The incoming Colorado Rockies ownership group will install a dedicated general manager in the front office, ending the franchise's practice of operating without that title since Bill Schmidt assumed decision-making authority in 2021. Schmidt has held president of baseball operations responsibilities without a subordinate GM layer since taking over for Jeff Bridich, who resigned under pressure. The new structure separates strategic oversight from day-to-day roster construction.
The Rockies have operated since 2014 without clear title delineation between ownership directives and baseball operations execution. Dick Monfort retained final authority on payroll and major decisions while Schmidt managed trades, draft picks, and player development. That arrangement produced five consecutive losing seasons, a farm system ranked 28th by *Baseball America* entering 2025, and attendance decline from 2.85 million in 2019 to 2.01 million in 2024. The ownership transition—pending MLB approval expected in June—allows incoming principals to impose external accountability without inheriting Schmidt's operational choices.
A dedicated GM role matters because it clarifies who answers for roster failures and creates a buffer between ownership capital allocation and field performance. The last time Colorado had distinct president and GM positions was O'Dowd's tenure, when the franchise reached one World Series and three playoff appearances across 13 seasons. Since his departure, decision-making collapsed into a single executive who reported directly to an owner with documented reluctance to approve nine-figure contracts or aggressive international spending. The structural change signals the new group expects different outcomes and is willing to pay the $2–4 million annual salary premium a credible GM commands.
The move also reshapes Schmidt's position. He remains in place through the transition but now operates knowing his successor structure includes someone between him and ownership. That compresses his decision timeline for offseason moves—spring training opens mid-February—and makes him less likely to commit to multi-year extensions for controllable assets like outfielder Nolan Jones or reliever Jalen Beeks. Front office sources around the league expect Schmidt to either accept a demotion to senior advisor or depart once the GM hire concludes.
The new ownership group has not disclosed candidates but recent MLB hires offer a template. The Orioles elevated Mike Elias from scouting director to GM in 2018 at $1.5 million annually; he rebuilt the farm system in three years and reached the playoffs in year five. The Guardians promoted Chris Antonetti internally in 2010, pairing him with president Mark Shapiro to create tiered accountability that survived two ownership transitions. Colorado's challenge is attracting a candidate to the majors' worst run-differential team (minus-224 in 2024) at altitude, where pitching development has structural disadvantages and the international spending pool trails 22 other franchises.
Watch for the GM search to begin formally after MLB governors approve the ownership transfer at the June quarterly meeting. The new group will likely hire an executive search firm—Turnkey Search or Sportsology—and target candidates from organizations with recent playoff success and altitude-neutral player development records. Schmidt's offseason moves between now and June will be scrutinized as either audition material or sabotage depending on outcome. Any multi-year contract extensions signed before the new GM arrives would constrain the incoming executive's first trade deadline.
The Rockies have not posted a winning record since 2018. The new ownership group paid an estimated $1.3 billion for a franchise that ranked 23rd in revenue among MLB's 30 teams in 2024. They are not adding a GM to preserve continuity.