The Maui News

World Series a father-and-son family affair for the Snitkers

- By KRISTIE RIEKEN

HOUSTON — No matter how this year’s World Series ends, a Snitker will get a championsh­ip ring.

This edition of the Fall Classic is a family affair with Atlanta Braves manager Brian Snitker in the dugout opposite his son, Houston Astros co-hitting coach Troy Snitker.

Close their whole lives, they’ll be rivals when the teams take the field Tuesday night for Game 1.

“Quite honestly, tomorrow at 7:09 or whatever, he’s going to want to kick my (butt),” dad said Monday.

But on the eve of the game, the elder Snitker still found time to play the role of proud papa when talking about his son’s success.

“I kind of validated the fact that maybe I did something right, the way he turned out,” he said. “He’s a heck of a young man.”

Troy Snitker grew up in clubhouses and dugouts, following his father as he toiled as a minor league skipper for most of his childhood. Brian Snitker taught his son so much during that time, but as he watched him bounce around teams from Macon, Georgia, to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, it was not what he said, but what he did that served as the most important lesson.

“Just his work ethic,” the 32-year-old Snitker said. “I think that’s the biggest thing that I’ve taken away from him, being able to watch him from a young age at the ballpark. He’s so consistent, hard working. He’s the same guy every day when you’re in the clubhouse with him.”

The 66-year-old Snitker spent 15 seasons a manager for various Braves’ farm teams before working as Atlanta’s third base coach from 2007-2013. He was the manager of the Triple-A Gwinnett Braves from 2013 until becoming the big league club’s interim manager when Fredi Gonz lez was fired in May 2016.

Brian got the job full-time in 2017 and has led the Braves to the postseason in each of the last four seasons.

“He’s just, he’s been through so much in his career where there were plenty of times where he could have easily decided to go do something else,” his son said. “But he stuck with it.”

Troy Snitker coached in college for a bit before joining the Double-A Corpus Christi Hooks as their hitting coach in 2018. He spent just one season there before moving on to work for Houston’s major league club.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Houston Astros hitting coach Troy Snitker stands with his father, Braves manager Brian Snitker, before a spring baseball exhibition game on March 4, 2019.
AP file photo Houston Astros hitting coach Troy Snitker stands with his father, Braves manager Brian Snitker, before a spring baseball exhibition game on March 4, 2019.

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