Dodgers fan favorite Joe Kelly takes coaching role at Corona High
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Skip to main content MLBDodgers fan favorite Joe Kelly takes coaching role at Corona High
By Ryan Anderson Published July 1, 2026, 3:06 p.m. ETSee more of our coverage in your search results.
Add The California Post on GoogleJoe Kelly is not done with baseball. He is just taking his fastball, edge and unmistakable personality to a different dugout.
The former Dodgers reliever has joined Corona High School’s baseball program as an assistant coach, beginning a new chapter after a 13-year MLB career that included three World Series rings, October dominance and a reputation as one of baseball’s great modern characters.
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Corona is not just any high school program. The Panthers have become one of the most heavily scouted teams in the country under coach Andy Wise, producing elite prospects, national attention and a historic 2025 draft class. In recent years, Corona has been a CIF Southern Section power and one of California’s premier baseball factories.
Kelly brings a resume few high school staffs can match.
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A third-round pick by the Cardinals in 2009, Kelly debuted in 2012 and later pitched for the Red Sox, Dodgers and White Sox. He appeared in 485 games, threw 839 innings and finished with a 3.98 ERA. His best work often came in October, including a dominant 2018 postseason with Boston and another title run with the Dodgers in 2020. He also earned a third ring with Los Angeles in 2024.
But numbers were never the full Joe Kelly story.
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He threw hard, sometimes wildly, and always with attitude. Dodgers fans embraced him after his viral showdown with the Astros, when he mocked Carlos Correa with the famous pouty face during the sign-stealing scandal fallout. He leaned into the “Wild Thing” comparisons, wore No. 99 with the Dodgers and even gave up No. 17 to Shohei Ohtani, a move that led to Ohtani gifting Kelly’s wife, Ashley, a Porsche.
This will not technically be Kelly’s first coaching experience, though his last dugout assignment came with, of course, a little chaos.
On the “Baseball Isn’t Boring” podcast, Kelly recently told a wild story about being punched while coaching his 9-year-old son’s team, which feels about right for a player who spent his career making baseball a little louder, stranger and certainly more entertaining.
Now, Corona gets the baseball version of Kelly: intense, unfiltered and experienced.
He may no longer be pitching in the majors, but he is still very much in the game.
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Teen who had cellphone taken away beat wheelchair-bound mom to death with hammer: Cops
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News footage of the apartment building where Georgina Lee Monk was found dead on June 26 (KARE).
A Minnesota teenager allegedly killed her mother with a hammer, then asked police to do a welfare check because she felt "regret."
Ramsey County prosecutors charged a 17-year-old girl with second-degree murder in connection with the death of her 43-year-old mother, Georgina Lee Monk. According to a criminal complaint obtained by local news outlet Pioneer Press, staff members at a day treatment program that the girl attended became concerned about the girl's behavior when she arrived on the morning of June 26.
Sign up for the Law&Crime Daily Newsletter for more breaking news and updatesAccording to reporting on the complaint by local NBC affiliate KARE, the girl told staff members that someone needed to "check on her mother because she felt regret." Staff members told police that they believed the girl was spiraling and acting strangely.
Officers from the Maplewood Police Department responded to the apartment building in Maplewood, Minnesota, at 9:30 a.m. and found Monk dead inside. She was in her bed, on her back, and had multiple blunt-force injuries to her face and upper body. Police said Monk was diabetic and suffering from an infection in her foot at the time of her death, which caused her to use a wheelchair.
After speaking with people at the apartment, police said the apartment manager had been aware of an ongoing conflict between the mother and daughter. He told police that on the night of June 25, he heard the two having an argument that was "more heated than usual."
Neighbors also told police about the fights Monk had with her daughter. Police said one neighbor stated that Monk had reportedly taken her daughter's phone away.
According to the complaint, surveillance video from the apartment captured the teen leaving the building at 3:23 a.m. on June 26 with a large white garbage bag. Two hours later, she was seen on camera walking around with a hammer before being seen again empty-handed. Around 7 a.m., she was seen walking to a nearby bus stop.
Police said that inside the apartment, they found bloodstains throughout the home, including on the teen's bedroom doorknob, in her bedroom, and on the toilet bowl lid. Bloody clothes were found in a hamper in her room. Police searched the dumpsters after garbage pickup took place.
After police took the teen into custody, she told them that she took the garbage out because that was one of her regular chores. When asked about the hammer, she told police that she was asked by Monk to put it back in the garage. According to the complaint, the teen said she kept the hammer in the home for "protection."
As the interview progressed, police said the teen admitted that she struggled with her mental health and was worried that she was "crazy." Police said she claimed to hear "whispers" and "a thought came into her head to, 'Get rid of anybody who hurt you in your life or anybody who dared to hurt you.'" She then allegedly admitted that she hit her mother in the head twice with the hammer. According to the complaint, she said the alleged killing was "not entirely planned."
Police said the teen asked a detective, "Am I a criminal because I only killed one person?"
According to the complaint, the teen "tried to go back to sleep" after the alleged killing, but was unable. She continued to "act like everything was normal" and called her boyfriend. The girl was arrested following the interview and booked into jail.
Police said the teen called her boyfriend while in custody and told him, "It wasn't just rage, I just couldn't handle it no more. I couldn't wait another year of all the criticisms, and all the manipulations, the mental and emotional abuse. I just couldn't, it was too much."
The teen was charged with second-degree murder and remains in custody. Since the suspect is a juvenile, court information was not made publicly available.
Tags: 2nd Degree MurderjuvenileMinnesotamomteenFollow Law&Crime:
Music teacher asked sister-in-law for help moving a piano, then strangled her: Police
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Background: News footage of Joseph Horner (in blue) being escorted to court on June 30 (WNBC). Inset: Victoria Castle (Instagram).
A New York man who worked as a music teacher at an elementary school has been charged with the murder of his sister-in-law.
Joseph Horner, 27, is being held without bond after prosecutors said he strangled his sister-in-law, 25-year-old Victoria Castle. The Nassau County Police Department said in a press release that officers responded to a home in North Massapequa, New York, at 8:44 a.m. on Monday after receiving a call about an unresponsive woman. When they arrived at the home, they found Castle and transported her to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Prosecutors said Horner, who placed the 911 call himself, was waiting for officers on the front porch of the home.
Sign up for the Law&Crime Daily Newsletter for more breaking news and updatesLocal NBC affiliate WNBC was in the courtroom for Horner's arraignment on Tuesday, when he pleaded not guilty to intentional murder. Prosecutors said that before Horner called 911 to report that Castle was not breathing, he allegedly strangled her and sexually assaulted her after she was unconscious. According to WNBC's reporting, Horner and Castle lived in the same multifamily house in adjoining apartments. Horner is married to Castle's sister.
Prosecutors said that after Horner allegedly assaulted Castle, he changed his clothes, called 911, and waited for police to arrive on the stoop. Horner allegedly told police that he lured Castle to his apartment by telling her he needed help moving a piano. After she came upstairs to his apartment, he came up behind her and allegedly held her in a chokehold until she went limp.
According to prosecutors, Horner told police that he had been interested in Castle since 2017, a year after he met her sister. Horner said that his wife, whom he married three years ago, was out of town at a bachelorette party on the day he allegedly killed Castle.
Horner was employed as a music teacher in the Oceanside School District. In a statement provided to local ABC affiliate WABC, a spokesperson from the district said Horner had been "placed on administrative leave effective immediately, pending further review. We have no further information at this time."
Horner is due back in court on July 2.
Tags: domestic violenceLong IslandmurderNew Yorkstrangulationteacher