Jesse joined ESPN Chicago in September 2009 and covers MLB for ESPN.com.
GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Alyssa Francona had several missed calls from her dad. Then her sister texted her.
“Dad’s trying to get in touch with you,” the message read. “Be supportive. He’s really excited.”
Alyssa — the eldest daughter of longtime MLB manager Terry Francona — wasn’t sure what to make of that. Her dad was happily retired and feeling healthy for the first time in years. He was traveling more, his golf game was improving and by all accounts, his time with family and friends was fulfilling.
If Francona, 65, was itching to manage again, he wasn’t showing it.
Not surprisingly, his daughters were happy that Francona seemed done with the grind of the game, but they knew their dad better than anyone: He loved being in the dugout and in the clubhouse. And there is “nothing like that ninth inning,” Francona would later say.
Alyssa called her sister Leah before calling her dad back.
“She said the Cincinnati guys were out there talking to him,” Alyssa recalled recently. “Don’t burst his bubble.”
KIM BOCHY HAD a similar experience in 2022.
The wife of manager Bruce Bochy was looking forward to her husband’s retirement. Bochy, 69, quit baseball after the 2019 season, but the two hadn’t fully enjoyed their newfound freedom yet as the COVID-19 pandemic soon shut the world down, and, like Francona, Bochy had various health issues to address. Just as the two were beginning to enjoy the fruits of a lifetime in the game, new Texas Rangers GM Chris Young came calling.
“Once CY came to visit — once he walked through the door — I was like, ‘Oh my gosh,’ I think this is not going to be good,” Kim Bochy recalled. “In my perspective, I was very, very content and very happy being done. He was too. I tried to talk him out of it, I did my best to talk him out of taking the job.
“Why do you want to go back? You’ve won three World Series, you’ve done everything in this game. Why do you want to go back? And he said, ‘I want to win another World Series.'”
Kim eventually came around to the idea of her husband’s return and it didn’t take long for Bochy to accomplish that goal, leading the Rangers to their first title in 2023. Now Francona has the same desire to restore glory to a franchise as the new manager of the Cincinnati Reds. When Francona left the Cleveland Guardians dugout after the 2023 season, he swore he was done. Baseball disagreed.
“I wasn’t planning on coming back,” he told ESPN. “I really wasn’t.”
BY THE TIME Francona left Cleveland, after 10 years, his body was breaking down. Ask him what ailed him the most, and he shakes his head.
“That’s the problem, there were about 12 things,” Francona said with a smile from his office in spring training. “I got both knees, both hips, my right shoulder. About a week after the season in Cleveland, I had my shoulder replaced and I had three hernias.
“I’m on blood thinners because of the blood clots. So when we fly, f—, my right leg, we take off, my pants fit. When we land, my pants don’t fit.”
Those issues finally caught up with him. He felt he was relying too much on his coaches and wasn’t fulfilling his No.1 rule — one that possibly impacted his health.
“I think if you’re managing correctly, you’re putting the players and the organization first and you’re putting yourself like a distant last,” Francona said. “I needed to be away. When you know you need to be away, you’re probably late.”
Francona’s short retirement consisted of time with his grandkids, golf trips to Mexico, a vacation to Hawaii and taking in some college football.
“I wasn’t married to my phone anymore,” Francona said. “My biggest decision was should I get another cup of coffee?”
He even offered to watch the grandkids while his daughters vacationed in Europe last summer.
“I almost came back then,” Francona quipped.
Watching a 7-year-old and a 9-year-old might have been more taxing than managing, according to his daughter. Shortly after arriving in Europe, Alyssa texted one of the kids, asking what grandpa was doing.
“She’s like, ‘Grandpa needed a rest day,'” Alyssa said with a laugh. “He’s taking a day off and we’re like 48 hours into what is a 10-day trip!”
Francona told that story at baseball’s winter meetings in December, not long after taking the job in Cincinnati. The Reds had flown down to Tucson to see him about their opening after the team had let David Bell go near the end of the season. Francona was “enjoying some beers” at a football game when he got the call that Cincinnati was interested — former broadcaster Marty Brennaman first broached it to him — and soon after, Reds president of baseball operations Nick Krall and GM Brad Meador were at his house. A day later, owner Bob Castellini was there, as well.
“I’m sitting in my rocking chair talking to them and I caught myself really early a couple times,” Francona recalled. “I said, ‘we’ could do this or ‘we’ could do that. I’m like, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa. Slow down.'”
But he wasn’t premature. The job was his if he wanted it — and on Oct. 4, he accepted it. After four years in the Philadelphia Phillies dugout, eight more in Boston and 10 in Cleveland followed by a one-year sabbatical, Terry “Tito” Francona was back. The news came unexpectedly even to his own family.
“We were making jokes about his golf score,” Alyssa said. “If he started shooting over 80 that he may take a job, but from all accounts he was shooting well on the course too. It was a little surprising.”
MANY OF FRANCONA’S contemporaries, starting with Bochy, were less surprised. Even after accomplishing his goal of winning another World Series after returning, Bochy is still going, with his 70th birthday coming early in the 2025 season.
“I just went through it,” he said. “I know the feeling. You get out. You miss it. You think ‘Gosh, I got out too early.’ All those thoughts go through your head. You just miss what you love to do.”
Like Francona, Bochy didn’t seek out a job as much as it sought him out. It’s why his wife knew there was trouble brewing once Chris Young walked through that door. A team needs you. It’s hard to turn away from that.
“I’m so glad he’s back, nor did it surprise me when Bochy came back,” Colorado Rockies skipper Bud Black said. “Don’t ask me why. I just know those guys and I knew they weren’t done.”
Black, 67, has been the manager in Colorado since 2017. The Rockies haven’t sniffed the postseason since 2018, losing more than 100 games in back-to-back seasons in 2023 and 2024. He has been given little to work with, yet he keeps coming back for more.
“It’s not just one thing, it’s all of it,” Black said. “It’s the passion for the game. I don’t think it ever leaves you. When you have the desire to stay in it, to stay in the fight, it feels good.”
Several managers ESPN spoke with echoed Black’s comments. Even those who were a little surprised at Francona’s unretirement understand what drives him — what keeps men who don’t need the money or glory from stepping away for good.
“I texted him right away and said, ‘Are you crazy?'” San Francisco Giants manager Bob Melvin said. “But there are guys that are just baseball guys. It’s in their blood. It’s what they have to do. He’s one of them.
“He’s a legend.”
Melvin is looking forward to exchanging lineup cards before Francona’s first regular-season game back in the dugout later this month as the Reds will host the Giants on Opening Day. Ahead of the matchup featuring two managers in their 60s, Melvin, 63, was asked why teams are turning back to some of the older guard to lead their clubs after a period when younger skippers were en vogue across the sport.
“Because of the success,” Melvin said, citing Dusty Baker and Bochy both winning World Series titles this decade. “Any time there is success, there’s a wave that goes in that direction.”
Francona is hoping to get caught up in that wave. He has a young, ultratalented team that seemingly underachieved last season when it won just 77 games and finished in fourth place in the NL Central.
Infielder Jeimer Candelario is among the players at Reds camp who think their new manager will provide just what the team needs to change that in the season ahead.
“Leadership,” Candelario said. “I think he’s a Hall of Famer. He’s done this for a long time. When he was named manager, he came to the Dominican Republic to see the guys. That was different. The way I see him is with a lot of respect because we know he’s a leader.”
After replacing retirement vacations with introductory trips to meet his new players, Francona admits he wasn’t sure how he would have filled his free time if he hadn’t come back. There’s only so much golf and traveling a person can do. Besides, managing is about the only thing he knows.
“Other than taking a real estate course for two weeks, this is all I’ve ever f—ing done,” Francona said. “I’m comfortable here.”
LOS ANGELES — Phillip Danault scored his second goal with 42 seconds to play, and the Los Angeles Kings blew a four-goal lead before rallying for a 6-5 victory over the Edmonton Oilers in the opener of the clubs’ fourth consecutive first-round playoff series Monday night.
The Kings led 5-3 in the final minutes before Zach Hyman and Connor McDavid tied it with an extra attacker. Los Angeles improbably responded, with Danault skating up the middle and chunking a fluttering shot home while a leaping Warren Foegele screened goalie Stuart Skinner.
Andrei Kuzmenko had a goal and two assists in his Stanley Cup playoff debut, and Adrian Kempe added another goal and two assists for the second-seeded Kings, who lost those last three series against Edmonton. Los Angeles became the fourth team in Stanley Cup playoffs history to win in regulation despite blowing a four-goal lead.
Los Angeles has home-ice advantage this spring for the first time in its tetralogy with Edmonton, and the Kings surged to a 4-0 lead late in the second period in the arena where they had the NHL’s best home record. That’s when the Oilers woke up and made it a memorable night: Leon Draisaitl, Mattias Janmark and Corey Perry scored before Hyman scored with 2:04 left and McDavid scored an exceptional tying goal with 1:28 remaining.
McDavid had a goal and three assists for the Oilers, who reached Game 7 of the Stanley Cup Final last season. Skinner stopped 24 shots.
Game 2 is Wednesday night in Los Angeles.
Until Edmonton’s late rally, Kuzmenko was the star. Los Angeles went 0 for 12 on the power play against Edmonton last spring, but the 29-year-old Russian — who has energized the Kings since arriving last month — scored during a man advantage just 2:49 in.
LOS ANGELES — Edmonton Oilers forward Jeff Skinner finally made his Stanley Cup playoff debut after 15 seasons and a league-record 1,078 regular-season games.
Skinner was in the lineup for Edmonton’s 6-5 loss in Game 1 of its first-round series against the Los Angeles Kings on Monday night, ending the longest wait for a postseason debut in NHL history.
Skinner, who turns 33 years old next month, has been an NHL regular since he was 18. He has racked up six 30-goal seasons and 699 total points while scoring 373 goals in a standout career.
But Skinner spent his first eight seasons of that career with the Carolina Hurricanes, at the time, a developing club that missed nine consecutive postseasons during the 2010s. From there, he spent the next six seasons with the woebegone Buffalo Sabres, whose current 14-season playoff drought is the league’s longest.
Skinner signed with Edmonton as a free agent last summer but struggled to nail down a consistent role in the Oilers’ lineup in the first half of the season. His game improved markedly in the second half, and he scored 16 goals this season while entering the playoffs as Edmonton’s third-line left wing.
Skinner’s teammates have been thrilled to end his drought this month. Connor McDavid presented Skinner with their player of the game award after the Oilers clinched their sixth straight playoff berth two weeks ago.
The veteran was active against the Kings, as his club mounted a furious rally only to lose in the final minute of regulation. Skinner had an assist and five hits across his 15 shifts. He finished the night with 11:12 time on the ice.
Ovechkin scored the first playoff overtime goal of his career to propel the Capitals to a series-opening 3-2 victory at home in his 152nd career postseason game.
“A goal is a goal,” Ovechkin said after the victory. “Good things happen when you go to the net.”
Ovechkin is the all-time leader in regular-season overtime goals with 27 in 1,491 games. They’re part of his career total of 897 goals, having broken Wayne Gretzky’s NHL record of 894 goals this season.
“The guy’s the best player in the world. What else can you say?” said Capitals goaltender Logan Thompson, who made 33 saves in the win. “He comes in clutch. All game. It’s a privilege to be his teammate.”
After an icing call, Capitals forward Dylan Strome won a faceoff, with Montreal forwards Patrik Laine and Ivan Demidov failing to clear the puck. Winger Anthony Beauvillier collected the puck for a shot on goal and then tracked down his own rebound to Montreal goalie Sam Montembeault‘s right. Montreal’s Alex Newhook and Kaiden Guhle went to defend Beauvillier, who slid a pass to an open Ovechkin on the doorstep for the goal at 2:26 of overtime.
The overtime tally completed a monster night for Ovechkin.
He opened the scoring on the power play at 18:34 of the first period and then assisted on Beauvillier’s second-period goal to make it 2-0 before finishing off the pesky Canadiens in overtime. It was the 37th multipoint performance and 10th multigoal game of Ovechkin’s playoff career.
Ovechkin also had seven hits in the game to lead all skaters.
Ovechkin is the oldest skater in Stanley Cup playoff history to factor in all of his team’s goals in a game. He also became the fourth-oldest player in Cup playoff history to score an overtime goal at 39 years and 216 days. Detroit’s Igor Larionov was 41 years old when he scored a triple-overtime goal in Game 3 of the 2002 Stanley Cup Final against the Carolina Hurricanes.
With his first goal, Ovechkin passed Patrick Marleau and Esa Tikkanen (72) and tied Dino Ciccarelli (73) for the 14th-most playoff goals in NHL history. Ovechkin’s 74th career playoff goal put him in a tie with Joe Pavelski for the 13th-most career playoff goals.
The captain’s overtime heroism rescued Game 1 for the Capitals. The top seed in the Eastern Conference watched the Canadiens rally in the third period on goals by Cole Caufield and Nick Suzuki 5:13 apart to send the game to overtime.
“You can see why they made the playoffs. That team doesn’t quit,” Thompson said. “In the third, they didn’t go away. We’ve got to respect them. They took it to us in the third.”
But rather than give Montreal some much-needed confidence and a series lead in its upset bid, Ovechkin shut the door in overtime.
“He played a hell of game tonight,” Beauvillier said.