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Phillies Extend Thomson, Make Coaching Changes
Bill Streicher-USA TODAY Sports

While the Winter Meetings are usually seen as a time where free agency conversations between players and teams get done and trades start heating up, it's also an opportunity for organizations to make some in-house moves as well.

With the baseball world all gathered in Nashville, TN, the Philadelphia Phillies used this time to get some business done with their coaching staff.

The biggest news is that the Phillies officially announced an extension for manager Rob Thomson that will run through the 2025 season.

Since "Topper" took over for the fired Joe Girardi during the 2022 season, he has a record of 155-118, two National League Championship Series appearances and one NL pennant. His .568 winning percentage is tied for sixth in Major League Baseball and his 18-7 record through his first 25 playoff games has only been accomplished or bested two other times in MLB history.

The 60-year-old will also have two new additions to his coaching staff heading into next year.

Philadelphia announced that they're hiring Dustin Lind and Rafael Pena as assistant hitting coaches under Kevin Long.

Lind was the director of hitting and assistant major league hitting coach with the San Francisco Giants from 2020-23. He worked as the minor league quality assurance coach for the Seattle Mariners in 2018 before being promoted to director of hitting development and strategies in 2019.

Pena is joining the Phillies from the Houston Astros organization, where he held the title of minor league hitting coordinator in 2023. He's been with the Astros since 2018 when he started as a development coach for their Single-A affiliate. He kept rising the ranks within their minor league affiliates, getting promoted as a hitting coach every year since 2019, before getting bumped up to his most recent role.

Both of these coaches should bring something different to Philadelphia who is looking to erase what happened in the NLCS when their bats completely went cold down the stretch.

This article first appeared on Philadelphia Phillies on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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