Guymon Daily Herald

Chris Young home as new Rangers general manager

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Chris Young vividly remembers sitting in a visiting clubhouse on a road trip as a rookie pitcher for the Texas Rangers and peppering Jon Daniels with various questions.

That wasn’t too long before Daniels, then the team’s assistant general manager, became baseball’s youngest GM at age 28 after the 2005 season.

Daniels was promoted to Rangers president of baseball operations in 2013 and had held that dual title until now handing his GM role to Young, who grew up in Dallas rooting for the Rangers, made his big league debut with his hometown team in 2004 and who since retiring as a player less than three years ago had already become a senior vice president for Major League Baseball.

“This opportunit­y is something that really I felt like is a once-ina-lifetime opportunit­y, in my hometown for a team and a franchise that I love,” Young said Monday, when formally introduced three days after being hired as GM. “It just tugged at my heartstrin­gs that I needed to be here.”

Daniels and Rangers managing partner Ray Davis had discussed for several years hiring a new senior executive. They hired Young as GM after the team’s fourth consecutiv­e losing season, with Daniels still in charge as president of baseball operations.

“Sometimes you just know when it’s the right time, the right person, the right fit for our group, for myself, for the team,” Daniels said.

Despite Young’s relative inexperien­ce as a baseball executive, Daniels saw a unique opportunit­y to add someone with a rare blend of skills and experience­s in baseball. Daniels said the 41-year-old Young also fit the team culturally, has a lot of existing relationsh­ips in the organizati­on and wants to be there.

Young mentioned several times during his introducti­on the learning curve he knows he faces in his new job. But the 6-foot-10 pitcher who played baseball and basketball at Princeton pitched in 13 major league seasons with five teams, including a World Series title with the Kansas City Royals, before his 2 1/2 years working with every team in the MLB office.

“I’ve had 17 years on field preparing for this moment. And it’s somewhat of a unique experience, it’s given me a perspectiv­e,” Young said. “At every step of the way, I’ve had an open mind and a curiosity to learn to observe and study what has made successful players, successful franchises. And certainly I look forward to applying that, but also learning, continuing to learn and grow in shaping the future of the Texas Rangers.”

external candidates and interviewe­d four internal candidates before hiring Young, who also spoke with the New York Mets in the GM search.

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