Espada vs. Hyde: 'It's great for the family'

June 22nd, 2024

This story was excerpted from Brian McTaggart's Astros Beat newsletter. To read the full newsletter, click here. And subscribe to get it regularly in your inbox.

HOUSTON -- As is customary in the first game of a series, Astros manager Joe Espada and Orioles manager Brandon Hyde took their respective lineup cards to home plate Friday night and exchanged handshakes with each other and the umpires. There probably aren’t two other managers in the big leagues who know each other as well as Espada and Hyde.

Espada and Hyde married sisters, meaning they are brothers-in-law. They were friends, roommates and co-workers prior to becoming related, and this weekend’s series at Minute Maid Park -- in which they are facing off for the first time as opposing managers -- is meaningful for both men and their families.

“It’s going to feel like a little playoff between two really good teams,” Espada said. “We’re going to be competing against one another. We’ve been running our mouths a little bit. Not so much the last couple of days. This is good for our family. … It’s going to be great, but it’s not about us. It’s about our club and we feel really good matching up against this Baltimore Orioles team. This is going to be a fun series.”

Hyde married Lisa Dearth in 2006, and Espada married her youngest sister, Pamela, in 2009. Hyde was managing at Single-A Greensboro in 2006 at the same time Espada was the infield coordinator in the Marlins system. Espada would often stay at Hyde’s house in Florida, which is how he ended up meeting Pamela.

“It’s going to be definitely a great experience and a great thing for our family,” Hyde said. “Me and Joe go way, way back, when he was my hitting coach when I was managing in 2006. So we’ve known each other for a long time, and I’m really proud of him and I’m happy he got this opportunity. It’s going to be cool to see him in the dugout in a little bit different seat this year. So it’s going to be a lot of fun.”

Hyde managed in the Marlins system from 2005-09 before serving as infield coordinator in '10 and was the Major League staff from '10-11. He was on the Cubs staff from '14-18 before the Orioles hired him to lead their rebuild prior to the '19 season. Hyde won a ring with the Cubs in 2016.

“We were on the Marlins’ staff in ‘10 and ’11,” Hyde said. “We used to carpool every day from North Palm Beach, Fla., down to Fort Lauderdale -- there and back, every single day. And then we were on staff together in the Minor Leagues. So we’ve spent a lot of time together talking baseball. I don’t think we’ve ever talked about managing against each other or what that would be like, but we’ve talked a lot of baseball throughout the years.”

Espada (left) and Hyde (center) as coaches with the Marlins in 2010

Espada coached in the Marlins system from 2006-10 before becoming third-base coach for the Marlins from '10-13. He joined the Yankees as a scout in 2014 and later was the third-base coach ('15-17) before replacing Alex Cora as Houston’s bench coach shortly after it won the World Series in 2017. He took over for Dusty Baker at the start of this year.

“He’s always been an incredible worker and a really good baseball guy, and so I was really excited for him to get this opportunity this year and he’s going to do really well at it,” Hyde said.

Espada’s Astros got the best of Hyde’s Orioles on Friday, holding on for a 14-11 win.

“It was fun,” Espada said. “I saw those runs start to creep up and he started to get on the top step [of the dugout] and I said, ‘We need to get 27 outs here.’ It’s great for the family.”