Curt Schilling is thinking about getting back into baseball.

USA Today reported that those close to Schilling say he would “love to get back into the game” and is interested in positions with two teams he played for during his 19-year MLB career. He’s apparently eyeing the Phillies’ managerial opening and the Red Sox’s pitching coach vacancy.

Schilling previously tried to join Gabe Kapler’s Philadelphia staff in 2017, saying he sent a text message to express his interest. Kapler was fired as manager on Thursday.

Schilling – who won one World Series with the Diamondbacks and two with the Red Sox – had an accomplished pitching career, which included three 300-strikeout seasons and joining the 3,000 strikeout club in 2006.

But Schilling had a reputation for having issues with teammates he played alongside and front offices he played for. The 52-year-old has cited his conservative political leanings as a reason for his stalled Baseball Hall of Fame candidacy in recent years.

He jumped into broadcasting as a color analyst for ESPN in 2010, but was fired in 2016 after he shared an anti-transgender Facebook post.

Schilling also pursued a career in politics, most recently challenging Senator Elizabeth Warren in the 2018 U.S. Senate election in Massachusetts. He ended up dropping out of the race. He also expressed interest in running for an Arizona congressional seat and said he was interested in running for president in 2024 if Donald Trump is re-elected in 2020.