MLB teams
Alden Gonzalez, ESPN Staff Writer 12d

Miami Marlins hire Clayton McCullough as manager

MLB, Miami Marlins, Los Angeles Dodgers

The Miami Marlins have hired Los Angeles Dodgers first-base coach Clayton McCullough as their new manager, it was announced Monday.

McCullough, 44, spent the past four seasons on Dave Roberts' coaching staff in Los Angeles, the last of which ended in a championship. He succeeds Skip Schumaker, who was not brought back at the end of his contract and has since joined the Texas Rangers' front office as a senior adviser to president of baseball operations Chris Young.

A career minor league catcher, McCullough managed in the Toronto Blue Jays' minor league system from 2007 to 2013, finishing six of those seasons with winning records. He was then hired by the Dodgers as their minor league field coordinator, at which point he worked under current Marlins assistant general manager Gabe Kapler.

"[McCullough] brings a strong pedigree of winning," Marlins principal owner Bruce Sherman said in a statement. "His love of the game, ability to build meaningful relationships, and new leadership will guide our organization into an exciting new era."

The Dodgers promoted McCullough to their major league coaching staff in 2021, inserting him as their first-base coach while having him work with outfielders and placing him in charge of their baserunning program. In 2024, McCullough played a big part in helping Shohei Ohtani evolve as a base stealer, paving the way for the first 50/50 season in baseball history.

McCullough was one of three primary candidates for the Marlins' managing job, along with Will Venable and Craig Albernaz. Venable was named manager of the Chicago White Sox and Albernaz pulled out of the race, opting to remain the Cleveland Guardians' bench coach. Detroit Tigers bench coach George Lombard and Luis Urueta, who served as Schumaker's bench coach and managed the last two games of the regular season, were also among those under consideration.

The Marlins interviewed McCullough over videoconference while the Dodgers navigated a World Series run in October. He met with staff members last week at the team's spring training complex in Jupiter, Florida, which is also where he resides in the offseason, and then again at loanDepot Park in Miami on Friday.

McCullough, a finalist for the Kansas City Royals managing job that went to Matt Quatraro two years ago, is the first managerial hire by president of baseball operations Peter Bendix, who took over baseball operations last offseason. McCullough will inherit a franchise once again in transition.

"We couldn't be more excited to welcome Clayton and his family to the Marlins," Bendix said in a statement. "... It's clear that Clayton's values and vision align perfectly with ours, and we are ready to begin working on the next exciting chapter for our club."

The Marlins surprisingly made the playoffs in 2023, getting swept in the wild-card round, then lost 100 games in 2024, a season that saw Bendix trade away veterans including Luis Arraez, Jazz Chisholm Jr., Tanner Scott, A.J. Puk and Trevor Rogers.

Bendix's goal is to build an infrastructure that will lead to sustained winning despite not possessing the revenue streams of some of the bigger-market teams in the National League East, similar to what he helped produce with the Tampa Bay Rays. That process, Bendix has acknowledged, will take time.

McCullough, who has experience developing young players but has also been around a championship culture, will help lead it.

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