The Rockies introduced new president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta at a press conference on Thursday. Owner Dick Monfort and executive vice president Walker Monfort also took part. While the executives spoke mostly in generalities, Dick Monfort revealed that he plans to scale back his involvement in baseball operations now that a new front office leader is in place.
Dick Monfort is one of the leading figures on the owner’s side in labor negotiations with the MLB Players Association. The 71-year-old pointed out that he’ll have more work to do on that end with the collective bargaining agreement expiring a little over a year from now. “I have a lot more responsibility with the league over the next year, so I have to allocate time there. Plus, I’m getting older,” he told reporters (including Patrick Saunders of The Denver Post). “Walker came to me and said he was interested in taking on (a bigger role). He can handle it.”
It is generally believed that Monfort will be one of the leading proponents of a salary cap push by the owners. The MLBPA has maintained that’s a non-starter, setting the stage for another round of contentious negotiations. The sides recently opened preliminary talks, but they’re almost certainly going to negotiate throughout the entire 2026 season. Commissioner Rob Manfred has already indicated he expects offseason lockouts to be a norm. A lockout would only come into play if there’s no new deal in place by December 1, 2026, and it seems both sides are pessimistic on the odds of things getting resolved that smoothly.
Walker Monfort, Dick’s son, has taken on a much bigger role with the Rox over the past few months. While he has worked for the franchise for more than 15 years, he was promoted to executive vice president in June. The 38-year-old played a significant role in the DePodesta hiring, and he indicated he’ll oversee a lot of the day-to-day operations of the club. “Obviously, everybody reports upward, to our chairman and CEO, my father, Dick. Basically, from there, I will still be in charge of oversight of the entire organization,” Walker Monfort said. “So Paul will report to me, and those that he hires will report to him.”
The most significant of those hires will a general manger and a manager. DePodesta said there’s no timetable for either hire. The Rockies are the only team without a permanent manager in place. Jon Morosi of The MLB Network reported last week that the Rox would like to have a GM by next month’s Winter Meetings.
Colorado’s search for a baseball operations head dragged a little longer than ownership probably anticipated. They’d reportedly narrowed to two finalists, Amiel Sawdaye and Matt Forman, before both men took themselves out of consideration. Dick Monfort said the team evaluated around 30 candidates in the search.
Any hire was going to have his work cut out for him. DePodesta takes over one of the worst teams in MLB history. They’re coming off a 119-loss season and have very little talent anywhere on the roster. A pitching staff that allowed nearly six earned runs per nine innings is in particularly rough shape. Speaking at the GM Meetings earlier this week, DePodesta implied he was open to trading hitting for rotation help (link via Thomas Harding of MLB.com).
“I want to stop short of naming a particular position group – I have one in mind, for sure – but I do think there’s some depth. Now what I have to do is understand what the other 29 teams think, and what players they are attracted to from our organization,” DePodesta said. “We need to be open-minded about that, and if we need to shift assets around – take a little away from this area to bolster another – then we’ll have to do that.”
Harding writes that a trade of an outfielder could be one way to add pitching. Center fielder Brenton Doyle regressed offensively, hitting .233/.274/.376 across 538 plate appearances. He’s a plus defensive outfielder, though, and teams would surely have interest with his four remaining years of arbitration control. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projects Doyle for a $3.2MM salary as a Super Two player.
Mickey Moniak had terrible defensive metrics but is coming off a career season at the plate. He popped 24 homers while hitting .270/.306/.518 in 461 trips. He’s projected at $4.2MM and controllable for two seasons. Most teams probably see him as a fourth outfielder, but he has flashed some of the offensive promise that made him the first overall pick nine years ago.
Tyler Freeman has good bat-to-ball skills, speed and some defensive versatility. He could be a serviceable utility player. None of Jordan Beck, Yanquiel Fernández or Zac Veen have been good MLB players to date, but they all had prospect pedigree and remain in their pre-arbitration seasons. They’d have modest trade value but could have some fans in other clubs’ scouting departments.

I don’t care what metrics say about Mickey Moniak, he was my favorite Rockie to watch this season. He struggled mightily in April and May, like most of the Rockies, that is why the were 9-51. But from June 1st onward, he was one of the better hitters in the entire league and his defense was not as bad as the numbers show. He was bounced around the outfield playing all three positions and at Coors Field that is a tall order. He looked good in right, but he was not that great in left and center (the two more difficult positions in Coors) and that dragged down his metrics.
Rooting for MM! I also think his season was underappreciated.
Yeah it looks he has some serious power and keep him out of center and he probably won’t grade out as bad.
Agreed hiflew. He was definitely one of the bright spots for us and there were very few. 43 wins is still hard to even imagine. Everything that could go wrong did and then some. It’s all up from here. 59 wins next year fingers crossed lol
He’s awful. He only hit vs RHP at Coors Field, usually in blowout games, which frankly any good college hitter could do. His OBP on the road was among the worst in baseball. And he’s a horrible defender and not young. DFA. Rox have far higher ceiling corner OF who need MLB playing time.
Seems harsh for a young guy on a bad team. Who else?? Zach Veen who can’t even hit in the minors?
Thank for your input, but I am going to stick with my own opinion. BTW, he is the same age as Brenton Doyle at 27. If you want to watch a AAA team full of 22 year olds, feel free to start watching the Isotopes or the Yard Goats.
Great. Monfort ruined the Rockies. Now he’ll be instrumental in ruining MLB
Ah yes because a salary cap would ruin such a balanced competitive league
I’m all for salary cap. Dodgers can go f themselves.
You do realize a salary cap doesn’t solve the Dodger-sized “problem” correct?
Sure does. Depends what the level is, but yeah, it solves a LOT. I’ll admit it probably is bad for the MLBPA though. Not saying it ain’t. But it’s necessary in some form of the league isn’t going to survive.
I’m glad you’re not at the negotiations table, jramey1. Go f yourself and stay mad on your computer.
Henni
Ah yes, since Monfort has done such a wonderful job in building a successful organization, he’ll be able to take his talents to the negotiating table and secure an agreement from a union that has never agreed to a cap.
The West Sacramento A’s and the Tampa Bay Rays play in minor league parks or empty stadiums and field better products than Monfort’s Rockies. Send their leaders to the table
What does building a successful (on the field) team have to do with negotiating a successful (financially) CBA for the league? Monfort’s doing very well financially.
@Seamaholic I know you’re a hardcore bootlicker, but Monfort can be doing well financially… Yet the team he owns hasn’t been doing well.
Yeah, NFL should get a cap as well, Anyone else tired of seeing the Chiefs in the Super Bowl?
Jordan Beck looks promising for what it’s worth.
The next CBA will not be fun. Monfort probably won’t help. MLB is a highly profitable industry that receives favorable tax treatment, gobs of public money and favors, and has rising franchise values. Maybe there’s something creative but players are going to resist a salary cap–and certainly so if the result of it just means they get less while the tanking/non-competitive teams continue with their behavior.
Not sure why there’s pessimism around Jordan Beck, he was a around league average for a hitter, and he hit 16 HRs and stole 19 bags, he at least has the makings of a solid regular if he gets more chances to play and develop.
I agree. And it’s too early to rule out that the other former prospects won’t turn out to be OK.
I would definitely characterize Beck as promising.
If I were the Rockies I wouldn’t trade Beck, Goodman, and Tovar at minimum.
Doyle had some personal stuff last season that may have affected his play. Worth seeing if he can bounce back from that. He has potential to be a Gold Glove CF with offense that is league average or better, which would make him worth keeping.
Really hope they hold onto Doyle. There is a ton of ground to cover at Coors Field and he is the best defensive OF the Rockies have ever had. 2025 was a rough year for him as he and his wife were expecting a son and it was lost with a miscarriage. He had injuries and it wasn’t until the last 2 months before he got back on track. 2 time GG and .260 23 HR 72 RBI 30 SB in 2024. Tovar and Doyle feed off each other as well, very tight friends.
Moniak is a gamer and if he isn’t a position player, solid at DH. Bryant won’t play again due to his back so they need to eat that contract. They can look at it like giving the Cardinals $50M to take Arenado. I think DePodesta is going to make positive changes, but I hope some that have been mentioned are thought through.
The thing is, you can’t take away money a player is already getting and you can’t force teams to trade/release players that are already under contract. The only way to implement a salary cap is to start with the highest team payroll and cap it from there.
The Mets and Dodgers both had payrolls north of $320 million with the Yankees third at $293 million so in theory a cap would probably have to start at $300 million which ultimately makes a cap pointless because there are 20-25 teams that will not spend that much anyway. Baseball needs a salary floor to get the small markets to spend because a cap is theoretically not going to hamper the big spenders anyway
Mickey was fun to watch last season. The eye test suggested he was better than his WAR. I also gotta believe any Rockies fan was quite pleased with Beck last year. It’s his job to lose in LF, and I don’t foresee a predictable competition for that position come Spring.
Who’s kidding who? Nobody wants any of the players the Rockies have
I want a few of their relievers but thats it.