DENVER -- The Rockies absorbed a road sweep at Texas in the first three games that Warren Schaeffer worked as interim manager for the Rockies after replacing Bud Black. But Schaeffer established a tone that is speaking much louder this offseason. In the first two games -- winnable but resulting in 2-1 and 4-1 defeats -- Schaeffer didn’t wait until the very end to use his bench. Substitutes Sean Bouchard and Kyle Farmer each had two plate appearances in the first game, and Bouchard and Owen Miller entered for two plate appearances (Farmer made one plate appearance) in the second game. Even in the 8-3 loss in the final game, Farmer and Mickey Moniak had multiple plate appearances. Of course, the 43-119 Rockies possessed neither the frontline players nor the depth to succeed no matter how the lineup was deployed. But Schaeffer, whom president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta named full-time manager in November, will continue the aggression in 2026. The new front office has set out to give Schaeffer a deeper roster by trading with the Diamondbacks for speedy, left-handed-hitting outfielder Jake McCarthy and signing multi-position switch-hitter Willi Castro, an All-Star in 2024, for two years and $12.8 million. |
In a strict depth chart sense, these additions can be criticized as repeats of guys on the roster. McCarthy arrives when there is already speed in center fielder Brenton Doyle and left-handed hitting in Mickey Moniak, who is coming off a career year. Castro can play infield and outfield, but so can right-handed-hitting Tyler Freeman, who offers leadoff skills similar to McCarthy's. But Schaeffer has no plans to manage by strict depth chart, or be tied to his starting lineup. The more options there are -- especially when there is balance of left- and right-handed hitting -- the more he can scratch and write in names on his lineup card during a game. “You’re looking for the high-leverage situations and trying to create as much leverage as you can,” Schaeffer said. “If there’s a situation in the fourth inning where we have runners at second and third, and there is a pitching change where we have a bad matchup and can use a better one for two big runs, we’re definitely considering doing that. “You need to take advantage of what’s given to you on a daily basis. You have to be ready to do that. We’re looking to win every night. If that’s in your brain and if there is an opportunity in the fourth inning to get this win tonight, you look at it.” |
The roster still needs work. The Rockies, overly right-handed in the past, prefer a left-handed hitter at first base. Club officials decline to identify targets, beyond acknowledging that they are open to roster and non-roster signings to increase depth. However, industry sources say Luis Arraez, who would give a strikeout prone team elite bat-to-ball skills, is under consideration. Nathaniel Lowe, who has more power than Arraez and was a Gold Glove winner in 2023, and Dominic Smith, who had a .750 OPS in 63 games with the Giants last year, could be fits. (From a starting pitching standpoint, the Rockies have signed free-agent Michael Lorenzen and believe they can add another through free agency or a trade.) For a better idea of Schaeffer’s approach, consider the Tigers. Manager A.J. Hinch (whose managerial career began a few years back under new Rockies general manager Josh Byrnes) had the tough conversations with players who had legitimate arguments for playing all the time, and fostered enough buy-in to produce postseason trips the last two seasons. “I admire A.J. Hinch,” Schaeffer said last season when discussing how he wanted to use his roster. “He’s forward-thinking in the way he operates immediately.” |
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MLB MORNING LINEUP PODCAST |
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As last season ended, callups Blaine Crim, Ryan Ritter and Kyle Karros were starters at, respectively, first base, second base and third base, and Yanquiel Fernández was part of the right-field mix. During last season, outfielder Zac Veen (Rockies No. 11 prospect) received his first Major League trial, and second baseman Adael Amador bounced between the Majors and Triple-A Albuquerque. Among those in line to debut this year are first baseman Charlie Condon (MLB Pipeline No. 70 prospect/Rockies No. 2), second baseman Roc Riggio (No. 10) and outfielders Cole Carrigg (No. 3) and Sterlin Thompson (No. 15). But if the new acquisitions continue as the Rockies expect, the goal is to use those players when they are ready and when the Rockies want to -- rather than have to, as in previous years. The Rockies won’t abandon their prospects. If they aren’t ready at the start of the season, it doesn’t mean they won’t show up during the season. “It puts them in competition mode for Spring Training -- may the best man win,” Schaeffer said. “That’s Paul DePodesta’s goal and Josh Byrnes’ goal -- to promote guys when they’ve earned it and when they’re ready to come up. We need to have depth and flexibility to do that.” |
SHIFTING THE MINDSET IN ’26 |
My MLB.com colleague Manny Randhawa contributed this item: Hunter Goodman was candid. Speaking to the media at Rockies Fest this past Saturday, the 26-year-old catcher was asked what he’d like to see change after 119 losses in 2025. |
“Last year, we had a super young team, me included,” said Goodman, an All-Star and Silver Slugger Award winner last season before being named among the game’s top 100 players by MLB Network. “When I was first called up, you’re just happy to be here. And you can’t play like that. “You’ve got to walk on the field and be like, ‘We’re the best team.’ You’ve got to walk on the field with a different level of confidence.” Along with a new front-office regime led by DePodesta, there appears to be a shift in mindset emerging with returning players who never want to experience another campaign like that again. But rather than putting 2025 out of mind, Goodman said he’ll use it as fuel. “I don’t want to forget about it,” he said. “I think it kind of lights a fire under you.” |
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