Billy McMillon Named PawSox Manager for 2019
This past December 7th, the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Boston Red Sox announced that Billy McMillon had been named as the new PawSox manager for the 2019 season. Red Sox Vice President of Player Development Ben Crockett made the announcement.
This past December 7th, the Pawtucket Red Sox and the Boston Red Sox announced that Billy McMillon had been named as the new PawSox manager for the 2019 season. Red Sox Vice President of Player Development Ben Crockett made the announcement.
McMillon, 47, has been Boston's Minor League Outfield & Baserunning Coordinator for the past three seasons after a six year stint as a manager in the Red Sox system…2010 & '11 with Greenville (low-A), 2012 & '13 with Salem (high-A), and 2014 & '15 with Portland (AA). Billy has actually spent the past 11 seasons in the Red Sox organization beginning with a stint as Greenville's hitting coach in 2008 & 2009. He replaces Kevin Boles, who had been manager of the PawSox from 2014-18 before leaving the organization following the 2018 season. In December, Boles was named manager of the Binghamton Rumble Ponies (the Eastern League Double-A affiliate of the New York Mets).
McMillon's 12-year playing career included parts of six seasons in the major leagues as an outfielder with the Florida Marlins (1996-97), Philadelphia Phillies (1997), Detroit Tigers (2000-01), and Oakland Athletics (2001-04). He had 6 HR in 66 games for the A's in 2003 and appeared in three games during the Division Series against the Red Sox that season (won by Boston, 3 games to 2). Billy won the International League batting title in 2000 when he hit .345 for the Toledo Mud Hens (AAA-Tigers). He is presently a nominee for the IL Hall of Fame.
He was an outstanding player for four different teams in the International League from 1996-2002 finishing with a career batting average of .310 with 79 HR in 609 IL games. Billy won the league batting title, IL Rookie of the Year honors, and was an All-Star when he hit .352 for Charlotte (AAA-Marlins) in 1996. After parts of three seasons with Scranton/WB (Phillies), he went to Toledo (AAA-Detroit) in 2000 and captured his second IL batting crown (.hitting .345 for the Mud Hens) while earning his second IL All-Star nod. Two years later he played his final season in the IL for Columbus (Cleveland) in 2002 where he hit .301 and was named to his third IL All-Star team.
Billy made his coaching debut in 2008 as the hitting coach for the Greenville Drive (2008 & 2009) before making his managerial debut in 2010 as the Drive skipper. During that 2010 season he led Greenville to the South Atlantic League Championship series where they lost to Lakewood, 3 games to 1.
He was promoted to manage Salem in 2012 on a team that featured Vazquez as catcher, regulars such as SS
Billy's progression continued when he moved to Double-A Portland in 2014 where he was named Eastern League Manager of the Year after guiding the Sea Dogs to a franchise-record 88 wins and the 2014 Eastern League Northern Division title. Portland was defeated in the playoff semi-finals by Binghamton, 3 games to 2.
His 2014 Sea Dogs, who had the best winning pct. in all of Double-A Baseball (88-54, .620) featured Betts, Swihart, Shaw, and Scott along with starters
Overall in his six seasons as a minor league manager, McMillon has a career record of 440-400 (.524). He has spent each of the last three seasons (2016-18) as Boston's Minor League Outfield and Baserunning Coordinator which has included stops at McCoy Stadium.
Billy McMillon was born in Otero, New Mexico and resides in Columbia, South Carolina with his wife, Krista, and children, Kennedy (17) and Jackson (14). Billy earned a B.A. from Clemson University and an MBA from the University of Phoenix. During his three year career at Clemson (1991-93), he had the highest career batting average (.382) of any former Tiger. He was selected by the Marlins in the 8th round of the 1993 June draft.
BILLY McMILLON'S LIFETIME MANAGERIAL RECORD (6 years)
YEAR CLUB LEAGUE W L PCT DIV. FINISH
2010 Greenville South Atlantic (A) 77 62 .554 2nd Won semis, lost finals
2011 Greenville South Atlantic (A) 78 62 .557 2nd
2012 Salem Carolina (A) 68 69 .496 3rd
2013 Salem Carolina (A) 76 64 .543 2nd Won semis, won finals
2014 Portland Eastern (AA) 88 54 .620 1st Lost semis
2015 Portland Eastern (AA) 53 89 .373 6th
Career Totals 440 400 .524
In 2014, Kevin Boles became the fifth PawSox manager during a six year span following Ron Johnson (2005-09), Torey Lovullo (2010), Arnie Beyeler (2011-12), and Gary DiSarcina (2013). Those four were all promoted to big league coaching staffs directly from the PawSox as Johnson became Boston's 1B coach in 2010, Lovullo was Toronto's 1B coach in 2011 and then Boston's bench coach in 2013, Beyeler was Boston's 1B coach in 2013, and DiSarcina took the Los Angeles Angels 3B coaching job in 2014. Boles won the 2014 Governors' Cup Championship with the PawSox during his first season and went on to compile 345 wins during his five year tenure in Pawtucket.
The complete list of all-time PawSox managers…
Darrell Johnson 1973
Joe Morgan 1974-1982
Tony Torchia 1983-1984
Rac Slider 1985
Ed Nottle 1986-1990
Johnny Pesky 1990
Butch Hobson 1991
Rico Petrocelli 1992
Buddy Bailey 1993-1996, 2002-2004
Ken Macha 1997-1998
Gary Jones 1999-2001
Ron Johnson 2005-2009
Torey Lovullo 2010
Arnie Beyeler 2011-2012
Gary DiSarcina 2013
Kevin Boles 2014-2018
Billy McMillon 2019 -
Rich Gedman, also in attendance today, will return for his 5th season as PawSox hitting coach in 2019. Gedman, 59, was promoted from the Portland Sea Dogs (AA) to become hitting coach for the Pawtucket Red Sox in 2015.
The PawSox improved their Team Batting average 16 points from 2015 (.238) to 2016 (.254) and continued to go up with a .258 average in 2017. The club hit .249 in 2018 led by two-time International League All-Star OF
Jackie Bradley, Jr. and Travis Shaw had fine seasons working with Gedman in Pawtucket in 2015 and both also spent considerable time in Boston. Rich was the hitting coach in Portland in 2013 & 2014 working with such notables as Xander Bogaerts and Christian Vazquez in 2013 and with Mookie Betts (.355 in 54 games) and Blake Swihart in 2014. Portland finished the 2014 season with an 88-54 record to win the Eastern League Northern Division.
A Worcester, MA native, Gedman played for Boston for 11 seasons from 1980-1990. In 906 career games with the Red Sox he hit .259 with 83 HR & 356 RBI. He is 4th in Red Sox history with 858 games caught behind only Jason Varitek, Carlton Fisk, and Sammy Walton.
His best seasons came in 1985 and 1986 when he was an American League All-Star catcher both years. Hitting .295/18/80 in '85 and .258/16/65 in '86. During that 1986 season Rich caught Roger Clemens' 20-strikeout game on April 29 and played in all 14 of Boston's post-season games in 1986 as he hit .357 with a HR in the ALCS vs. California and added a homer in the World Series vs. the Mets.
Gedman signed with Boston as a non-drafted free agent in 1977 and played for the PawSox in 1980 (batting .236 with 11 HR in 111 games). He also played for the PawSox for 25 games in 1981 (going 1-for-3 during The Longest Game in Baseball History in April of that year) and had a brief injury rehab assignment with Pawtucket during the 1988 season. He finished his big league career playing for Houston in 1990 and St. Louis in 1991 & '92.
This is Rich's 9th year as a coach in the Red Sox system. In 2011 he was the hitting coach for the Lowell Spinners, in 2012 he served in that same role for the Salem Red Sox, and in 2013 & 2014 he was Portland's hitting coach. His coaching career actually began as bench coach for the North Shore Spirit of the Can-Am Independent League before he became manager of the Worcester Tornadoes in that same league from 2005-2010.
Rich and his wife Sherry currently live in Framingham, MA and have three children: Michael, Marissa (a professional hockey player), and Matt (a former infielder in the Red Sox system who played for Salem in 2013 and 2014).
The PawSox 2019 field staff will also include pitching coach Kevin Walker, who returns for his second year along with coach Bruce Crabbe, who is back for his sixth year with the PawSox. The club will have a new trainer as David Herrera, the Red Sox former Latin American Medical Coordinator, joins the PawSox replacing Eric Velazquez who was promoted to a new role in the Red Sox organization. Chris Messina will be the new PawSox strength & conditioning coach.
PAWSOX BOX OFFICE TO OPEN ON JANUARY 26
The Pawtucket Red Sox will put 2019 single game tickets on sale for the first time on Saturday, January 26, starting at 10 a.m., at pawsox.com, by phone at (401) 724-7300, and at the McCoy Stadium Box Office.
For those fans who wish to visit in person on January 26, the Box Office at McCoy will be open from 10 a.m-2 p.m.
The PawSox will again hold the line on ticket prices in 2019. The lowest-priced tickets - $6 in advance for children & seniors and $9 in advance for adults - remain unchanged for the 5th year in a row.
Green (Field Box) seats will again be $14 when purchased in advance, while the red seats (Reserved Box) will continue to be $13. General Admission tickets will once again cost just $9 and General Admission tickets for children (aged 12 & under) will remain only $6, as will tickets for seniors (aged 62 & over), veterans, and active duty military. The military discount is presented by TD Bank. Again this season, tickets purchased on the day of the game will cost $2 more than those purchased in advance of the day of the game.
The club's full 2019 promotional calendar will be updated frequently, and fans can stay up to date at pawsox.com. The PawSox begin their 2019 season on April 4 in Syracuse with their home-opener at McCoy Stadium slated for Thursday, April 11 at 6:05 pm vs. the Syracuse Mets (and
MAJOR/MINOR LEAGUE SPRING TRAINING DATES & PAWSOX SPRING TRAINING SCHEDULE
Feb. 4 Red Sox Equipment Truck Departs from Fenway Park & McCoy Stadium for JetBlue Park in Ft. Myers
Feb. 13 Major League Pitchers & Catchers First Workout
Feb. 18 First Major League Full Squad Workout
March 1 Remaining Minor League Pitchers & Catchers Report
March 5 Remaining Minor League Position Players Report
RED SOX OFF-SEASON ACQUISITIONS
Boston Red Sox acquisitions, free agent signings, or re-signings who could impact Pawtucket in 2019 include…
Bryce Brentz, OF - Brentz, 30, was selected by Boston in the first round (36th overall) of the 2010 June Draft and spent his first eight professional seasons (2010-17) in the Red Sox organization. The right-handed hitter was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates on February 20, 2018, then claimed off waivers by the New York Mets on March 26. He spent most of the 2018 season with Triple-A Las Vegas, where in 55 games he hit .264 (51-for-193) with 15 home runs and a .912 OPS, batting .333 (16-for-48) with five home runs against left-handed pitchers. Brentz spent his entire 2017 season with Triple-A Pawtucket and was named an International League mid- and post-season All-Star, hitting 31 home runs with 85 RBI. In 34 career major league games-all with Boston in 2014 and 2016-the outfielder has hit .287 (25-for-87) with five doubles, one home run, and nine RBI.
Juan Centeno, C - Centeno, 29, has appeared in 111 major league games (87 starts) with the Mets (2013-14), Brewers (2015), Twins (2016), Astros (2017), and Rangers (2018), batting .227 (74-for-326) with six home runs. The left-handed hitter is 8-for-17 (.471) in six career games at Fenway Park and has batted .266 (17-for-64) against left-handed major league pitchers. He spent most of the 2018 season with Triple-A Round Rock, where he threw out 18 of 41 attempted base stealers (43.9%) and hit .234 (48-for-205) in 59 games. During the Astros' 2017 championship season, Centeno appeared in 22 games and was on the club's ALDS, ALCS, and World Series rosters, though he did not appear in a postseason game. Born in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, he was selected by the Mets in the 32nd round of the 2007 June Draft.
Gorkys Hernández, OF - Hernández, 31, has spent the past three seasons in the San Francisco Giants organization, appearing exclusively with the major league club in both 2017 (128 games) and 2018 (142 games). Last season, the right-handed hitter batted .234 (97-for-414) with 15 home runs, including .277 (72-for-260) with a .778 OPS before the All-Star break. Originally signed by Detroit in 2005 at the age of 17, the Venezuelan native has appeared in 374 major league games with the Pirates (2012, '15), Marlins (2012), and Giants (2016-18), making 155 starts in center field, 58 in left field, and 14 in right field. His lone postseason experience came in the 2016 Division Series against the Cubs, when he started Game 1 in center field and appeared in two other games as a pinch hitter and defensive replacement.
Oscar Hernández, C - Hernández, 25, attended 2018 Major League Spring Training camp with the Red Sox as a non-roster invitee and spent the entire season with Triple-A Pawtucket, batting .205 (31-for-151) and throwing out 17 of 39 attempted base stealers (43.6%) in 47 games. The Venezuelan native spent his first eight professional seasons in the Rays (2010-14) and Diamondbacks (2015-17) organizations, posting a 3.05 catcher's ERA in his 17 major league games (10 starts), all with Arizona from 2015-16. At the minor league level, Hernández has thrown out 41.0 percent of attempted base stealers (162 of 395). Selected by Arizona as the No. 1 overall pick in the 2014 Rule 5 Draft, Hernández was named MVP of the Venezuelan Summer League in 2011 after winning the Triple Crown with a .402 batting average, 21 home runs, and 66 RBI.
Zach Putnam, RHP - Putnam, 31, missed the entire 2018 season recovering from Tommy John surgery performed in June 2017. Selected by Cleveland in the fifth round of the 2008 June Draft, the right-hander has appeared in 145 major league games-all in relief-with the Indians (2011), Rockies (2012), Cubs (2013), and White Sox (2014-17). In 130 games with the White Sox, he posted a 2.71 ERA (42 ER/139.1 IP) with 149 strikeouts, with lefties batting .228 (53-for-232) and righties hitting .210 (55-for-262) against him in that time. Putnam has pitched primarily in the later innings in his major league career, having made 61 appearances in the eighth inning and 34 in the ninth. He has faced 171 batters with runners in scoring position since the start of 2014, allowing zero home runs and holding opponents to a .196 batting average (27-for-138) in that situation.
Erasmo Ramírez, RHP - Ramírez, 28, missed a majority of the 2018 season due to a pair of stints on the disabled list. He made 10 starts with the Mariners and went 2-4 with a 6.50 ERA (33 ER/45.2 IP), including 2-1 with a 3.68 ERA (12 ER/29.1 IP) in a six-start span from August 12-September 9. Originally signed by Seattle in 2007, Ramírez has appeared in 192 major league games (92 starts) with the Mariners (2012-14, '17-18) and Rays (2015-17), going 32-39 with a 4.36 ERA (309 ER/637.2 IP). In 81 relief appearances since the start of 2016, the right-hander has posted a 3.81 ERA (49 ER/115.2 IP), including a 3.23 mark (11 ER/30.2 IP) in 2017. One of only 15 players in major league history born in Nicaragua, Ramírez is 13-8 with a 3.20 ERA (80 ER/225.0 IP) against AL East clubs, having posted a 2.05 ERA (6 ER/26.1 IP) in 11 games at Fenway Park.
Josh Smith, RHP - Smith, 31, split the 2018 season between the Mariners and Red Sox organizations, signing with Boston as a minor league free agent on May 15 after being released by Seattle. Each of his 22 appearances (11 starts) came at the Triple-A level with Tacoma and Pawtucket, as he went 5-8 with a 4.38 ERA (41 ER/84.1 IP), 90 strikeouts, and 19 walks. Smith allowed 13 earned runs in 7.1 innings over his first three outings with the PawSox, but in his final 15 games he posted a 2.84 ERA (21 ER/66.2 IP). With Pawtucket, he surrendered only one home run to the 143 right-handed hitters he faced. Selected by Cincinnati in the 21st round of the 2010 June Draft, Smith has appeared in 67 major league games (nine starts) for the Reds (2015-16) and Oakland A's (2017), going 5-8 with a 5.30 ERA (75 ER/127.1 IP) and 103 strikeouts.
BOSTON RED SOX NON-ROSTER INVITEES (11)
PITCHERS (6): Zach Putnam, Erasmo Ramírez, Carson Smith, Josh Smith, Domingo Tapia, Ryan Weber
CATCHERS (2):
INFIELDERS (1): Tony Renda
OUTFIELDERS (2): Bryce Brentz, Gorkys Hernández
BOSTON RED SOX 40-MAN ROSTER (39)
PITCHERS (21): Matt Barnes,
CATCHERS (3):
INFIELDERS (11): Xander Bogaerts,
OUTFIELDERS (4): Andrew Benintendi, Mookie Betts,
2018 PAWSOX WHO HAVE LANDED ELSEWHERE FOR NEXT SEASON
RHP William Cuevas Signed by KT Wiz of Korean Baseball Organization
RHP Justin Haley Signed by Samsung Lions of Korean Baseball Organization
LHP Robby Scott Claimed by Arizona
LHP Josh D. Smith Signed by Cleveland (Columbus)
C Dan Butler Arizona Diamondbacks Bullpen Catcher