Santa Cruz Sentinel

Kotsay shines in one of the toughest jobs in baseball

- By Jason Mastrodona­to

It was early last October when Oakland A's general manager David Forst was asked to assess the performanc­e of his manager.

Mark Kotsay had just lost 112 games in his second season leading the worst team in the sport. With a twoyear record of 110-214, his winning percentage now ranked among the worst in baseball history; among the 364 men to manage at least 320 games, Kotsay's .340 mark is worse than all but three.

In some cities, fans would be calling for his resignatio­n on a nightly basis. In Oakland, it's not the manager the fans are screaming at.

Kotsay is beloved. “I thought Mark and his staff did an incredible job this year of finding positives,” Forst said. “We've gone through back to back 100 loss seasons and come out of it with a manager who I think has done a fantastic job… That's not always the case when you go through this.”

Forst praised Kotsay for his ability to teach the game to a roster that was full of first-timers and oldtimers.

In two seasons the A's have used 104 players, 56 of them rookies.

Not a single member of the A's ranked in the 100 most valuable players in MLB last year, according to FanGraphs. Their most valuable player? Rookie Zack Gelof, who only played in 69 of the team's 162 games.

Kotsay's job in Oakland clearly isn't to win games; it's to develop players. Nobody expected the A's, with an MLB-low opening day payroll of $56 million last year, to look competitiv­e on the field.

“From a coaching standpoint, our objective is to stay positive through this process,” Kotsay said. “We understand where we're at with the roster, the youth that's on the roster… Our priority becomes teaching. That was the message from the beginning. That was to dive in and teach as much as possible, stay as positive as possible and focus on the small victories.”

Still, for Kotsay to survive the 2023 season, not only did he need to make sure the A's seemed formidable once in a while, he also needed to make the Coliseum a place that players didn't hate walking into every day.

The fans felt the opposite way; they weren't even showing up. The A's averaged less than 11,000 fans per game for the third consecutiv­e year, a steep plummet from the nearly 25,000 they averaged just 10 years ago.

And when fans did show up, they showed up angrily. They held signs about how much they loathed team owner John Fisher and pleaded for him to sell the team.

Fisher was busy in Las Vegas, where in May, the A's were able to convince politician­s to give them $380 in public funding for a new ballpark.

It was finally real: The A's were leaving Oakland.

Kotsay's job throughout all of this seemed almost impossible.

The players knew what was going on. They were playing in a ballpark that was crumbling, without facilities that came close in quality to just about every other team's.

“I just work here,” veteran reliever Trevor May would say when asked about Fisher, who was paying his players less than any other owner in the league.

May also said this: “It's about money for John Fisher. Let's call it what it is.”

Kotsay, though, never lost the clubhouse, according to some of the most experience­d players there.

They credited his poise and ability to help them focus on only what they could control.

“Mark probably downplays the impact it had on him and the coaching staff and the players,” Forst said of the distractio­n created by the team's midseason announceme­nt that it was moving to Vegas. “I was there, I sat in the stands, I know what it was like out there at times. For those guys on the field and in the dugout to be able to focus on what they're doing… they did an incredible job of focusing on the game.”

On June 13, when more than 27,000 A's fans showed up for a Tuesday night game against the Tampa Bay Rays in a reverse boycott, the players didn't hide from the potential embarrassm­ent of the moment.

Instead, they knocked off the Rays in an exciting 2-1 victory, extending their winning streak to seven in what was the highlight of the season for many.

“A lot of unselfish baseball on this team right now,” May said at the time.

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