
5 former players are running baseball operations in the majors. More could be on the way
PEORIA, Ariz. — Shortly after his playing career ended, Jerry Dipoto took in a game at Wrigley Field with former big league manager Jim Fregosi. After a particularly nasty strikeout by Eric Gagne, Dipoto laughed.
Fregosi promptly slapped Dipoto on the back of his head.
'He said, 'I'm just going to remind you today. ... Don't ever forget how hard that it is to play,'' Dipoto recalled. 'And that's what I think is the thing I remember most, and I think the benefit of the guys who have gone through it, is that they recognize that it is a really hard game.'
That lesson stayed with Dipoto as he made his way to his current job with the Seattle Mariners — and membership in an exclusive club. Dipoto is one of five former major leaguers serving as the top baseball executive for a big league franchise at the moment.
Dipoto, 56, has been the president of baseball operations for Seattle since Sept. 1, 2021. Like Dipoto, Chris Young, 45, was promoted from general manager to president of baseball operations for the Texas Rangers on Sept. 13. Craig Breslow was hired as the chief baseball officer for the Boston Red Sox on Oct. 25, 2023, and Chris Getz was promoted to GM of the Chicago White Sox on Aug. 31, 2023.
Buster Posey, 37, joined the list when the former All-Star catcher was hired as president of baseball operations for the San Francisco Giants in September.
'There are a ton of incredibly successful executives who didn't play baseball,' said Breslow, 44. 'I don't think it's a prerequisite, but I do think it provides a level of credibility and empathy given I've kind of been on every side of a transaction, or every side of a conversation I've had to have with a player or coach. And credibility in terms of really being able to understand what players are thinking about, what they're going through.'
Under Breslow's leadership, Boston used a complicated contract structure to add Alex Bregman in free agency. Bregman also was being pursued by the Cubs and Tigers before he agreed to a three-year, $120 million deal with the Red Sox.
San Francisco had been struggling to land a major free agent before shortstop Willy Adames agreed to a seven-year, $182 million contract with the Giants in December. Adames said Posey played a major role in his decision.
'My meeting with the team, it was me and him, basically. No agent. Nobody,' Adames said. 'So we had a really, really good conversation, and I bought into his plan for this organization, for what he wants to build here in the near future.'
Breslow has a degree from Yale and Young graduated from Princeton, so the five players in charge of major league teams doesn't exactly represent some sort of counterrevolution when it comes to Ivy League grads in baseball.
But today's major leaguers are increasingly savvy when it comes to the business side of the game, and they have firsthand experience with the data used by front offices as part of their decision-making process.
'Where we were a decade ago to where we are now, there's just so much opportunity to make better decisions nowadays based on the information that we have,' said Getz, 41. 'But being well-versed in it now, you know having a former playing background is only going to position you, your résumé is just stronger.'
While that big league career is an asset in a variety of ways, it also creates a unique set of blind spots. Building out a front office that complements one another is key, Dipoto said.
'I learned to adapt along the way to things I didn't know and to trust people who are smarter than I am to fill in those gaps,' he said, 'and to recognize when I'm allowing my want to be a good teammate and my want to love the good teammate, sometimes, you have be able to discern when that doesn't equal best player fit for this situation.'
There are several more people in position to join the club one day. Brandon Gomes helped the Los Angeles Dodgers win the World Series last year, serving as the team's GM under Andrew Friedman. Ryan Garko was promoted to assistant GM with the Detroit Tigers in May. Cole Figueroa is an assistant GM for the Rangers.
Kevin Reese and Tim Naehring work for longtime New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman, and Josh Barfield is part of Getz's front office with the White Sox.
When it comes to his discussions with players interested in working in baseball operations, Breslow said the conversations provide an indication of the potential for success.
'It becomes pretty clear, generally who has the curiosity, who asks a lot of questions,' he said. 'Who wants to learn why we make decisions not just what decisions are being made. Those are the people (that could make the transition).'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC Sports
23 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
Was Dolan or Rose behind Thibodeau's firing?
Tim MacMahon joins Dan Patrick to preview the 2025 NBA Finals between the Pacers and Thunder, analyze the reasons why the Knicks fired Tom Thibodeau, share his thoughts on Adam Silver's new All-Star Game format and more.


WIRED
33 minutes ago
- WIRED
Palantir Is Going on Defense
Jun 5, 2025 3:22 PM Palantir threatened to call police on a WIRED reporter and kicked out other journalists from a recent conference following reports of the data analytics firm's work with the Trump administration. Palantir headquarters in Palo Alto, California. Photograph: DavidPalantir, facing mounting public scrutiny for its work with the Trump administration, took an increasingly defensive stance toward journalists and perceived critics this week, both at a defense conference in Washington DC and on social media. On Tuesday, a Palantir employee threatened to call the police on a WIRED journalist who was watching software demonstrations at its booth at AI+ Expo. The conference, which is hosted by the Special Competitive Studies Project, a think tank founded by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, is free and open to the public, including journalists. Later that day, Palantir had conference security remove at least three other journalists—Jack Poulson, writer of the All-Source Intelligence Substack; Max Blumenthal, who writes and publishes The Grayzone; and Jessica Le Masurier, a reporter at France 24—from the conference hall, Poulson says. The reporters were later able to re-enter the hall, Poulson adds. The move came after Palantir spokespeople began publicly condemning a recent New York Times report titled 'Trump Taps Palantir to Compile Data on Americans' published on May 30. WIRED previously reported that Elon Musk's so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was building a master database to surveil and track immigrants. WIRED has also reported that the company was helping DOGE with an IRS data project, collaborating to build a 'mega-API.' The public criticism from Palantir is unusual, as the company does not typically issue statements pushing back on individual news stories. Prior to being kicked out of Palantir's booth, the WIRED journalist, who is also the author of this article, was taking photos, videos, and written notes during software demos of Palantir FedStart partners, which use the company's cloud systems to get certified for government work. The booth's walls had phrases like 'REAWAKEN THE GIANT' and 'DON'T GIVE UP THE SHIP!' printed on the outside. When the reporter briefly stepped away from the booth and attempted to re-enter, she was stopped by Eliano Younes, Palantir's head of strategic engagement, who said that WIRED was not allowed to be there. The reporter asked why, and Younes repeated himself, adding that if WIRED tried to return, he would call the police. After the conference ended, Younes responded to a photo from the conference that the reporter posted on X. 'hey caroline, great seeing you at the expo yesterday,' he wrote. 'can't wait to read your coverage of the event.' Palantir did not respond to WIRED's request for comment. Poulson tells WIRED that he, Blumenthal, and Le Masurier were also watching demos at Palantir's booth prior to being kicked out. After a Tuesday panel with Younes and Palantir engineer Ryan Fox, Poulson says Le Masurier approached Younes near Palantir's booth and asked about the company's work for Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. A Palantir employee stepped between them and claimed that Palantir had asked her to leave 'multiple times,' according to a video of the interaction viewed by WIRED, and she was escorted out of the conference hall shortly after. 'Apparently, Palantir was so annoyed that they not only kicked her out, but demanded that Max and I be kicked out as well,' Poulson says. "So the security guards came and got us." The group was allowed back inside the conference hall after explaining their situation to friendly security guards, Poulson says. The guards asked them to respect any requests from attendees to stop filming. Some conference organizers appeared to be on high alert after a pro-Palestine demonstrator interrupted a panel with Palantir's head of defense, Mike Gallagher, on Monday. The demonstrator was subsequently ejected from the conference, Poulson reported. A handful of pro-Palestine activists were also thrown out on Tuesday after disrupting a panel with Eric Schmidt and Thom Shanker, a former Pentagon reporter at the New York Times. (Palantir formed a partnership with the Israeli military in January 2024, and Google is part of a $1.2 billion cloud contract with the Israeli government.) Poulson tells WIRED that on Wednesday, the conference began mandatory bag-checks for every attendee. During Younes' Tuesday panel with fellow Palantir employee Fox, which was focused on what the two men do at Palantir and why they like working there, Younes made passing references to perceived critics of the company. When talking about the reasons he joined Palantir, he said, 'I was sick and tired of people with bad intentions,' Younes said, 'many of them who are actually here.' He later added that he's a 'big believer' in the views of Palantir's cofounders, particularly those of CEO Alex Karp. (Karp is known for his nonapologetic stance toward Palantir's work with military and defense agencies and immigration authorities.) 'Playing a role in helping them, to prove the doubters and the haters wrong, that just feels really good,' Younes said. On Tuesday, Palantir posted on X claiming the Times article was 'blatantly untrue' and said that the company 'never collects data to unlawfully surveil Americans.' The Times article did not claim that Palantir buys or collects its own data, though it's a common misconception that the company does so. The New York Times did not immediately respond to a request for comment by WIRED. On Wednesday, Palantir's official X account continued posting about the Times article on X. 'Want to meet Dr. Karp?' the post read. 'In 90 seconds, identify the technical errors in this article. DM us a video in the next 24 hours - whoever finds the most inaccuracies gets an interview with him.'


Washington Post
40 minutes ago
- Washington Post
The Knicks fired coach ‘Thibs.' That's just wrong.
I know there are many bigger outrages in the world, but today I would like to share with you the frustration that gnaws at me as a fan of the New York Knicks following the firing on Tuesday of our gruff but beloved — and widely respected — head coach, Tom Thibodeau. 'Thibs,' as he is universally known to the Knickerbocker faithful, had just taken the team to its first Eastern Conference finals in a quarter-century. Sure, they lost to the Indiana Pacers in six games, and that was deeply disappointing — particularly after a historic Game 1 meltdown in which the Knicks somehow blew a 14-point lead with less than three minutes to go. But in the previous round, the Knicks had knocked off the defending champions, the Boston Celtics, and that was a result almost no one saw coming. (The Knicks had not beaten the Celtics once during the regular season.) The Knicks were on a good trajectory — and worlds removed from the chaos and mediocrity in which they had been mired when Thibs was hired in 2020. Since Jeff Van Gundy stepped down in 2002, the Knicks have had 13 head coaches. Only two of them have delivered winning records, and none could match Thibs's postseason success: He has taken them to the playoffs in four out of five seasons. This year's roster was the best Thibs ever had, anchored by two All-Stars: the clutch point guard Jalen Brunson and the sweet-shooting big man Karl-Anthony Towns. But Towns had been traded to New York just before the start of the season, while another key player, center Mitchell Robinson, was injured for most of the season. It often takes a team time to jell, and the Knicks appeared to find a new level in the playoffs. There was every reason to give Thibs an opportunity try to build on the Knicks' success next season. But no. After helping to turn Madison Square Garden once again into the mecca of the hardcourt, Thibs has been sent packing. The decision was said to be made by team president Leon Rose, but looming in the background is the Knicks' mercurial owner, James Dolan, who has been blamed by fans for their long years of suffering. To me, this seems to violate the fundamental compact of sports: You win and you get rewarded; you lose and you get punished. Thibs won — and he was punished just the same. Granted, he didn't 'win the chip,' short for championship. No Knicks team has since 1973, but they were heading in the right direction, with a talented roster and a veteran, skilled coach to lead them. Notably, Thibs appeared to have a rock-solid relationship with Brunson, the team captain. There were, of course, complaints about Thibs. There always are with any coach — or any human being, for that matter. He was often criticized for playing his starters too many minutes and wearing them down by playoff time. But, despite their heavy usage, all of the Knicks starters were healthy in the playoffs. Another complaint was that Thibs was inflexible in his rotations, that he stuck with his five starters no matter what, despite evidence that the starters were getting outscored when on the floor together. It's a legitimate criticism, but part of the problem was the lack of bench depth. Knicks management dealt away key role players to assemble a fearsome five led by Brunson and Towns. It would be instructive to see how Thibs would do next season if team president Rose, who has done a superb job so far of upgrading the roster, managed to restock the team with better role players. Now we will never know. Instead a new head coach will be tasked with meeting the high standards set by Thibs — which include back-to-back seasons with more than 50 wins for the first time since the Pat Riley era in the 1990s. Thibs's firing, unfortunately, is part of a bizarre trend in the NBA of getting rid of successful, experienced head coaches. Every winner of the NBA Coach of the Year award between 2018 and 2023 has been fired. That includes Thibs, who earned the honor with the Knicks in 2021. (He had previously won it in 2011 with the Chicago Bulls.) Even coaches who win the title aren't safe: Los Angeles Lakers coach Frank Vogel won in 2020 and was fired in 2022. Milwaukee Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer won in 2021 and was fired in 2023. Denver Nuggets coach Michael Malone won in 2023 and was fired in April, before the end of the regular season. All three are now considered contenders for the Knicks job. The holy grail that all these teams are chasing is what the Golden State Warriors did in 2014: They fired a winning head coach, Mark Jackson, and replaced him with Steve Kerr, who went on to win even more: Kerr led the team to three titles. But for every Jackson-to-Kerr switch, there are plenty of changes such as the one when the Bulls got rid of Thibs in 2015 and replaced him with Fred Hoiberg. Thibs had a winning percentage of .647; Hoiberg, .426. I remain enthusiastic about a Knicks team that has become one of the best in the league. I just hope Rose and Dolan know what they are doing. Because what they have done to Thibodeau feels wrong. All will be forgiven if Thibs's successor brings home a title — but there will be hell to pay if the new coach squanders what he built.