Tom Kotchman


John Thomas Kotchman is an American professional baseball scout, coach and minor league manager. Since the 2014 season, he has been manager of the Gulf Coast Red Sox, rookie-level affiliate of the Boston Red Sox of Major League Baseball. The 2019 season was Kotchman's 40th as a minor league manager.
In 2008, Kotchman was one of the inaugural inductees into the Professional Baseball Scouts Hall of Fame. He was the 2017 winner of Baseball America's Tony Gwynn Award for "lasting contributions to baseball."

Early baseball career

Kotchman attended high school in Seminole, Florida, and played baseball at Chipola Junior College in Florida and Georgia Southern University. He was signed by the Cincinnati Reds in 1977 and played two seasons in their farm system at the Class A level. A third baseman, he threw and batted right-handed, stood tall and weighed.
He began his managerial career in 1979 at age 24 with the Auburn Redstars in the Short-Season Class A New York–Penn League. The Auburn franchise lacked a Player Development Contract and was designated a "co-op" team, receiving its players on loan from multiple Major League organizations. After one season there, Kotchman became manager of teams affiliated with MLB organizations. He spent 1980–81 in the Detroit Tigers' system, as skipper of the Bristol Tigers of the Rookie-level Appalachian League in 1980, then the Macon Peaches of the full-season Class A South Atlantic League in 1981. He then spent 1982–83 as pilot of the Red Sox' Class A Florida State League franchise, the Winter Haven Red Sox. At Winter Haven, he was the first manager in the professional baseball career of eventual 354-game winner and seven-time Cy Young Award recipient Roger Clemens.

Almost three decades with Angels

In 1984, he joined the player development system of the Los Angeles Angels, beginning an association that would last through 2012.
From 1984–86, he was manager of the Angels' Class A California League farm clubs, the Redwood Pioneers, based in Rohnert Park, California, and the Palm Springs Angels. Success there led to a promotion to the Angels' Triple-A Edmonton Trappers affiliate in the Pacific Coast League, where he also spent three seasons.
In 1990, Kotchman assumed a role he would play for 23 seasons, as both a Florida-based area scout and manager of the Angels' Short-Season Class A or Rookie-level teams in the Northwest League and the Pioneer League. He skippered the Boise Hawks of the NWL for 11 seasons, during which time the Hawks never finished lower than second place and never compiled a losing record. From 2001–12, he managed in the Pioneer League with the Provo Angels and the Orem Owlz. As a scout, Kotchman signed such future Angels as Howie Kendrick, Jeff Mathis, Scot Shields and Bobby Wilson.
In late October 2012, it was reported that Kotchman and the Angels had severed their longtime relationship, when he was asked to concentrate solely on scouting.

Return to Red Sox' system

The December 11, 2012, edition of Baseball America reported that Kotchman had decided to rejoin the Red Sox organization for as a Florida area scout. The Red Sox soon announced that Kotchman would also serve as a coach for the Rookie-level Gulf Coast Red Sox.
On December 18, 2013, the Red Sox promoted Kotchman to manager of the GCL Red Sox, his 35th year as a skipper in minor league baseball. His club won the 2014 Gulf Coast League championship, the ninth league title Kotchman had won since 1990. Additionally, he was honored as Manager of the Year and included in the Gulf Coast League Postseason All-Stars team. He was reappointed skipper of the GCL Red Sox on January 8, 2015, and promoted to Florida cross-checker five days later. The 2015 GCL Red Sox won 41 of 58 regular-season games then repeated as league champions by sweeping three playoff games.
Through 2019 and 40 total seasons, Kotchman had compiled a career regular season managerial record of 1,901 victories and 1,583 defeats, a winning percentage of.546, with ten league championships.

Personal life

He is the father of former Major League first basemen Casey Kotchman and his daughter Christal Kotchman was on the College of Charleston softball team.