The Angels are hiring Max Stassi to serve as their catching coach, general manager Perry Minasian confirmed Wednesday. They’re also adding Keith Johnson and Andy Schatzley to the staff as third base coach and infield coach, respectively. Jeff Fletcher of The Orange County Register first reported the hires.
Stassi, 34, had not officially announced his retirement as a player. He’s apparently moving into the next phase of his career after playing parts of ten seasons in the big leagues. Stassi had played in Triple-A in the Giants organization this past season, though he spent most of the year on the minor league injured list. His final MLB appearance came in 2022 with the Halos.
Originally a fourth-round pick of the A’s, Stassi was traded to the Astros before he reached Double-A. He debuted with Houston in 2013 and spent the next few seasons as a third catcher on the organizational depth chart. Stassi technically logged parts of seven big league seasons with the Astros, but he combined for just 163 games over that stretch. Only once did he play more than 31 games in a season.
The Angels acquired Stassi in what seemed like a minor deal at the 2019 deadline. He struggled down the stretch but exceeded expectations over the next couple seasons. Stassi hit .278 with seven homers in 31 games during the shortened 2020 schedule. He popped a career-high 13 longballs with a .241/.326/.426 batting line over 319 trips to the plate a year later.
Stassi signed a three-year, $17.5MM extension going into the 2022 season. The Halos gave him the lion’s share of work behind the dish, while Kurt Suzuki served as the backup catcher. Stassi took a career-high 375 plate appearances but slumped to a .180/.267/.303 batting line. That unfortunately will go down as his final MLB action. He missed the entire ’23 season — first because of a hip injury, then attending to a family situation after his son was born three months premature and required several months in NICU.
The Angels traded Stassi to the Braves as part of a shuffling of dead money over the 2023-24 offseason. Atlanta immediately released him, leading to a free agent deal with the White Sox. Stassi’s bothersome hip led him to begin the season back on the injured list, and he underwent season-ending surgery in July. He wasn’t able to stay healthy in the minors last season either, so he’s now moving into coaching. He finishes his playing days with a .212/.295/.361 slash with 41 home runs in a little more than 400 games. He drove in 128 runs and collected 241 hits.
Stassi’s jump into coaching comes with his old team and on his former catching mate’s staff. Suzuki is headed into his first season as an MLB manager. They tabbed an experienced bench coach in John Gibbons and a highly-respected veteran pitching coach in Mike Maddux. Adam Eaton gets his first MLB coaching opportunity as first base/outfield coach.
Johnson and Schatzley had each been managers in the Halos’ farm system — Johnson at Triple-A Salt Lake, Schatzley with Double-A Rocket City. The 54-year-old Johnson has managed in the organization for 14 years. He’d previously worked on the MLB staff as an infield coach and spent a couple seasons as first base coach of the Marlins. He appeared in six games for the Angels in 2000, his only big league playing experience. Schatzley, 41, has managed in the system for the past five seasons after spending nearly a decade in the college ranks. This is his first role on an MLB staff.

Kurt bringing his boys in
keith johnson is a good hire
I knew nothing about Schatzley. Googled him. A LOT of defensive drills on Coaches Insider.
Hopefully this can translate to a big league field. Lord knows the Angels need it.
Stassi coming home. I think he will be a much better coach that his body allowed him to be a catcher.
The Stassi will over see things
To the max even….
Another Kelenic trade disaster!
I’m not opposed to it but it seems players taking on coaching and managerial jobs this soon is happening more than ever.
The thing I remember most about Stassi is a series of draft recaps run by Baseball Prospectus in which they chastised almost every org for not picking him. (Whoever was in charge REALLY liked Stassi).
Looks like the angels can add another 9 wins in 2026
No more World Series oredictions forcthecangels, as all dreams have been announced. 10 more wins would be a nice season.
Too bad injuries derailed him, but good luck to him. Suzuki and Stassi there is good for the organization.
Well, Stassi was like the rest of us. No one called so he moved in to the next chapter.
that is kind of a trip considering he was expected to be depth in the giants system or at least has been listed as such
A manager and coaching staff can only do so much for a team, and some of these guys are unproven, but I’m optimistic about this group. I doubt this team will contend as long as Moreno is the owner, but I think we’ll have better fundamentals, better energy, and win more games in 2026. Maybe we’ll even stop ruining young players and lay a foundation for the post-Moreno era. A fan can dream.
If there was a World Series for coaches, we’d likely contend. But there isn’t. Maybe we should get some Major League caliber players now.
Hello Cleveland? JB from Anaheim. Let’s talk Taylor Ward.”
“JB here shirt’s off, stats in hand, and I’ve got a bat that’ll light up Lake Erie. His name? Taylor Ward. And baby, he’s the right-handed thunder your lineup’s been missing. But I’m not done. I’m tossing in a rookie arm with upside so sweet, you’ll think it’s Christmas in November.”
Sending to Cleveland
The Goods: Taylor Ward + Caden Dana
Taylor Ward (OF)• Age: 31
Control: Through 2027
2025 Stats: .246/317/.475, 36 HR, 103 RBI, .792 OPS
Profile: Veteran slugger with OBP, power, and corner outfield versatility
Caden Dana (RHP)• Age: 21
Angels’ No. 2 prospect, 6’4” righty with a power fastball and developing secondaries
2025: Dominant in Triple-A Salt Lake, still rookie-eligible
Profile: Mid-rotation upside, team control through 2031
Why It Fits Cleveland
Ward gives you instant lineup thump and veteran stability
Dana adds long-term rotation upside to a system that thrives on pitching development
You deal from bullpen surplus without touching your top-tier prospects
Anaheim What We Want Back
Hunter Gaddis (RHP): 8th-inning weapon with a wipeout slider, 3.11 ERA in 76 IP
Joey Cantillo (LHP): 25-year-old lefty with swingman upside and team control through 2029
“So what do you say, Cleveland? JB’s got the bat, the bonus arm, and the swagger. You’ve got the bullpen bullets. Let’s make this trade pop like fireworks over Lake Erie. Call me.”
Perry Minasian in case you’re scrolling or
Arte Moreno I’m available 2027
Call Me