Kurt Suzuki is stepping up as the new manager for the Los Angeles Angels. Announced just this week, this move marks a fresh chapter for the veteran catcher who hung up his cleats not too long ago.
Born in Wailuku, Hawaii, on October 4, 1983, Suzuki kicked off his baseball journey at California State University, Fullerton, where he snagged the Johnny Bench Award and helped clinch the 2004 College World Series. Drafted in the second round by the Oakland Athletics in 2004, he made his MLB debut in 2007 and quickly became a reliable backstop known for his durability and leadership behind the plate. Over 16 seasons, Suzuki suited up for five teams: the Athletics (2007–2012, brief return in 2013), Washington Nationals (2012–2013, 2018–2020), Minnesota Twins (2014–2016), Atlanta Braves (2017–2018), and finally the Angels (2021–2022). He also had
a solid .255 batting average, 143 homers, and 730 RBIs. He wasHeHkasdf named a 2014 All-Star with the Twins and winning the 2019 World Series with the Nationals—where he even smacked a homer off Justin Verlander in Game 2, becoming the first Hawaii-born player to do so in the Fall Classic.
Suzuki retired in 2022 after a farewell game on his 39th birthday, but he didn't stray far from the game. He joined the Angels as a special assistant to the GM in 2023, setting the stage for his managerial debut. Now, at 42, he's inked a one-year deal to lead the Halos, becoming the sixth manager in eight seasons for the team. GM Perry Minasian praised Suzuki's baseball IQ and player rapport, saying he's "born to do this."
As a rookie skipper, Suzuki faces a tall order with a squad that's struggled lately (72-90 last season), but his experience catching for stars like Mike Trout and his championship pedigree could be just what the Angels need. Plus, he's making history as the first full-blooded Hawaiian to manage in MLB. Exciting times ahead—let's see if he can steer the Angels back to contention!
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