East Bay Times

Team glad to have Kotsay back, make him third base coach

- By Shayna Rubin srubin@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The Oakland A’s promoted quality control coach Mark Kotsay to third base coach, the team announced Thursday.

During his six seasons as part of Oakland’s coaching staff, Kotsay has become respected for his keen coaching abilities and feel for the clubhouse mood. Kotsay will replace Al Pedrique, who was released from his third base coach duties back in October after three years with Oakland.

It should be noted, too, that the A’s are standing by bench coach Ryan Christenso­n, who found himself in hot water after an NBC Sports California camera caught him inadverten­tly throwing up what looked like an offensive sign in the handshake line after a win last season.

Kotsay’s reputation follows him outside of the Coliseum confines — the 45-yearold has interviewe­d for positions with other teams — including for the Detroit Tigers’ managerial position ultimately filled by former Astros manager AJ Hinch this year. He also interviewe­d for the Houston Astros’ managerial position filled by Dusty Baker and the Giants’ job filled by Gabe Kapler in 2019.

Kotsay’s promotion could be an effort to keep the highly- sought-after coach close. He’s proven to be an invaluable mentor to the team, as utility player Chad Pinder can attest.

“He’s awesome,” Pinder said. “With him playing for so long and not being that far removed from his playing days, he’s a guy that everyone gravitates toward.”

Kotsay was destined to return to a field staff position — the A’s created the quality control position, in essence, for Kotsay to squeeze as much of his expertise and observatio­ns into the clubhouse and dugout while allowing him time to deal with a family matter that forced him away from his bench coaching duties in 2016. Even as quality control coach of late, Kotsay still observed batting practice and helped with infield defense work.

Kotsay played 17 seasons with seven different teams, including four as a contacthit­ting infielder with the A’s from 2004-07. He retired in 2013 and promptly joined the San Diego Padres’ front office in 2014 and then as their hitting coach. He joined the A’s in 2015 as their bench coach and was moved to quality control coach in 2017, a post he held until his move to third base coach for the 2021 season.

For players like Pinder, it’s clear why the A’s are intent on keeping a coach like Kotsay close. It’s in the details.

Pinder recalls flubbing a situationa­l hitting moment in one of his first big league games back in 2017. He didn’t utter a word as he tried to return unnoticed back to his seat in the dugout to stew over the missed opportunit­y. It was Kotsay who approached him with the right words.

“In that first year, everything is amplified,” Pinder said. “And I’m analyzing everything, and he can tell I’m analyzing. He came put his hand on me and said, ‘This is what needed to happen. We know it. You know it. You’re gonna have thousands of opportunit­ies and chances to get this done. Just know and grow from it and move on.’

“I didn’t say anything, he just could sense I needed some words of encouragem­ent and it was exactly what I needed to hear.”

And Kotsay came back when Pinder struggled not knowing if he’d be penciled into the game’s lineup during the 2018 season; without a word, Kotsay sat him down and talked him through his role. There’s always some certainty amid the uncertaint­y, he told him.

“He has a really good pulse on every type of player in the clubhouse. He knows how to handle each player individual­ly. It’s not cookie cutter,” Pinder said. “That’s a big strength of (manager) Bob Melvin’s, too, I see a lot of that in Kots.”

Waving home runners around third base, Kotsay can bring a little more of the competitiv­e fire that still burns in him. Kotsay is just seven years removed from a big league roster, and it shows in his on-field demeanor.

“He’s a competitor. He’s still got that fire from playing, and that’s fun to be around, too,” Pinder said. “He’s a fun guy to be around. Everybody really enjoys having him around.”

The A’s feel lucky to have been able to not only move him back onto the field, but also keep him another year. It’s only a matter of time before he lands a managing job.

“He’s not far off, I genuinely believe that,” Pinder said. “He has experience on all sides of the game and that’s invaluable. He’s going to be a great manager one day. We’re happy to have him back.”

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