The Rockies announced Wednesday that general manager Bill Schmidt is stepping down from his post. While Schmidt and the team framed it as a mutual parting of ways, Patrick Saunders of the Denver Post reports that Schmidt was fired. Regardless, they’ve begun a search to bring in a new head of baseball operations from outside the organization, according to the team.
“After a number of conversations, we decided it is time for me to step aside and make way for a new voice to guide the club’s baseball operations,” Schmidt said within this morning’s press release. “It’s been an honor to serve the Rockies family for over 25 years. I’m thankful to the Monfort family for the opportunity, to my family for their constant support, and our staff for their tireless dedication. Better seasons are ahead for the Rockies and our great fans, and I look forward to seeing it come to life in the years ahead.”
Schmidt spent four-plus seasons as the GM in Colorado, originally taking over for Jeff Bridich after Bridich was fired during the 2021 season. The Rockies quickly stripped away the interim title following the season and named Schmidt the full-time general manager — just the fourth GM in Rockies franchise history. As was the case with predecessors Bridich and Dan O’Dowd, Schmidt was an internal promotion. He’d previously served as the club’s scouting director dating back to the 2000 season.
The move to hire someone from outside the organization represents a major ideological shift. Owner Dick Monfort would surely prefer to describe his family as loyal — perhaps to a fault — but onlookers and critics would frame the Rockies as an insular organization that has fallen behind the times. Colorado’s baseball operations and analytics departments are reportedly among the smallest in Major League Baseball, if not the smallest. Beyond remaking the roster, the incoming baseball operations head will also have ample work to do in modernizing and bolstering the team’s infrastructure.
“Bill’s departure allows our club to seek a new leader of our baseball department experienced in areas where we know we need to grow within the operation,” Monfort said in the press release.
Monfort’s son, Walker, who was promoted to executive vice president this past June, added: “A new voice will benefit our organization as we work towards giving our fans the competitive team they deserve. We are setting our sights on finding the right leader from outside our organization who can bring a fresh perspective to the Rockies and enhance our baseball operations with a new vision, innovation and a focus on both short and long-term success.”
The Rockies, under Schmidt and Bridich before him, have enjoyed little to no success. Colorado hasn’t made the postseason since back-to-back Wild Card appearances in 2017-18. Those were just the fourth and fifth postseason berths of what is now the franchise’s 33-year history. The Rockies have never won the National League West. This year’s 43-119 record is the worst in franchise history and marks their third consecutive 100-loss season.
As Saunders points out in his piece, this year’s collective 6.65 ERA from the Rockies’ rotation is the worst mark by any club since earned run average became an officially tracked statistic back in 1913. Among the 12 pitchers to start a game for the Rockies this year, only Kyle Freeland (4.98), Ryan Feltner (4.75) and Ryan Rolison (0.00) had an ERA under 5.00. Feltner made only six starts due to injury. Rolison “started” one game, tossing a scoreless inning as an opener.
Schmidt’s four-plus seasons as general manager saw the Rockies move away from the prior core featuring notable veterans like Jon Gray, Trevor Story, Charlie Blackmon and Ryan McMahon. While there have been some high points — the emergence of shortstop Ezequiel Tovar and catcher Hunter Goodman, most notably — they’ve been vastly outweighed by missteps that have left the club with a roster devoid of talent and a barren farm system. Baseball America ranked the Rockies’ system 27th following this year’s draft and trade deadline — the same as when Schmidt took over as permanent general manager.
The Rockies have regularly opted not to trade players at peak value even in losing seasons, holding onto Story, Gray, German Marquez and Daniel Bard, among many others, when any could have been valuable trade chips at the deadline. Colorado netted a draft pick for Story’s departure when he rejected a qualifying offer and signed in Boston, but Gray simply left with no compensation for the organization. Bard, rather than being traded at the 2022 deadline, instead signed a two-year, $19MM extension that did not pan out well for the team. This year’s trade of McMahon to the Yankees marked a notable change in direction, but even that decision was arguably made a year too late. Schmidt was also in the GM chair when Colorado signed Kris Bryant to a disastrous $182MM contract, though that decision very likely falls more on ownership than the front office.
Beyond the team’s distaste for trading veteran players to bring in young talent, the Rockies haven’t capitalized on their perennially high selections in the amateur draft. Colorado hasn’t selected lower than tenth in the draft since 2019, but none of their top picks in that time — Charlie Condon, Chase Dollander, Gabriel Hughes, Benny Montgomery, Zac Veen — have made an impact on the team to date. Condon and Dollander remain promising, well-regarded young players, but Condon’s selection over likely AL Rookie of the Year Nick Kurtz (who went to the A’s one pick later) now looks glaring, even if it was sensible at the time. The last Rockies day one pick with even one WAR, per Baseball-Reference, was Brendan Rodgers, whom they selected third overall back in 2015.
Overhauling this operation will be a daunting task — one that’ll surely take multiple years. The Rockies will need to significantly build out their baseball operations, analytics and player development departments and build a farm system practically from the ground up. That’ll need to happen without the benefit of shopping many players on the current roster, as the majority of their team possesses minimal trade value — as one would expect from a club that just lost 119 games. There are a handful of big leaguers who could bring back a notable return on the trade market, but Schmidt’s ouster has the feel of a total system reboot that could very well see the team extend its streak of 100-loss seasons.

Hire Johny Mo that’d be funny
Anyone would be an improvement
Mo goes back to his roots and then hires Holliday as assistant manager like he was going to do in 2023.
That’s “Assistant TO the manager”
Even if he were willing to eventually come out of retirement, he’d want to spend at least one year actually retired first.
Wow. Firings! The Rockies! Maybe they will go outside the org this time.
There are plenty of yes men outside the organization for Monfort to choose from. If he hires a solid baseball executive with a proven track record of success who thinks independently, I’ll be shocked.
They should hire me, I would easily win more games then any GM that they’d hire. I just wouldn’t know how to draft
Do they?
Benny Montgomery over Andrew Painter and Jackson Merrill
Gabriel Hughes over Zack Neto
Dollander over a bunch of guys
Condon over Kurtz and Wetherholt doesn’t look good
Maybe Ethan Holliday will be the savior
Jackson Merrill was the 27th pick as an underslot high schooler from a non Prep School outside of Baltimore. Outlets had him ranked in the 70-80 range.
That was a find by Preller. Not a guy the Rox were going to take at #8.
Damn exactly 26 years of employment.
It’s hard to believe they have done so little with all those high first-round draft picks. Like with Pittsburgh’s position players, the vast majority of the top Colorado prospects just don’t seem to improve.
Fun story: The Rockies have never had the #1 pick nor have they ever moved up as a result of the lottery, only down.
Neither year. Shocking.
Maybe the next GM will place some emphasis on analytics to help support player development.
It is a sad commentary on the reporting and posting, that people focus on the size of the analytical department and not the quality of said department.. A larger department is not the same as a better department.
nytimes.com/athletic/6680162/2025/10/01/colorado-r…
So you’re saying bigger isn’t always better, eh?
But it is the American way to say more is better because it takes analysis to figure out that it is often not true.
Skeptical – clearly the quality of their department is just as abysmal as the quantity.
I’d rather have a big government than a small government run by an imbecile.
Tell yourself whatever you need to believe, buddy. You think your fearless, bald, orange leader knows how tariffs and child predation coverups actually work? He for sure knows how bankruptcy works.
Now, if only the owners would “step down”. Hands down, worst run organization in baseball. LAA, Pitt, and Miami are all really bad too, but Colorado is the worst. What they saw in him for 26 years is beyond me. I’ll pray for healing for all Rockies fans. Good luck with the next guy. You deserve better.
Just Schmidt?
Others have also been around seemingly forever…..
Rolando Fernandez, VP of international scouting and development, joined the Rockies as a coach in 1993. Danny Montgomery, VP and assistant general manager of scouting, Scouting director Marc Gustafson and major-league operations director Paul Egins have all been with the Rockies since ‘91.
Just Schmidt probably doesn’t move the needle in
Improving the talent on the field in Colorado.
I think you have identified several changes that must be made. There is no area ,scouting, drafting, developing, maintaining that is even near average.
Amazingly, fans attend, but maybe there is more to the experience than the game itself.
I suspect the new person in charge will have a year to assess and begin the restructuring, at which point more will be shown the door.
The owners should seriously contemplate selling the team
Now that’s interesting
The time was right for Schmidt… I guess that means that the severance parachute was at least 10 karat gold flecked.
You are never going to get a top flight pitcher to pitch in Denver. Without pitching, the best you can hope for is .500 baseball.
Would laugh if they lured a pitcher with promise most of his games pitched would be scheduled away. Is that even possible with modern scheduling?
Congrats Rockies fans!
My advice to the next Rockies GM: Dick Monfort before he dicks you.
Mozaliek hiring incoming
Well, the Rockies could take Elias and Ziggy the Super Computer and Rutschman from the Orioles
That would be epic
Or Hire Dan Duquette, not as epic, but it would be interesting
I hope those who hopped so far off the Elias train never get back on if this turns around next year.
Ruben Amaro Jr come on down
No one can ruin tomorrow as quickly as Ruin Tomorrow can.
3 seasons in a row losing over 100 games, they should blow everything up,
That is what happened to the Pirates but it is now six years and running and they still haven’t figured it out.
At least the Rockies were smart enough to stop it at four years.
The pirates at least produce a few good players
People like this landing high profile jobs should give everyone hope in life. I can’t think of a more incompetent GM in recent MLB history.
Schmidt didn’t hire himself. There’s not another team in the league that would’ve even given him an interview for a leader of Baseball Ops gig. It’s not his fault that the job was offered to him despite his obvious shortcomings, let alone that of the organization around him.
Maybe Walker, a/k/a “Little Dick” Monfort will be sensible enough to actually hire someone qualified, provide the resources to build out the dept, and then get and stay the hell out of the way.
I think the Texas Rangers are in the same boat as the Rockies. They too need to rebuild as they have no starter on the roster that could fetch high draft picks to restock their already depleted minor league system among other problems. As a note they are still locked in to longterm contracts with Simien and Seager who are clearly in a steep decline.
The only upside to a job like this is there is very little you can actually do to make the team worse…
He’s gonna toil away on a beach somewhere regretting how Luis Robert eluded him
Rox and Angels fans have suffered enough. For the love of all things holy, please sell your teams Dick and Arte. If you love your teams, if you love your cities, if you love your fans, if you’ve accumulated enough generational wealth to last 10,000 years, please sell your teams.
John Fisher and Bob Nutting too
And the Pohlads…
Woody Paige had a rare take I liked
“It’s actually not amazing that one man could destroy a city’s love for baseball. But it’s amazing that the one man is not a carpetbagger who came from somewhere else, but has spent his entire life in the state. That’s the sadness.” x.com/woodypaige/status/1924702517633421584
Denver fans are fire, but our zeal for sports gets regularly exploited by owners treating the team like some investment townhomes they forgot about after building the apartment block in Chelsea
“Next Victim”
This is at least one step forward. Now for the Monforts to sell.
There are two powerhouse ownership groups in Denver, and neither have a MLB team:
– Stan Kroeneke, based in Denver, owns the Denver Nuggets, Colorado Avalanche, LA Rams, and an assortment of other Denver-based major league sports teams (soccer, lacrosse…). Their organization knows how to build championships.
– The Walton family (think Wal-Mart, not John-Boy) own the Denver Broncos, and are now proceeding to build a new retractable roof football stadium with their own nickel, and saying hasta lavista-baby to the 30 year old Empower Field at Mile High when that lease expires.
Either of these owners would make a positive impact on the business of baseball operations.
How can you forget the years if not decades the current ownership group has given the team. The excitement, the pennant fights and the outstanding teams will never be replaced.
Dick Monfort’s son got promoted back in June. Not a chance any time soon.
Balboa, A$AP, and The Squirrel…
Kim Ng would be a great choice but she’s probably not leaving her job as Commissioner of the AUSL
Rocks GM. That’s gotta be the cushiest seat in sports. They don’t even pretend that they want to win. It’s like a government job. Show up when you want, do what you want, and enjoy the benefits. LMAO
There’s an apparent dark horse in the race that contacted the Monfort’s directly with his plan for an organizational rebirth. Background is outside of baseball but has already communicated his vision to ownership
He has a great resume for his next job
He did an unbelievable job for the Rockies
I find it hard to believe that he was able to do what he did
They need to make a list of candidates, rank them, and then pick whichever one they like the least.
Does it matter?
resume header: “built a team that did something very few teams have done in the history of the sport”
Bill was the best Rockies General Manager in history. His mentorship, leadership and intelligence guided the team to heights never envisioned.