Top 57 Quotes & Sayings by Dave Martinez

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American coach Dave Martinez.
Last updated on April 19, 2025.
Dave Martinez

David Martinez is an American professional baseball coach and former outfielder who is the manager for the Washington Nationals of Major League Baseball (MLB). He previously served as the bench coach for the Tampa Bay Rays and Chicago Cubs. He played in MLB for the Cubs, Montreal Expos, Cincinnati Reds, San Francisco Giants, Chicago White Sox, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, Texas Rangers, Toronto Blue Jays, and Atlanta Braves from 1986 to 2001. Martinez had a .276 career batting average, 1,599 hits, 91 home runs, 795 runs scored, and 580 runs batted in.

At 21, I'm too young to be considered just a defensive outfielder.
I like to hit with men in scoring position.
Early in my career when I was with Montreal, we had a lot of good outfielders like Otis Nixon, myself, Marquis Grissom and Larry Walker. We all did the platooning thing, although each one of us could have played every day. We got everybody in the lineup, and everybody got to play.
Honestly, I'd rather not talk about my health. — © Dave Martinez
Honestly, I'd rather not talk about my health.
The object is to win as many games possible.
I enjoy my job. And I love the city of Chicago, and this organization - it gave me the start to my whole career.
It wasn't until Joe Maddon called me in 2006 when I thought about pursuing a coaching career.
I've done everything I could as a bench coach. I'm ready to manage.
My job is to be the bench coach with the Rays and help this team succeed. If another opportunity arises, I'd welcome the opportunity.
You have to take care of the seconds. The minutes, the hours, and the days will take care of themselves.
I've seen teammates who wanted to choke each other.
It would be tremendous... I'd love to be part of winning a championship in Chicago.
I'm about as honest as I can get.
I had some pretty good teachers. I learned how to play the game the right way. — © Dave Martinez
I had some pretty good teachers. I learned how to play the game the right way.
I love conversations, about anything.
The one thing I've known and I've learned from the best managers, it's to stay positive.
There's a lot of good Latin personnel out in baseball, coaching, in the front office, and it's nice to be recognized. But I really believe I'm here because of my merit, not because of any race or anything like that.
I interviewed quite a few times and finally got a job with the Nationals. And I greatly appreciate it.
The one thing I always hear from the players is they say, 'You never change... no matter what happens, you have conversations with us, you are always positive.' They appreciate that.
Often, bumpy roads lead to beautiful places.
Sometimes you need to have a tough conversation or face a tough situation, and take it head on.
I always was the quiet type, never said that much.
I love Chicago. I love Wrigley Field.
When I was with the Giants, I played for Dusty Baker, and I love Dusty to death. I think he's a great manager and great person, but he platooned me. His reasoning was to get everybody in the lineup. It wasn't that I couldn't play every day.
Umpires are supposed to be non-confrontational - they're supposed to uphold the peace on the baseball field.
I prepared myself for years to be where I'm at now, and I try to focus on the here and now.
Through process and preparation and going through all of the interviews, I've learned a lot about myself and my skills.
I realized that I still had a lot to offer the game. My knowledge could maybe help younger guys. I enjoyed being around the clubhouse, on the field.
My kids would watch from the window and wave to me during batting practice.
I utilize my coaches. I value their opinions on a lot of things.
My dad was big about talking about baseball and Latin players.
I've had many managers, and learned a lot from them, the good ones always stayed even-keeled, never rode the waves.
I was thinking it would be nice if I woke up and could play like Roberto Clemente.
When you feel like you're going to have a low-scoring game, why not have one of your better hitters have a chance? All of a sudden you're in the ninth inning and you have one of your best hitters on deck that doesn't get up. I always think about that.
In my first press conference I said, 'I'm here to win.' If you don't think that way, or any player thinks that way, why are you playing the game?
I've been around baseball for a really long time. I didn't know I could want to be here any more than I do, have any more love or passion for this. But being away, even for just a week, that was the worst. I didn't know what was going on. I never want to do that again.
You have to stay in the moment. Stay focused. Know what you're going to do.
Building relationships. Communicating. Trust. Those are three things I've kind of instilled myself with. — © Dave Martinez
Building relationships. Communicating. Trust. Those are three things I've kind of instilled myself with.
Yeah, I grew a goatee, and the next year, everybody had them.
We have to stick together. That is what makes good teams.
The biggest thing I tell the boys is control the heartbeat. It's hard to do, but we've gotta be able to control the heartbeat in big moments because it goes really quick. So just stay in that moment and focus on the moment, don't get ahead of yourselves, and just play the game that we've been playing all year.
Let them know that we care, even when they have a bad game and not a good game, let them know that we always care about them. You'll get the most out of every player.
I'm never going to criticize any umpires or anything, because they're a big part of the game.
It's all about communication, culture and competing every day.
I never took things for granted. I always told myself to keep working hard, come to the ballpark ready to play, and one day I'll get a chance to play.
In the heat of the moment things get blown out of hand.
I don't care what a guy can't do. Tell me what a guy can do and let's make the best of that. If we can do that, all the perceived things he can't do seem to go away.
When a guy 275 pounds snaps, look out. — © Dave Martinez
When a guy 275 pounds snaps, look out.
When I look back, I think I just never got the opportunity to play every day.
In my career, I finished in second place six times. I played on teams that were in it to the very end. It's frustrating.
When things go bad, the best thing to do is keep working and keep coaching.
I can remember having meetings with my coaches when things were going bad. I told them, 'Hey, we've got to be positive. This is the time we need to step up. You've got to make sure they know everything is going to be okay. Keep teaching. Once they see you are down, you lose them and that can't happen.'
When you go up there in the batter's box, you're engaged to hit. It's the same thing with baserunning.
I can play with pain. It doesn't bother me.
Every year that I have under my belt, I'm a lot more confident and a lot more prepared for the challenges of being a manager.
You know, for me, you don't chase wins.
Everyone keeps telling me how young I am, but if the right opportunity comes up, I'm ready to manage.
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