MILWAUKEE — The Milwaukee Brewers will go with multiple hitting coaches next season after hiring Ozzie Timmons and Connor Dawson to replace the fired Andy Haines.
Brewers president of baseball operations David Stearns announced Thursday that the National League Central champions had selected Timmons and Dawson to split up responsibilities as part of their “hitting coach team at the major league level.”
Stearns said the Brewers also plan to hire an assistant hitting coach to join that duo.
“What we are doing is really a recognition that this has transformed into a very big job,” Stearns said. “Over the last three to five years, as information continues to proliferate our game, we’re asking more and more of our coaches in general and that’s certainly true of our hitting coaches.
“… I think we’re going to see other teams in the industry follow similar structures in the not-too-distant future, so we think this is the right way to go.”
The Brewers announced Oct. 20 that they wouldn’t be renewing the contract of Haines, who had been Milwaukee’s hitting coach for three seasons.
Milwaukee scored a total of six runs in a four-game NL Division Series loss to the eventual World Series champion Atlanta Braves after ranking 12th out of 30 major league teams in scoring, 20th in OPS and 27th in batting average during the regular season.
Stearns said he didn’t interview the two hitting coaches together but was seeking individuals who were open-minded and willing to collaborate. Stearns said he believes he found two coaches whose divergent backgrounds will make them an ideal duo.
“Connor’s coming from the new school,” Timmons said. “I’m a little bit of old school. We can combine that together. We can make the Brewers roll. That’s the plan.”
Timmons, 51, was the Tampa Bay Rays‘ first base coach and assistant hitting coach from 2017 to 2021. He also assisted players with baserunning and outfield instruction during that time. He played with four different MLB teams from 1995 to 2000.
Dawson, 28, had worked in the Seattle Mariners organization since 2019 and was their minor league hitting coordinator this season.
“I’m relatively new to professional baseball,” Dawson said. “Having a guy like Ozzie, and his experience as a player, as a coach, it’s invaluable. His wisdom complemented with what I have to bring to the table, I think it makes a great pairing, and I think it can make us really good teammates in this endeavor as well.”