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Blue Jays hire Don Mattingly as bench coach

Former Marlins manager calls Toronto 'a really good club'
Miami Marlins manager Don Mattingly smiles after throwing ball to fans, Oct. 1, 2022
Posted at 12:39 PM, Dec 01, 2022
and last updated 2022-12-01 12:39:37-05

TORONTO — Don Mattingly was expecting to spend a summer at home with his family. A call from the Toronto Blue Jays convinced him to get back into baseball.

Mattingly, who left his job as Miami Marlins manager at the end of last season, is joining Toronto's staff as bench coach to manager John Schneider, the team announced Wednesday.

Mattingly said he'd been contacted by multiple clubs with offers for 2023, but nothing interested him until Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins called to chat.

"Just the first conversation, it felt great, honestly," Mattingly said on a video call Wednesday. "It piqued my interest right away."

Mattingly managed against the Blue Jays in 2020 and 2021.

"Knowing the talent and seeing it, I know it's a really good club," Mattingly said. "You look at the combination of youth and experience, and an offense that can throw runs up. Over the last few years I've seen these guys. They throw runs up in a hurry. I think all the ingredients are there to win."

The former New York Yankees slugger and six-time All-Star joins the Blue Jays after seven seasons with the Marlins. Mattingly won NL Manager of the Year honors with Miami in 2020.

Miami Marlins manager Don Mattingly waves to crowd after final game, Oct. 5, 2022
Miami Marlins manager Don Mattingly waves to the crowd after a game against the Atlanta Braves, Wednesday, Oct. 5, 2022, in Miami. Don Mattingly won't be back next season. His contract expires after this season, and both sides agreed it is time for a new voice to lead the club.

"Credibility and experience are achieved in many different ways, and Don's is unique for our staff," Atkins said. "Experience and credibility are words that get used a lot in professional sports, and in life and in corporate worlds. It's hard to quantify exactly how valuable that is, but I think it's something that will create that calming impact and influence, and help not only with performance and lack thereof, but also with accountability, which will be huge."

Before Miami, Mattingly won three division titles in five seasons as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers. He also worked as hitting coach and bench coach for the Yankees, and as hitting coach of the Dodgers before his managerial stint in Los Angeles.

In Toronto, Mattingly replaces Casey Candaele, who was promoted from Triple-A Buffalo to serve as Schneider's bench coach after the Jays fired manager Charlie Montoyo in July, replacing him with Schneider. The Blue Jays said Candaele will resume his job as manager of the Triple-A Bisons in 2023.

Mattingly spent his entire 14-year playing career with the Yankees, winning nine Gold Gloves at first base, three Silver Slugger awards, the 1984 AL batting title and the 1985 AL MVP award.