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List of Nashville Sounds coaches

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Seven men wearing red baseball jerseys, gray pants, and black caps are standing on a baseball diamond's infield; three are talking together on the mound.
Pitching coach Stan Kyles meets with the Sounds' battery of Justin Lehr and J. C. Boscán on the mound.

The Nashville Sounds Minor League Baseball team has played in Nashville, Tennessee, since being established in 1978 as an expansion team of the Double-A Southern League.[1] They moved up to Triple-A in 1985 as members of the American Association before joining the Pacific Coast League in 1998.[1] With the restructuring of the minor leagues in 2021, they were placed in the Triple-A East, which became the International League in 2022.[2][3] In the 2024 season, the Sounds' coaching staff was led by manager Rick Sweet and included Al LeBoeuf (hitting), Patrick McGuff (pitching and bullpen), Eric Theisen (hitting), David Tufo (bench), and Ned Yost IV (general).[4][5]

Six former Sounds players later served as coaches for the team. Wayne Garland of the 1982 starting rotation returned as pitching coach from 1987 to 1988.[6] Don Cooper, who pitched out of the bullpen in 1980, served as pitching coach from 1994 to 1996.[7] Reliever Steve Wilson retired from the Sounds during the 1995 season and became the team's pitching coach.[8] Fred Dabney, a reliever on the 1993 team, returned to coach pitchers from 2012 to 2014.[9] Éric Gagné, who made two major league rehabilitation starts in 2008, served as bullpen coach in 2019.[10] Jim Henderson, a reliever from 2011 to 2012 and in 2014, returned to the Sounds as pitching coach in 2021.[11] Outfielder Gene Roof (1986) and catcher Buddy Pryor (1987) were player-coaches who coached hitting while also playing on the team. Two coaches also managed the Nashville club. Pitching coach Wayne Garland filled in as interim manager for three games in 1988 after the dismissal of manager Jack Lind.[12] Richie Hebner, who was the hitting coach from 1998 to 2000, became the team's manager for the second half of the 2000 season when Trent Jewett was hired as the Pittsburgh Pirates' third base coach.[13] Four coaches have been selected to participate in the Triple-A All-Star Game: Stan Kyles (2006), Rich Gale (2011), Bob Skube (2014), and Rick Rodriguez (2017).[14][15]

Pat Dobson's 1980 to 1981 pitching staffs had a 3.18 earned run average (ERA), the lowest recorded under all pitching coaches. Darold Knowles (2001–2004) and Stan Kyles (2005–2008) are the longest-tenured pitching coaches, having each served four full seasons. Hitting coaches Jeff Livesey (2001) and Sandy Guerrero (2009–2011) led their hitters to batting averages of .276, the highest under all hitting coaches. Al LeBoeuf (2012, 2021–2024), who coached hitting for five seasons, is the longest-serving hitting coach.

Coaches

[edit]
Key
No. A running total of the number of Sounds coaches. Thus, any coach who has two or more separate terms is only counted once.
W% Team winning percentage: number of wins divided by number of games coached in the regular-season
ERA Team earned run average: earned runs divided by innings pitched times nine
SO Team strikeouts
BA Team batting average: hits divided by at bats
HR Team home runs
RBI Team runs batted in
* Player-coach
All-Star while coaching the Sounds

Pitching

[edit]
A portrait of a man in a blue cap with a white "N" on the front and a white baseball jersey with "Sounds" across the chest in red and blue
Pat Dobson's 1980 to 1981 pitching staffs had a 3.18 ERA, the lowest under all pitching coaches.
A man in a blue cap with a white "N" on the front, a blue baseball jersey with "Sounds" across the chest in white and red, and white pants stands on a baseball field with his hands behind his back.
Hoyt Wilhelm, pitching coach from 1982 to 1984, was inducted in the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1985.[16]
A man in a blue cap with a white "N" on the front and a white baseball uniform with "Sounds" across the chest in blue and red stands, hands on hips, on a field.
Wayne Garland of the 1982 Southern League champion Sounds returned to coach pitchers from 1987 to 1988.[17]
Pitching coaches
No. Coach Season(s) Wins Losses W% ERA SO Ref(s). Stat ref(s).
None 1978–1979 147 138 .516 3.32 1,630 [18] [19][20]
1 Pat Dobson 1980–1981 178 108 .622 3.18 1,804 [21][22] [23][24]
2 Hoyt Wilhelm 1982–1984 239 198 .547 3.73 2,357 [25] [26][27][28]
3 Roger Craig[p 1] 1985 71 70 .504 3.84 783 [29] [30]
4 John Hiller[p 2] 1986 68 74 .479 4.25 755 [31] [32]
5 Wayne Garland 1987–1988 137 145 .486 3.89 1,833 [33] [34][35]
6 Ray Rippelmeyer 1989–1990 160 133 .546 3.52 1,784 [36][37] [38][39]
7 Don Gullett 1991 65 78 .455 3.77 886 [40] [41]
8 Frank Funk 1992 67 77 .465 3.82 1,033 [42] [43]
9 Rick Peterson[p 3] 1993–1994 164 123 .571 3.70 1,951 [44][45] [46][47]
10 Kirk Champion[p 4] 1994 83 61 .576 3.53 1,041 [48] [47]
11 Don Cooper[p 4] 1994 83 61 .576 3.53 1,041 [48] [47]
12 Dewey Robinson[p 5] 1994 83 61 .576 3.53 1,041 [48] [47]
Don Cooper[p 6] 1995 68 76 .472 4.04 931 [50] [51]
13 Steve Wilson[p 7] 1995 68 76 .472 4.04 931 [52] [51]
Don Cooper 1996 77 67 .535 3.77 880 [53] [54]
Kirk Champion 1997 74 69 .517 4.64 881 [55] [56]
14 Bruce Tanner 1998–1999 147 136 .519 4.73 1,894 [57][58] [59][60]
15 Jim Bibby 2000 63 79 .444 4.80 854 [61] [62]
16 Darold Knowles 2001–2004 280 289 .492 4.32 3,961 [63][64] [65][66][67][68]
17 Stan Kyles 2005–2008 299 273 .523 4.13 4,327 [69] [70][71][72][73]
18 Chris Bosio[p 8] 2009 75 69 .521 4.25 882 [74] [75]
19 Jim Rooney[p 9] 2009 75 69 .521 4.25 882 [76] [75]
20 Rich Gale[p 10] 2010 77 67 .535 4.27 938 [78] [79]
21 Bill Castro[p 11] 2010 77 67 .535 4.27 938 [77] [79]
Rich Gale[p 12] 2011 71 73 .493 4.27 1,003 [15] [80]
Bill Castro[p 13] 2011 71 73 .493 4.27 1,003 [15] [80]
Chris Bosio[p 14] 2011 71 73 .493 4.27 1,003 [81] [80]
22 Fred Dabney 2012–2014 201 231 .465 4.22 3,353 [82] [83][84][85]
23 Don Schulze 2015 66 78 .458 3.95 1,037 [86] [87]
24 Rick Rodriguez 2016–2018 223 198 .530 3.92 3,279 [88] [89][90][91]
25 Brian Shouse 2019 66 72 .478 5.48 1,158 [92] [93]
Brendan Sagara[p 15] 2020 [95]
26 Jim Henderson 2021 65 56 .529 4.16 1,108 [96] [97]
27 Jeremy Accardo[p 16] 2022–2024 252 191 .569 4.30 4,216 [98] [99][100][101]
28 Patrick McGuff[p 17] 2024–present 78 68 .534 4.40 1,286 [5] [101]

Hitting

[edit]
A man in a blue cap with a white "N" on the front and a white baseball jersey with "Sounds" across the chest in red and blue smiles.
Ed Napoleon was the Sounds' first hitting coach, serving from 1980 to 1982.
A man in a blue cap with a white "N" on the front, a blue baseball jersey with "Sounds" across the chest in white and red, and white pants stands on a baseball field resting a bat on his shoulder.
Outfielder Gene Roof served as a player-coach in 1986.
Hitting coaches
No. Coach Season(s) BA HR RBI Ref(s). Stat ref(s).
None 1978–1979 .256 108 977 [18] [19][20]
1 Ed Napoleon 1980–1982 .270 273 1,922 [102] [23][24][26]
2 Dick Sisler[h 1] 1983 .272 100 650 [104] [27]
3 Jim Saul[h 1] 1983–1984 .268 199 1,244 [103][105] [27][28]
None 1985 .252 96 521 [106] [30]
4 Gene Roof* 1986 .274 85 600 [107] [32]
5 Jim Lett[h 2] 1987 .257 75 535 [108] [34]
6 Buddy Pryor*[h 3] 1987 .257 75 535 [109] [34]
None 1988–1990 .253 246 1,594 [110][111][112] [35][38][39]
Jim Lett 1991–1992 .255 199 1,086 [113] [41][43]
7 Roger LaFrancois 1993–1996 .264 527 2,482 [114] [46][47][51][54]
8 Von Joshua 1997 .269 153 659 [55] [56]
9 Richie Hebner[h 4] 1998–2000 .273 482 2,049 [13][58] [59][60][62]
10 Dave Clark[h 5] 2000 .258 138 639 [13] [62]
11 Jeff Livesey 2001 .276 130 616 [115] [65]
12 Curtis Wilkerson 2002 .262 110 608 [116] [66]
13 Jay Loviglio 2003 .266 116 585 [63] [67]
Jeff Livesey 2004 .272 180 642 [115] [68]
14 Gary Pettis 2005–2006 .269 272 1,279 [117] [70][71]
15 Harry Spilman 2007–2008 .267 278 1,267 [118] [72][73]
16 Sandy Guerrero 2009–2011 .276 394 1,978 [119] [75][79][80]
17 Al LeBoeuf 2012 .259 119 507 [120] [83]
18 Bob Skube 2013–2014 .260 249 1,145 [121][122] [84][85]
19 Webster Garrison 2015 .265 84 548 [86] [87]
20 Eric Martins 2016–2018 .261 408 1,864 [88] [89][90][91]
21 Howard Johnson 2019 .261 179 658 [92] [93]
Chase Lambin[h 6] 2020 [95]
Al LeBoeuf 2021–2024 .254 621 2,778 [4] [97][99][100][101]
22 Eric Theisen 2024–2024 .244 133 688 [4] [101]

Bench coaches

[edit]
Bench coaches
No. Coach Season(s) Ref.
1 Geno Petralli 2019 [92]
2 David Tufo 2024–present [4]

Bullpen

[edit]
Bullpen coaches
No. Coach Season(s) Ref.
1 Éric Gagné 2019 [92]
2 Patrick McGuff 2023–present [123]

General

[edit]
General coaches
No. Coach Season(s) Ref.
Tyler Graham[o 1] 2020 [95]
1 Ned Yost IV 2021–present [96]
2 Liu Rodríguez 2023 [123]

Former roles

[edit]
Former roles
Coach Season(s) Role Ref.
Sean Isaac 2022 Development coach [98]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
Pitching
  1. ^ The 1985 Sounds were not assigned a pitching coach, but Roger Craig, the Detroit Tigers' minor league pitching instructor, made several visits to Nashville to work with pitchers.[29]
  2. ^ The 1986 Sounds were not assigned a pitching coach, but John Hiller, the Detroit Tigers' minor league pitching instructor, made several visits to Nashville to work with pitchers.[31]
  3. ^ Rick Peterson was promoted to bullpen coach for the Chicago White Sox on June 21, 1994.[44]
  4. ^ a b Kirk Champion, pitching coach of the Chicago White Sox' Double-A Birmingham Barons, and Don Cooper, Chicago's minor league pitching coordinator, filled in on a rotating basis from June 21 to July 14, 1994.[48]
  5. ^ Dewey Robinson, the Chicago White Sox' former bullpen coach, was assigned to Nashville on July 15, 1994.[48]
  6. ^ Don Cooper was promoted to pitching coach for the Chicago White Sox on June 2, 1995.[49]
  7. ^ Steve Wilson, a Nashville relief pitcher, retired during the 1995 season and was hired as pitching coach.[52]
  8. ^ Chris Bosio was promoted to pitching coach for the Milwaukee Brewers on August 12, 2009.[74]
  9. ^ Jim Rooney, a Milwaukee Brewers roving crosschecker, was assigned to Nashville on August 12, 2009.[76]
  10. ^ Rich Gale took a temporary leave of absence in the middle of the 2010 season.[77]
  11. ^ Bill Castro, the Milwaukee Brewers' Latin American pitching adviser, replaced Rich Gale during his 2010 leave of absence.[77]
  12. ^ Rich Gale resigned in June 2011.[15]
  13. ^ Bill Castro served in an interim capacity following Rich Gale's June 2011 resignation.[15]
  14. ^ Chris Bosio, a Milwaukee Brewers major league advance scout, was assigned to Nashville in June 2011.[81]
  15. ^ Brendan Sagara was hired to serve as pitching coach in 2020, but the season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic before it began.[94]
  16. ^ Jeremy Accardo left to become the pitching coach for the Arizona State Sun Devils on June 27, 2024.[5]
  17. ^ Patrick McGuff, Nashville's bullpen coach, became the acting pitching coach on June 27, 2024.[5]
Hitting
  1. ^ a b Dick Sisler was replaced by Jim Saul during the 1983 season.[103]
  2. ^ Jim Lett was promoted to bench coach for the Cincinnati Reds on March 30, 1987.[108]
  3. ^ Buddy Pryor was named player-coach following Jim Lett's promotion to the Cincinnati Reds.[109]
  4. ^ Richie Hebner was promoted to manager of the Sounds after Trent Jewett became the Pittsburgh Pirates' third base coach on June 6, 2000.[13]
  5. ^ Dave Clark, a Pittsburgh Pirates extended spring training instructor, was assigned to Nashville on June 6, 2000.[13]
  6. ^ Chase Lambin was hired to serve as hitting coach in 2020, but the season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic before it began.[94]
Other
  1. ^ Tyler Graham was hired as a coach for 2020, but the season was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic before it began.[94]

References

[edit]
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