The Rangers and Angels each have new managers in place for 2026, but that still leaves seven other teams looking for a new dugout leader. Amidst all of the recent news and rumors about all of these simultaneously ongoing managerial searches, there hasn’t been much out of Atlanta, which is by design. The Braves generally operate with more secrecy than most clubs, and as president of baseball operations Alex Anthopoulos told reporters during his year-end press conference, “if we do our job the way I want us to do it, you guys won’t have anything” on his club’s hunt for a new skipper.
A few details have emerged from MLB.com’s Mark Bowman, though more in regards to some speculated names that can perhaps be removed from consideration. Bowman hears from a source that former Blue Jays manager John Gibbons isn’t a candidate, and that “there has been no indication” that former Cubs manager David Ross or MLB Network and former player Mark DeRosa are being eyed for the manager’s job.
A follow-up message from Bowman on X specified that Gibbons, Ross, and DeRosa were the names he felt could be “confidently removed” from the running. His initial report didn’t eliminate bench coach Walt Weiss or coach Eddie Perez from consideration, but Bowman downplayed the idea of either man being elevated to the manager’s chair, writing that “their potential candidacies seemed to die when the Braves didn’t persuade [Brian] Snitker to manage at least one more year.” This implies that a succession plan might’ve been the initial concept for the team, but Snitker’s decision to step away from the job after the 2025 campaign might have the Braves leaning towards bringing an entirely fresh voice into the dugout.
Gibbons had the most MLB managerial experience of any of the names rumored to be involved in Atlanta’s search, as Gibbons logged parts of 11 seasons as the Blue Jays’ skipper over two separate tenures with the club. Anthopoulos was the Jays’ assistant GM during Gibbons’ first stint, and then after becoming general manager himself, made the unusual move of rehiring Gibbons back prior to the 2013 season, when Toronto was looking to replace John Farrell. Gibbons has spent the last two seasons as the Mets’ bench coach but stepped down from the job last month, creating speculation that he might emerge as Anthopoulos’ choice once more in Atlanta.
Ross seemed to be a natural candidate, as a Georgia native who both played for the Braves for four seasons and has four years of Major League managing experience on his resume. DeRosa is another former Brave who played seven seasons with the club from 1998-2004, and he has stuck mostly to broadcasting since his playing career ended in 2013. DeRosa hasn’t coached or managed in the majors or minors, though he was Team USA’s manager during the 2023 World Baseball Classic.
In terms of which names might be on the Braves’ radar, Bowman writes that Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann’s “candidacy has seemingly strengthened over the past couple weeks.” The fact that the Dodgers are on their way to the World Series could be a complicating factor, though Lehmann could interview with the Braves during the interim periods between playoff rounds. This does mean that Atlanta might not announce a new hire until November, or at least until after the World Series is completed.
The 40-year-old Lehmann has been Dave Roberts’ bench coach for the last three years, and he has spent the last decade in the L.A. organization in such roles as a game planning/communication coach, a special assistant within the front office, and an advance video scout. Lehmann’s time with the Dodgers overlaps with Anthopoulos’ two-year (2016-17) tenure as the Dodgers’ vice-president of baseball operations, so there’s plenty of familiarity between the two men.
Cubs bench coach Ryan Flaherty and Tigers bench coach George Lombard are two other “potential candidates,” in Bowman’s words. The two have each been popular names in managerial searches in recent years, as Flaherty was a finalist for the Padres’ job in 2023 (before Mike Shildt was hired) and has been speculated as a candidate for the Padres’ current vacancy, as well as the Orioles’ and Twins’ open managerial positions. Lombard interviewed with the Marlins and White Sox last winter, and he was also in the running for past managerial vacancies with the Tigers and Pirates.
Lombard is an Atlanta native, and he also has some past L.A. history with Anthopoulos since Lombard was the Dodgers’ first base coach during the 2016-20 seasons. Both Lombard and Flaherty are former Braves players — Lombard during the 1998-99 seasons, and Flaherty in 2018.
I can confirm that I haven’t been contacted about the Braves manager job either.
What a coincidence. I haven’t either.
I was but I was sworn to secrecy….oh wait, oops
I missed a call from a 404#
If you a call from sih-selm-ate… pick up!
You and AA ain’t fooling anyone. My connected friend Jon H. has whispered otherwise.
….which he heard directly from Scott Boras
If ai recall correctly, the Braves have a history of promoting from within. So it won’t be unexpected that they are not considering any of these names.
In the past, yes. Atlanta hasn’t hired a manager under Anthopolous’ guidance, however, so I’d say anything is possible. I just don’t want DeRosa at the helm.
They’ve only had 3 managers since 1990 so there’s not much to look at as far as history. AA was 13 years old when Bobby Cox moved back to manager in 1990.
Though I wouldn’t consider George Lombard a favorite, interestingly, his son (not NYY’s top prospect George Jr.), but Jacob is one of the top prospects overall and is predicted to go in the top-10 as a SS, with some outlets linking ATL to him (before any mention of George Sr. as a managerial candidate).
Sure, they took SS Tate Southsiene in 1st rd last year (and Alex Lodise in 2nd), but SS are typically athletic enough to play anywhere, if they can hit — as the Padres have demonstrated.
The name that hasn’t come up at all with all these managerial openings is Benji Gil which really surprises me. He’d be a great manager, but for whatever reason nobody seems interested.
You would think that with a club that’s built to contend, they’d want someone with experience. Not someone new to management or barely got their feet wet with a short term gig. Just all the names that have been rattled off and speculated are all those types. Don’t make sense. The again AA seems to like to bargain hunt and spend cheapish lately so guess it’s fitting as well. Smh. Rather see someone like Baldelli, who has had success, at the helm more than the “I think he’d be a great manager” type people. There’s a time and place for a retread type manager to be hired and this is one of those times. It isn’t a rebuild from a bad team and such. It’s a retool.
but why do teams always seem to prefer these recycled old managers? l never got that
Jason Varitek.
I turned it down a few weeks ago as I was too busy at my full-time gig as a greeter at Walmart. Man, way too many people to greet nowadays.
What happened to the yankees getting a new manager??? i’m still waiting for that news.
Have to fire Boone 1st.
Hal Steinbrenner has lowered expectations and said just make the playoffs is a renewal to manage next year
@mlbnyyfan
Who wants to be the manger of the Yankees? You don’t actually make decision. It’s the nerds in the offices telling me and my players what to do. For example, 3-2 count, if it’s close, don’t swing. Better to get run up than actually hit the ball. That’s what the data says!
somehow only the fans think Boone needs to be replaced. Cashman and Steinbrenner are fine with him
As a 13 year old kid, I would have seen Bobby Cox’s first game in the dugout for his second managing stint, but the game was rained out. I was at the game the prior night, which was R Nixon’s last game at the helm. The next night (vs Padres I believe) was rained out, and we were headed back home the following day.
AA aside, the Braves have a tradition of hiring from within. As a team ready to contend again next year, just don’t see them rocking the boat with someone who has absolutely no institutional history.
A completely fresh slate would be out of character. Then again, neither Ross nor DeRosa have been part of the organization since they played.
It wouldn’t surprise me if they hired a skipper from outside. But having an organization vet like Eddie Perez or TP as bench coach makes a lot of sense.
Tim Hudson
Pitching coach, sure. That’s what he’s been doing at Auburn.
Matt a Borgschulte
If they go with Weiss, Perez, Gonzales or anybody currently in the organization, they will only continue their “Lost at Sea” approach to baseball! Both Bobby Cox and Brian Snitker had so much talent to work with but their incompetence kept them from winning! With Cox, ONE World Series win with arguably the best Pitching Staff ever assembled and Snit having the most productive offense in MLB History (’23), only ONE World Series Win! Those 2 repeatedly played out games to lose rather than win by being out-managed most of the time. Mostly out-managing themselves by over-thinking situations and making poor decisions!
The perfect manager would come in and tell Alex he needs to rebuild the team!
Yeah because it’s managing that cause Lonnie Smith to get deaked on a play he should have scored on.
You lose 1-0 in 10 innings in game 7 of the World Series. Most definitely Bobby Cox’s fault. Let’s just go ahead and blame Bobby for that curve ball M Wohlers hung in game 3 of the ‘96 series that Jim Leyritz hammered and drastically changed the series momentum. That’s all Bobby’s fault 🙄
Chipper jones is the top of my potential manager list for the Braves.
Maybe the Braves give the job to Ron Washington? It’s not a far-fetched idea I think.
A MLB manager really makes no difference. The only real difference makers are the talent evaluators and the money teams are willing to pay to get the talent. Does anyone think that Dave Rogers would have a good record with the 10 teams that have lowest payrolls. Let’s face it, the Dodgers are the best team money can buy!
Good luck to whoever has to take over that dumpster fire.