that ownership could be considering hiring a PBO with more experience in building contenders on limited budgets.
Dodgers: Reports surfaced earlier today that the Dodgers are planning to work out an extension with Dave Roberts, as the skipper is entering the last season of his last three-year extension with the club. It comes as no surprise that L.A. wants to retain Roberts in the wake of the team’s second World Series title during his tenure, and it stands to reason that president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman is also a candidate for a new deal, perhaps regardless of the terms of his last agreement. Friedman came to the Dodgers on a five-year deal in October 2014, then signed an extension of an unknown length in November 2019. If that next contract was another five-year pact, Friedman is a technically free agent right now, but there has no zero indication that Friedman (who has been as busy as ever in bolstering the Dodgers roster this winter) is going anywhere.
Guardians: This is a speculative entry since it has been well over a decade since Chris Antonetti’s contract terms were publicly reported. Even if he is approaching the end of his current deal, there hasn’t been any sense that the Guardians are planning a front office change, especially not in the wake of another AL Central crown and a trip to the ALCS. Antonetti has been a member of Cleveland’s front office since 1999, and in his current role as president of baseball operations since October 2015.
Mariners: Jerry Dipoto has been extended twice since the M’s first hired him in September 2015, and his last extension in September 2021 was a multi-year deal of unspecified length. It is therefore possible this could be Dipoto’s final season under contract as Seattle’s president of baseball operations, unless another extension has been signed in the last three-plus years. Despite four straight seasons of 85 or more wins, the Mariners reached the playoffs just once in that span, as a lack of hitting has hampered the team over the last two years in particular. It remains to be seen if ownership is okay with just being competitive (or, as Dipoto infamously put it, winning “54 percent of the time“) or if any impatience is growing over the Mariners’ difficulty in truly breaking through as a contender. The Mariners were sparked to a 21-13 record down the stretch after manager Dan Wilson was hired last August, so it could be that the managerial change (and a change of hitting coaches) is what was needed to get the M’s back on track, but Dipoto and Wilson could both face pressure if Seattle again falls short of postseason baseball.
Orioles: Mike Elias has been Baltimore’s GM for six seasons, though his contract terms haven’t been made public at any point during his tenure. Manager Brandon Hyde signed a three-year deal when first hired prior to the 2019 season, and he has signed at least one or perhaps two extensions since, leaving his contract status a bit of a mystery. This is another situation where job security probably isn’t an issue, as the Orioles have come out of their rebuild to reach the playoffs in back-to-back years, even if the club has yet to record even a single postseason win in that span. New owner David Rubenstein is eager to win but hasn’t shown any inclination to changing the leadership structure since he bought the Orioles earlier this year.
Pirates: Ben Cherington has now completed five full seasons as the Buccos’ general manager, so he either signed a somewhat unusually long contract when first hired, or he has already inked one extension that has escaped public attention. Pittsburgh fans are impatiently waiting for the first winning season of Cherington’s tenure, as the team has flirted with contention in each of the last two years before finishing with identical 76-86 records. Paul Skenes has at least emerged as the crown jewel of the Pirates’ lengthy rebuild process, so regardless of Cherington’s contract terms, it doesn’t appear as though he is in any danger of being fired.
Rangers: Bruce Bochy’s return to managing saw him sign a three-year contract with Texas, so 2025 represents the final year of that deal. Bochy turns 70 in April but didn’t give any hints about retiring when speaking to reporters at the end of the season. A second straight losing season might change the equation either on Bochy’s end or on the front office’s end, but the Rangers’ 2023 World Series title (to say nothing of Bochy’s three previous rings as the Giants’ manager) has naturally brought him a lot of leeway within the organization. Both sides might prefer to go year-to-year just to maintain flexibility, but it wouldn’t be surprising if Bochy soon gets another year added to his contract.
Rockies: Bud Black has signed three straight one-year extensions to remain as Colorado’s manager, and past reports have indicated that Black is on something of an unofficial year-to-year rolling contract with the organization. It is perhaps notable that Black’s most recent deal wasn’t finalized until this past October, whereas his previous two extensions were completed prior to the start of the seasons. This might indicate that ownership and/or Black himself are starting to think harder about continuing the relationship in the wake of six straight losing seasons, even despite the Rockies’ well-known penchant for staying loyal to long-term employees. The same logic could extend to GM Bill Schmidt, though Schmidt’s contract terms haven’t been known since he was elevated to the full-time general manager position in October 2021.
Royals: Matt Quatraro is entering the final guaranteed year of his initial three-year contract as manager, though the Royals have a club option on his services for the 2026 season. J.J. Picollo has also completed two full seasons as the team’s general manager since being elevated to top of Kansas City’s baseball ops ladder in September 2022, though his contract status in the wake of that promotion wasn’t known. Regardless, it doesn’t seem like either is going anywhere, and extensions could be in order since the Royals enjoyed an 86-win season and a return to the playoffs last year, including a wild card series win over the Orioles.
Tigers: Likewise, Detroit is also coming off a playoff appearance and a wild card series victory, as a magical late-season surge left the Tigers just one game short of the ALCS. It is therefore safe to assume that president of baseball operations Scott Harris has plenty of job security, and while his contract terms aren’t known, it is probably safe to assume Harris received more than a three-year guarantee when he was hired in September 2022.
Twins: Some larger-scale changes could be afoot in Minnesota since the Pohlad family is exploring selling the Twins, and some shuffling in the front office has already taken place, with president of baseball ops Derek Falvey also becoming the president of business operations and Jeremy Zoll replacing Thad Levine as general manager. Falvey’s previous deal was up after the 2024 season so obviously he signed an extension, but while manager Rocco Baldelli’s previous extension is known to have run through at least the end of the 2025 campaign, it is unclear if the coming season is the final year of that deal. If Baldelli is indeed heading into a lame-duck year, the ownership situation might prevent the skipper from getting at least another season added to his deal, just so a new owner could potentially have a clean slate in evaluating things once they take over the team.
White Sox: This is more of a speculative entry, just because Chris Getz’s contract terms weren’t released when he was named Chicago’s general manager in August 2023. A GM wouldn’t normally be considered to be on the hot seat so soon after being hired, nor are immediate results expected since the White Sox are quite obviously going through a hefty rebuild. While nobody expected the Sox to contend in 2024, however, there’s a difference between just being a losing team and having a league-record 121 losses. Another embarrassment of a season might give owner Jerry Reinsdorf second thoughts about Getz’s stewardship of the rebuild effort, or the possibility exists that Reinsdorf could sell the team, which should shake the organization up entirely.
Yankees: Aaron Boone quieted some of his critics when the Yankees both returned to the postseason, and captured the first AL pennant of Boone’s seven-year stint as the Bronx manager. This result led the Yankees to exercise their club option on Boone’s services for 2025, and while no negotiations had taken place about a longer-term deal as of early November, it stands to reason that some talks will take place before Opening Day. Then again, Boone’s current deal wasn’t signed until after he’d already completed the final season his previous contract, so it could be that the Yankees will again play wait-and-see. There isn’t much sense that Boone is in jeopardy, and while expectations are always high in New York, ownership’s loyalty to Boone through some relative lean years would make it unusual if he was let go so soon after a World Series appearance.
clrrogers
Ross Atkins needs to go. It’s past time for that. He has wasted the Vladdy/Bo years by not surrounding them with enough offensive talent to win. Shapiro needs to go too, due to his reluctance to fire Atkins. Can’t blame Schneider too much. He can only put on the field what they give him to work with.
Dustyslambchops23
all true but Schneider also has made some awful mistakes. It’s best to just clean house top to bottom
Canuckleball
It’s tough to judge Schneider. We don’t know how much micromanaging is going on. It seems as though at least some of the things he’s done were at the behest of the general manager. And the GM seems to love adding more bench coaches every year to ‘help’ him.
But he has made a few obvious blunders that were clearly all him.
Dustyslambchops23
If your boss tells you to pull a starter super early in a playoff game you have always have a choice.
I always remember the line from moneyball, ‘I’m managing this team in a a way I can defend in job interviews’
So either Schneider is awful or weak, it’s one or the other, both bad qualities for a manager
Yossi Ronnen
This line was true 20 years ago. Thanks (in part) to Moneyball, the role of a manager changed and now they “collaborate” with the FO and analytics department.
Shishka
Agreed, they all should’ve been let go in October. Schneider wouldn’t get a job managing any other major league team, and he’s had enough of a chance with the Jays already.
Hank Murphy
The needs to be a massive housecleaning in Toronto.
Front office, scouting, mlb coaching staff for starters.
bestone
Yeah….its kinda obvious that shatkins doesn’t want to build a team which would be a base for the next front office to win with.
No incentive to sign anyone really.
I wonder how many deals/better ideas from the others in the team were shot down by Shapiro…time will tell.
rottenboyfriend
The Dodgers are now the old Yankees regarding crazy HIGH payrolls but the big difference is the Dodgers have won 2 World Series the past 5 years and made the playoffs 12 years in a row with 10 division championships! It’s time for Steinbrenner to clean house with the front office especially Cashman! No championships since 2009 and only one World Series appearance in the past 15 years!
SHARKmapiro
It’s funny how jays fans have been sporadically calling for “shatkins” to be fired (more when they lose, less when they win) and yet they’ve managed to keep their jobs almost as if they’ve never done as poorly as the online world is led to believe. His goals were business related and they still spent on players to try to win. The players have underachieved. So, if Shapiro is gone after this season it will not be unceremoniously. And, once he’s gone the new big cheese will fire Atkins which is why he got that extra contract year.
Dustyslambchops23
Jays farm system is bottom 5 by all major publications.
In a competitive window the jays haven’t won a play off game.
Are those just online comments?
Leave the Atkins fangirling in 24
damhikt
The calls have been fairly consistent that Atkins has to go these days. The calls for shatkins have lessened considerably in recent years due to Shapiros focus on stadium improvements. Schneider.
NYCityRiddler
Shapiro & Atkins, this fool & clown show should’ve been canceled years ago. Ahahahaha!
17dizzy
Jed Hoyer will make the playoffs with the Cubs in 2025.
If the Cardinals keep Nolan Arenado, they will claim the last NL Wild Card spot for 2025.
Without him, they’ll miss the playoffs for their 3rd straight year.
friesTO
For Jays fans watching nothing for 9 years under Shapiro/Atkins has been astoundingly bad. Full front office rebuild is necessary to start over. They squandered the Vlad/Bo years that ship has sailed.
Atkins is extended but Shapiro is not so this is a great opportunity to get rid of them both. Schneider is just a team player, not much he can do. He hasn’t been perfect but I wouldn’t pin our woes on him. However a new direction would likely see a new manager as is the way with things.
There are just as many holes in the front office as the field, need new assistants, new scouting, new player development, etc. We need MLB level administration not AA or AAA. We can’t field a MLB team because we’re internally are not a MLB organization
Aiming for 15th place would be an upgrade
17dizzy
When the Cardinal’s Owners annually place a contending team on the field, The Cardinals Fans turn out in record numbers to the tune of 3 million plus … fans in the stands yearly!!
Owners can’t keep playing the Poor Card!!
It’s misspent funds by John Mozeliak which has caused the problems over the past 8 years.
However —- Fans disgust with John Mozeliak’s own admission of his lack of caring and lack of effort to place a contending team on the field after the 2024 All-Star game caused the fans to completely quit coming to games.
Instead of the Owners allowing Mozeliak to throw the 2025 season in the Dumpster —-
John Mozeliak should have been thrown in the Dumpster by the Owners and the 3 million Plus Fans would definitely —- instantly return!!!
Laseball Biker
Yanks better not extend Boone…
Lars MacDonald
It’s almost guaranteed that they’ll extend him.
It’s very frustrating.
17dizzy
You ought to have Oil Marmol as your favorite team’s manager.
Cardinals Fans would love to have Boone, no matter how bad he is, over Marmol !!!!
Want to trade???
Acoss1331
Boone’s not going anywhere, Cashman loves the guy. Boone isn’t a manager, he’s buddy buddy with the players.
178iq
Take boon out behind the barn. Or dump boon in the river.
KnicksFanCavsFan
@Acoss @178
So fire a manager that has had 5 out of 6 sessions with 92 end or better Ave³
KnicksFanCavsFan
@Acoss @178
So fire a manager that has had 5 out of 6 seasons with 92 wins or better , including 3 seasons with 98+ win. A guy who you know can handle the NY media? and bring in who? Someone who is an unknown and may not jel within the organization?
Acoss1331
Boone is an extremely frustrating manager, I’ve been following the Yankees because of Rizzo being on the team, and the White Sox being unwatchable. Ask the Yankees fans on here, Yankee Clipper, Joe, and YankeeBleacherCreature.
RynoScoobs
it’s mostly frustrating because you never actually know what he’s thinking most of the time. His default reaction is to deflect and obfuscate with contradicting statements, and then downplay things that are obvious errors.
I’ve wondered as a fan for a long time if that was the public face, and the clubhouse culture was different. As in, maybe he would have serious talks with the guys off-camera and crack down, but then play goober for the cameras. But after the World Series, and the leaked Dodgers scouting report, it was just laid bare that the things we were saying were the same things the rest of the league was seeing, and made them pay.
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
Boone just led the team to a World Series he deserves more chances
But if the Yankees have 2023 again then he needs to go
TheMan 3
5 years as the Pirates GM and they’re just as bad now as they were when he was first hired
With Skenes, Keller and Jones in the rotation, Oveido returning from TJ surgery and a few top pitching prospects ready to make their major league debut, Cherington has done nothing of significance to improve the offense for next year
By February, he will be scouring the waiver wire for the next has been to fill the roster
Being a competitive team is just a fantasy for this team
Canuckleball
But how much of that is on Cherington and how much is the owner not giving him any money to spend? It’s not possible to develop an entire roster of young cheap players that can win a title. There have to be at least a few costly free agents/trade acquisitions.
It’s tough to go out and get good players when the owner pretends he’s poor.
TheMan 3
position player development has been horrible under Cherington’s leadership so he fired the entire staff placing blame on them despite the fact that he was in charge of their work.
He’s also made bad trades and those players he received were in the budget restraints.
Yes the owner is cheap but the management hasn’t been much better
letitbelowenstein
Cherington should be sending half of his pay to Koji Uehara and Shane Victorino. Without them, Cherington would not be a major league GM today. Ben lucked out with those K-Mart grade signings in 2012-13.
panj341
Unfortunately he is apparently not judged by the team’s performance, only by how much money he saves Nutting.
Acoss1331
Hoyer has been active this offseason, last offseason as well, but the man needs to bolster that Cubs bullpen if he wants to make the playoffs…
citizen
Hoyer can’t judge talent.
Unclemike1526
Hoyer has no idea how manage a team within the Luxury Tax. Sorry but if that’s the way Ricketts wants it he has to let Hoyer go. Hoyer always has one or more contracts at least that completely limit what they can do. He has no idea of how to use a farm system. He has no idea of how to make them work together. Basically he has no idea period. I was actually amazed they let PCA find his way in the Majors. They have prospects who need to be playing in the Majors now. Because of a dumb trade for 1 year of a guy, They have to let Shaw play. If they send him right back down it’ll be another mistake. Now they HAVE to let him sink or swim. It’s just comical.
Led Hoyer
Hoyer spends lots of money he just spreads it around on mediocre talent instead of impact players. He painted himself into a corner this year. If he doesn’t sign some real bullpen arms and extend Tucker this will be another flop of an off-season. No clue how they weren’t in on Burnes/Fried or snell either.
Acoss1331
He refuses to sign any quality bullpen arms. Reclamation projects are fine, but signing a proven arm would go a long way.
rememberthecoop
They desperately need a closer but Jed stubbornly refuses to admit to that. So it’s inevitable that the team will blow late leads again and those really take the heart out of a ballclub. And no way they extend Tucker.
kgcubs
Aloha Across, agreed. And Hoyer can’t use the excuse he’s tied up because of ownership. He’s had opportunities to be creative like the Braves in acquiring talent from other teams, then extending them to affordable contracts. I give him credit in helping along the farm system but I hope he walks away after this next season. Mahalo!
LaBellaVita
As a Rays fan, the post about NYY warms my heart. May the YFO give Boone a long extension.
RunDMC
FWIW, there’s been some speculation that Snitker would retire at the end of his contract (following 2025 season), in which he’d turn 70 y/o. It should also be noted that the 2025 season will be his 48th year with the franchise in which he signed a free agent contract with in ’77, then transitioned to instructor/coaching roles after. He’s said recently that he feels no pressure or desire to stay on until 50, which would be through the 2027 season.
FanDan
AJ Preller’s contract expires after 2026. If they don’t make the playoffs this year, Padres pull the plug with a year left and try something else.
citizen
wow. only 19 out of 30 teams have managers or gm on the last year of their contract.
Flyby
“There isn’t much sense that Boone is in jeopardy, and while expectations are always high in New York, ownership’s loyalty to Boone through some relative lean years would make it unusual if he was let go so soon after a World Series appearance.”
didnt they let girardi go when he was one win away from the world series? This team loves boone though so doubt they would let him go unless they get a 100 loss season.
YankeesBleacherCreature
Girardi lost the clubhouse. It appeared like he was getting a root canal and became abrasive during every post-game interview after a tough loss. He also stopped defending his players in the press. He needed to go.
Boone should be grateful he has Matt Blake.
RynoScoobs
If only we could get a hitting coach version of Matt Blake…
ohyeadam
I like Falvey but am torn on Rocco. Don’t know anything about Zoll that replaced Levine, who I also thought was good. Twins have built a young competitive controlled team.
Dreaming of a new Cohenesque owner, or anyone who doesn’t slash payroll when the team is competitive. Hopefully they at least keep Falvey around
178iq
Dump boon in the river. Or take him out behind the barn.
desertbull
How is $213 million a limited payroll for the Cubs? The payroll is not the problem. The players that they are giving the $213 million to are not good enough
CarverAndrews
An excellent thread for the Everyman to show how much smarter they are than the folks that are hired to run and manage their professional baseball teams.
Lindor's Bodyguard
You’re talking about UncleMike, among others. Mike’s brilliance is unrivaled in the mlbtr comments.
CarverAndrews
Please do not ascribe any names to my comment. Frankly, there are so many that do this on so many threads that it is pointless to call anyone out in particular.
The only names that I manage to pay attention to are the routinely solid posters that have something to say, and then usually say it well. It is a rather small group.
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
I can’t see dipoto leaving
If he was a good GM he would’ve been hired by a big market team already, but no other owners need a yes-man like dipoto
Just gotta keep selling the product and the fans will always come even if we never do anything in the playoffs
Canuckleball
This is another case where the financial constraints are likely hampering what Dipoto can do.
It’s probably really tough to attract good quality offensive talent to play in Seattle’s pitcher friendly park without overpaying, and they can’t afford to overpay.
Not saying he’s been perfect, but I like a lot of the moves he’s made, within the financial limits that have been placed on him.
TheHighCheese4Me
The constraints are limited to keeping them in contention for the “most profitable team in the league” title. If that miraculously happens to coincide with a better than expected win%, great!
Ownership has ZERO aspirations of winning the WS.
Until that changes, Jerry and crew are safe to keep developing pitchers and watching the inept offense lose games.
So many lies from the FO. And gullible fans keep buying it.
Chester Copperpot
Many of those financial constraints come from Jerry himself. No one forced him to trade for Haniger’s bloated contract. No one forced him to sign Evan White to a $24M deal before he ever saw a major league inning. No one forced him to give Juan Nicasio $17M for 42 IP of 6.00 ERA baseball. No one forced him to sign Robbie Ray, Mitch Garver, AJ Pollack… etc, etc.
good vibes only
The financial constraints are not from Jerry. This team in this market, in this competitive window should have a higher budget. But you are correct he spends what money he does have quite poorly. It’s always $7M here $12M there for spare parts turds.
IsIt2025Already?
Sounds like Cherington with a little more money available.
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
I agree that if Jerry had more resources of course our team would be better but he’s made a lot of bad moves (i.e. winker, Frazier, Wong, polanco, list goes on)
Like I said before if he was like David Stearns where he succeeds with less money then he would’ve been hired by a big and better team
Unrelated but Dave sims won a broadcasting award, and as a result got hired by the Yankees because he is a good announcer
Chester Copperpot
THE financial constraints aren’t from Jerry, but he’s not good with what he does have. If he were to have more finances, shouldn’t we just expect more expensive mistakes? Or do we think he would start landing better players? I don’t know, I’m just frustrated I guess.
martevious
The financial constraints are bogus
tim 14
Cardinals: John Mozeliak’s exit plan is already in place. The longtime head of the St. Louis front office is stepping down after the 2025 season, with Chaim Bloom already inked to a long-term contract to become the Cardinals’ next president of baseball operations.
Please Hurry !
SadMsFan
Well, the Mariners are going to fall short of the postseason. They have a pathetic roster. It’s going to be easy to pitch to them. And for the Astros, Jim Crane has advisors and he still tr aded Tucker? What the ****!!!
Ignorant Son-of-a-b
I’m glad you can predict the future. Can I have tonight’s Lotto numbers?
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
AL west can be the worst divison this season
Astros retooling and have passed their last dance which was 2024
Rangers banking on guys coming off TJ to be great
Mariners hoping all their players get good again going all internal options
Angels always lose
Athletics are young and upbeat but still unproven
martevious
Yes, the Mariner’s will fall short of the post-season. They’ve done absolutely zero to improve a terrible offense. The great pitching staff is being wasted.
I’m about to switch allegiance to a team that actually has the goal of going to the World Series.
letitbelowenstein
This is Brandon Hyde’s sink-or-swim year. He doesn’t necessarily have to win the World Series, but if he gets another quick boot in the first round of the playoffs again, I figure it’s 90% certain he’s gone.
sad tormented neglected mariners fan
The players love Hyde so if he does well in the regular season the playoff result doesn’t really matter
However if the orioles have a surprise bad season…
Bnickles127
“It remains to be seen if ownership is okay with just being competitive (or, as Dipoto infamously put it, winning “54 percent of the time“) or if any impatience is growing over the Mariners’ difficulty in truly breaking through as a contender.”
Obviously they are okay with it, if they wanted to be a contender they would make an investment in the team and take a gamble to increase their beloved profits exponentially
This one belongs to the Reds
Then there are contracts that should have already expired…
nacb55
I think Friedman probably got an extension when signing Ohtani as there is that weird clause that allows him to opt out of the contract if Friedman were to leave so I’d say he is easily at least on another 5-6 year deal if not longer.
I doubt the Dodgers would care if Ohtani were to leave in 7-8 years because of Friedman leaving probably not sooner though.
Pads Fans
You know who is not on that list of lame duck execs? AJ Preller.
IsIt2025Already?
Cherington needs fired. He’s wasting the window with Skenes with this offense.
panj341
No incentive to win, only to make more money for the owner, Nutting.
YankeesBleacherCreature
That’s a Nutting problem.
IsIt2025Already?
Nutting isn’t the one who can’t develop hitters. Cherington had 5 years of drafts and trades to get there and the best he’s come up with is Joey Bart so far (1.3 fWAR after SF gave up on him)
bob9988 2
It was already reported by the Seattle Times that Jerry was extended last Aug. What isn’t known is if its for just ’25 or longer. Or if its just ’25 with a team option.
Teamspirit
Ron Washington is the best hire the Angels’ have made in years. Seems like Perry has found someone he can work with harmoniously. Now, if the personnel can stay healthy (a weak spot in the organization), and the new guys can come through, we might have a season.
good vibes only
Jerry Dipoto will keep this job until he retires. Guarantee it. He’s doing exactly what the ownership wants him to do:
-develop a pipeline of cheap controllable talent
-be just good enough to put butts in seats
-take John Stanton’s beatings for him in the media
-PROFIT
Jerry is not perfect by a long shot but it’s very unlikely a wanker like John Stanton could find anybody better. If they let him go Stanton would probably just promote some random unqualified person from within, no job search or anything.
Ignorant Son-of-a-b
@goodvibes Jerry is a professional with ambition who would like to succeed. He is not going to allow himself to be hamstrung by Stanton until retirement age. I would think Stanton/ownership have two strikes against them in his mind and if he is not allowed to build up the roster adequately enough and thus Mariners miss the playoffs for a third year in a row…then he’s walking. (Or at that point Stanton just fires him anyway.) And that would be a shame, because I think Jerry has done an excellent job given the tight parameters and meager Financials he has to work with.
good vibes only
I absolutely do not think Stanton will fire him unless the team tanks and profits are majorly impacted by ticket sales/attendance issues. If they win 85 games again and miss the playoffs he won’t lose his job.
There’s not going to be any GM openings at the big market clubs after this year. I think he likes the hands off nature of Stanton compared to Arte Moreno.
I do think he’s done an excellent job at building the organization from the ground up with talent and cutting edge analytics and development, but he (or maybe just the people in his org) are terrible at assessing major league talent. His signings are pretty bad, including his biggest one of all, the mind boggling Robbie Ray contract.
Do you really think he’d walk if they don’t succeed this year? I kinda think he enjoys being allowed to build a death star of home grown prospect talent without being bothered by ownership.
Teamspirit
DiPoto is not going to walk. Where would he go? He’s a GM, not that many jobs out there. I agree that he is doing what he can to keep owners satisfied, and he has bad track record on good hires.
jhanley108
The NL Central has become the weakest division and the Cubs could squeeze in the playoffs saving Epstein’s coffee boys job. But not bloody likely.
barrelup
Dipoto and his crew know what side their bread is buttered on and I fully expect an extension. He has become the willing (other than not really facing the media this winter after the season) ballwasher for ownership and a full-on yes man for our dirtball owners. 1 playoff appearance and at least 3 harassment settlements for these owners in the past two+ decades.
Astros_fan_in_Aus
Well, the first bit of baseball news I read in 2025 is a reminder that Dana Brown may be in his last year of his contract. Perhaps Crane will realise that hiring him was a mistake and get us a real GM.
Hank Murphy
The Blue Jays are in dire need of an organizational enema.
The Cleveland Clowns and the whole mlb coaching staff need to go.
Dunno
“I am as disappointed as any fan we have that this team hasn’t been in the playoffs in two years,” Stanton said. “I believe we’re making progress. I can certainly understand why fans are frustrated when they hear me say that, but I believe that we are on track to have a team that consistently wins over a long period of time. I intend this team to win, have a winning record every season, be in the playoffs most seasons, and we will win a World Series.” John Stanton – Oct 2024.
Stanton is a lying sack of manure. He has shown that he won’t spend a penny more than he has to.. His primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary goals are to lead the league in profit. Off season free agent spending? The grand total zero. Sell the team already to someone who wants to win and be done with it!!!
martevious
Exactly! The M’s have plenty of money, they just don’t want to spend it. They need new ownership.
PrincessYuki
Dipoto is definitely being extended. 4 straight winning seasons. A young team that’s only going to get better that would have made the playoffs in 2024 if Julio and Crawford had remained healthy. I really look forward to what the Mariners can do in 2025. They are definitely the team to watch and the team that every free agent should want to go to.
Samuel
Every FA wants to go there?
LOL
What a depressing place to play half a season of the summer game.
It does seem an attractive option for veteran bullpen pitchers coming off of a season or three of poor performance. They can play in that pitchers park for a year, put up some numbers, and then get a nice contract from teams that don’t have the scouting/acquisition and coaching staffs to develop their own bullpenners that work for reasonable salaries. I’d say at least half of MLB organizations fir that criteria.
Dunno
We can all see the free agents clamoring to join the Mariners. by all those big contracts signed this offseason. Oops, wait, the grand total spent on free agents so far is this off season is $0.00, a mere 917.25 million less than the Mets.
If you consider a team with the 29th ranked offense a team to watch, then you must enjoy watching a bunch of really low scoring games. The problem there is that there is such slim margin of error there as we have seen the past two seasons.
alumofuf
Don’t bring back Boone or Cashman. Time to bring in new people regardless of what they accomplish
Limited Budgets
“more experience in building contenders on limited budgets”
Cubs are one of the profitable teams in the league – for them to budget like a small-mid market with low fan base is ridiculous.