Monfort said much of this will hinge on ideas of the new leadership, be it one person or a small team that operates under the supervision of Dick and Walker Monfort. The key, Walker said, is that the Monforts plan to trust their hire to foster change.
The focus is on putting leadership in place before making decisions on staff, such as the team’s manager. Warren Schaeffer was promoted from third-base coach to interim manager after the club relieved Bud Black of his duties on May 11. Schaeffer received positive reviews from players.
From conversations with various Rockies baseball officials since the end of the regular season, some principles have emerged:
• No matter who is in charge, an unending factor is the reluctance of big-name pitchers to sign with Colorado during their prime years, and the inflated cost that anyone who would entertain the club would demand. Efforts to develop pitching will continue but will need new eyes.
New baseball leadership will be tasked with finding innovative ways to develop pitchers who are either drafted and signed or acquired from other clubs. The Rockies need a refresh after 2025 starters posted a 6.65 ERA -- the highest in MLB since ERA became an official stat in 1913.
• In an issue related to pitching -- but just as much to every area of the club at every level -- new leadership will be charged with helping the Rockies catch up with other clubs (especially successful small-to-mid-market clubs) in gathering and using information.
The team has made small increases in the number of employees in one of the game’s smallest analytics groups. The opening of a performance lab in Scottsdale, Ariz., before the 2024 season has helped, and the team has made steps in the use of biomechanics as a tool to help players. But information-gathering for the Major League clubs and all of the affiliates lags behind others, as do staffing levels in game-planning, coaching and information-gathering.
• Are there innovative ways of scouting, whether for the Draft or to acquire players from other organizations? Can the Rockies develop ideas of what works for them and find those players economically?