Where EAST meets the Northwest

HIGH-PRESSURE POSITION. Catcher Kurt Suzuki of the Los Angeles Angels
gestures while leaving a baseball game against the Oakland Athletics in Oakland,
California, in this October 4, 2022 file photo. Suzuki is taking over the Los
Angeles Angels as a first-time manager with a monumental task before him — and
perhaps a very limited amount of time to show progress. (AP Photo/Godofredo A.
Vásquez, File)
From The Asian Reporter, V35, #11 (November 3, 2025), pages 11 & 14.
Kurt Suzuki is thrilled to be a first-time manager with the
Angels, even on a 1-year contract
By Greg Beacham
AP Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Kurt Suzuki is taking over the Los Angeles Angels as a
first-time manager with a monumental task before him — and perhaps a very
limited amount of time to show progress.
Suzuki got just a one-year contract when he became the Angels’ sixth manager
in the past eight seasons, general manager Perry Minasian said. Minasian also
has one year left on his deal with the Angels, who are mired in a stretch of 10
straight losing seasons after finishing 72-90 in September.
"He’s tied in with me," Minasian said of Suzuki, the longtime catcher who
served as Minasian’s special assistant for the past three seasons after his
retirement from a 16-year playing career.
Neither man expressed any worries about the brief window given to the
42-year-old Suzuki, who will be learning his vast new job under unusual
pressure. Suzuki’s contract appears to be another unique decision by Angels
owner Arte Moreno, whose team hasn’t made the playoffs since 2014 or had a
winning season since 2015.
Minasian and Suzuki both said they feel urgency to end the Angels’
decade-long drought, no matter how long their contracts might be.
"I make a joke of it, but I feel like I’ve been playing on one-year deals my
whole career," Suzuki said. "I feel like I had to prove myself every single year
I played this game. ... I’m here because I want to lead this team. I’m here
because I want to help these players. I want to do good for this city and this
organization."
Suzuki teared up while thanking his wife and three children in the front row
of his news conference at Angel Stadium, where he played his final two major
league seasons before moving into Minasian’s front office.
Suzuki was chosen by Minasian from a field of candidates that included Albert
Pujols. Minasian wouldn’t say how negotiations broke down with the former Angels
slugger, who also has never coached or managed in the majors.
At least Pujols has winter-ball experience in a dugout, but Minasian is
confident Suzuki will pick up his new job swiftly because he’s already done
large parts of it as a catcher.
"I never thought I would be comfortable hiring a manager who wasn’t a manager
before, but this is a different person," Minasian said. "I know he didn’t have a
coaching title, but even when he played, he coached-slash-managed for different
places. He managed a game for a long time. I believe he’s the right person for
the job."
Suzuki is used to achieving great things despite starting from a tough
position.
After growing up on Maui, he walked on at Cal State Fullerton and grew into a
freshman starter, a College World Series winner, and a second-round draft pick
by the Oakland Athletics.
He made one All-Star team and won a World Series ring during an accomplished
major league career. His lively bat produced 143 homers, but he was even better
known for his excellent defense, game management, and relationships with his
pitchers, including Shohei Ohtani.
"I feel like I was born to do this — to lead players, to help players get
better," Suzuki said. "That’s my personality. I feel like I’ve done it on a
yearly basis with 29, 30 pitchers throughout a whole season, trying to
understand how to get the best out of each player, and that’s what excites me.
Obviously you play this game to win also, but what excites me is being able to
help kids reach their potential."
Suzuki replaces Ron Washington, whose option year wasn’t picked up after two
losing seasons. Brad Ausmus, Joe Maddon, Phil Nevin, and interim Ray Montgomery
have also briefly held this slippery job since Mike Scioscia wasn’t brought back
in late 2018 after 19 years in charge.
Suzuki skirted questions about Angels third baseman Anthony Rendon, his
teammate on the Washington Nationals’ championship team in 2019. Rendon, who
didn’t play at all this season due to a hip injury, still has one season left on
the catastrophic $245-million, seven-year contract Moreno gave him as a free
agent after the World Series.
"I haven’t spoke to Perry about that whole situation," Suzuki said of Rendon,
who will make $38 million from the Angels next year.
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