Results tagged ‘ Mexico ’
Latinos in the big leagues: What would Roberto Clemente think?
It’s been nearly four decades since Roberto Clemente’s deadly plane crash, but his legacy still resonates with Latinos.
Clemente represents an image of dignity, a strong Latino proud of his culture and language who embraced his ties to the community. In life, the Puerto Rican star was a better man than ballplayer, which says a lot because he was a Hall of Famer. In death, Clemente has emerged as a symbol of hope and goodwill among Latinos across the U.S. and Latin America.
Next month, Major League Baseball will honor one player with the prestigious Roberto Clemente Award for contributions on and off the field. Over the next month, MLB will join the rest of the country in celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month. Ceremonies will take place at ballparks around the Majors.
The upcoming celebrations come at a time when Latinos are strong in numbers and influence in the clubhouses and in the stands.
“Dad would be happy with all the progress we’ve made, but he would also make sure that the Latinos who have jobs in the Major Leagues would have a mission and think about the big picture,” said Luis Clemente, reached at his Puerto Rican home. “He would want them to represent themselves well but also give back to the community. He was an activist for equality, and I know he would still defend the rights of people.”
Latino players have come a long way since the days of Clemente, who died in a plane crash at the age of 38 while delivering food and supplies to earthquake-torn Nicaragua in 1972. Since then, the influence of Latinos has grown in nearly every way. Latinos are the fastest-growing demographic nationally, and their impact is felt in businesses, schools, non-profits and in the Major Leagues, where Latinos make up about 30 percent of players and comprise many of the game’s highest-paid and most-celebrated stars.
Major League Baseball, under the leadership of Commissioner Bud Selig, has made an institutional commitment to sound hiring practices and diverse participation at all levels of the game, and Latinos are making strides in Major League front offices. Angels owner Arte Moreno and Linda Alvarado, a member of the Rockies’ ownership group, are of Mexican descent. Mets general manager Omar Minaya and Phillies GM Ruben Amaro Jr. also are Latino. Young front-office executives like Moises Rodriguez in St. Louis, Manny Colon in Florida, Rolando Fernandez in Colorado, Eddie Romero in Boston and Rafael Perez, who oversees International Player Development with the Mets, could be future general managers.
In the dugout, White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen is from Venezuela, Marlins manager Edwin Rodriguez is Puerto Rican and Indians skipper Manny Acta is from the Dominican Republic.
They follow the path set by managerial predecessors such as Mike Gonzalez, Preston Gomez, Cookie Rojas and Felipe Alou.
“On our side of it, what guys like Felipe Alou and Ozzie Guillen have done, and then [former Marlins manager] Fredi Gonzalez and myself getting a chance and now Edwin Rodriguez in Florida — it gives the rest of the guys a chance,” Acta said. “They say, ‘Hey, it’s possible. Those guys did it, we can do it.’ It’s got to come from us. You work hard, and people will notice you if you earn your peers’ respect, regardless of where you come from.”
Could the number of Latino managers be higher? Of course. But as with everything in life, the likelihood of more Latino managers hinges on the union of opportunity and skill. As the numbers of Latino players and retired Latino players grow, the numbers in managerial positions should grow, too. White Sox bench coach Joey Cora and Cardinals third-base coach Jose Oquendo are among the Latinos waiting for the opportunity to manage in the big leagues. Longtime coach Juan Samuel served as Baltimore’s interim manager this summer until he was replaced by Buck Showalter.
“Baseball is an extension of society,” said Rodriguez, the first Puerto Rican-born manager in the Majors. “If you look around, there are more Hispanic people living in the United States. That means there are going to be more Spanish-speaking people playing baseball. So chances are you are going to see more Latinos or Hispanics becoming managers. I think the baseball industry is very knowledgeable about it. The number of Hispanic players have been increasing every year in professional baseball. So that has to be a factor whenever they decide who is going to manage where.”
Major League Baseball, through the MLB-Dominican Development Alliance/USAID Incentive Fund, matches grants to carry out development projects in players’ hometowns and communities where big league teams have academies. As of this month, the MLB-DDA has directed more than $840,000 to support 16 projects in the D.R.
The number of Latino players could increase in the future. Major League Baseball’s expansion into Latin America now includes Panama, Nicaragua and Colombia. The Atlanta Braves have explored baseball options in Spain, while the Tampa Rays have made connections with Brazil.
“I am very pleased with the progress Latinos have made in baseball in terms of players, and it will keep growing because clubs have made a tremendous investment in Latin America,” said Lou Melendez, MLB’s vice president of international baseball operations. “But you can never get comfortable. There is still room for growth, growth in more significant roles in the industry, especially in policy-making roles and decision-making roles. We are all aware of Arte Moreno, and I’d like to see other Latinos consider purchasing teams and becoming part of the industry.”
A big part of Clemente’s legacy is the emphasis on charity. He encouraged veteran Latino players to take care of younger Latinos in the clubhouse. He would be proud to know that those traditions are still honored in communities and stadiums across the country.
The examples are everywhere.
As teammates in Arizona, Livan Hernandez used to buy Miguel Montero suits, shoes and provide advice on the life of a professional ballplayer. In Texas, a young Carlos Pena was moved out of a local hotel and into Alex Rodriguez’s Dallas mansion until he adjusted to life in the big leagues. Rodriguez later mentored Robinson Cano during his first few years in New York.
In Cincinnati, Francisco Cordero’s primary job with the Reds is to close games, but he’s also served as the bridge between the English-speaking world and Spanish-speaking world in clubhouses for a decade. Several Latino stars, including San Diego’s Adrian Gonzalez, St. Louis’ Albert Pujols, Boston’s David Ortiz, Guillen, Acta, Carlos Delgado and Pedro Martinez have created non-profit foundations to help their communities in the United States and Latin America.
The Roberto Clemente Foundation, established 1993 to help the youth in Pittsburgh, is still going strong, and The Roberto Clemente Sports City for young ballplayers in Puerto Rico is under renovation.
“Like everything, there is good and there is bad, but it’s better than what it was before,” Luis Clemente said. “There are a lot of Latinos that have been giving back to the game, a lot of great players that bring a lot of fans to the game. They’ve become role models. Latinos have been a real good influence on baseball, but there is still a lot that can be done.”
Troubles in Mexico stretch to MLB
Former Major League pitcher Ismael Valdez used to tell a story that sounded more like a joke than a warning.
As the story goes, Valdez was driving near his Ciudad Victoria home in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas when a band of criminals ran him off the road. The bandits drew guns and tied the pitcher’s hands behind his back.
Valdez’s mind raced. He was being robbed or kidnapped or worse.
Then one of the bandits recognized him. The gunman was a Dodgers fan. Valdez spent the next 15 minutes signing autographs and posing for photos with the assailants. They then apologized for the trouble they’d caused.
Valdez drove away unharmed. Eventually, he learned to laugh off the incident.
Nobody is laughing now.
Mexico is experiencing an unprecedented rise in crime, kidnapping and violence as drug cartels and Mexican authorities fight for control of the lucrative drug routes across the border into the United States.
The violence has affected millions on both sides of the border, who fear they could get caught in the crossfire. It’s hit home, too, with many Mexican Major League players no longer feeling safe in their own hometowns.
“The truth is that it’s pretty scary,” said Angels infielder Freddy Sandoval. “Living in Tijuana is a pretty tough place to be, and I have not gone back for the simple fact that the crime is so high. Everyone always says that if you don’t mess around with the bad guys that they won’t mess around with you, but it’s still scary. There are innocent victims all of the time, so for a lot of us, it’s hard to believe that saying.”
Mexico City’s Reforma newspaper reports that the country had 6,587 drug-related murders in 2009, up from 5,207 in ’08 and 2,275 in ’07. Drug-related violence has claimed the lives of more than 3,300 this year.
To combat the problem, Mexico president Felipe Calderon deployed 45,000 soldiers and 20,000 federal officers to the country’s most dangerous areas to take on the drug cartels. The U.S. State Department has extended its travel warnings to certain parts of Mexico until August.
Calderon is visiting with President Barack Obama this week amid concerns over the escalating drug war and recent immigration legislation in Arizona.
“It’s very hard here. It’s turning wild,” said Oscar Sanchez, a sports writer in Monterrey, Mexico. “Major League players have to keep a low-profile here. Soccer players are more recognizable, but the salaries baseball players have can make them targets.”
Players from Mexico have a deep history with the Major Leagues: since Baldomero Almada played for the Red Sox in 1933, 111 players from Mexico have played in the Majors. Opening Day rosters featured 12 Mexicans.
In the past, Mexican Major Leaguers tried to keep their salaries, addresses and number of children out of the press for security reasons. In the age of new media, that information is easily found and is also often reported by traditional media outlets.
“Unfortunately, the delinquency in Mexico is at levels that we’ve never seen,” said Royals closer Joakim Soria, who is from the state of Coahuila. “I think you have to have faith in God and belief that the country will get better. I’m proud to be 100-percent Mexican and I love my country, and when I get a chance to go back home, I go. You can’t live in fear, but you can’t pretend nothing is happening.”
The northern states of Coahuila, Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, Chihuahua and Baja California have suffered much of the drug-related violence. There have been public shootouts in Ciudad Juarez, Tijuana and Nogales.
In February, Astros Spanish broadcaster Francisco Romero and his family were caught in gunfire at a U.S. border checkpoint in Nogales. The Romeros were unharmed, but four were killed and 17 injured in the four-minute shootout.
“The shooters were 50 yards to our right, and about 150 yards from the actual border,” he said. “The last three years, it’s something very common in that area of Nogales. You’re aware of it, but you don’t know you’re going to be in the middle of a shootout.”
Last year, Oscar Manuel Robles Arangure, father of former Major League infielder Oscar Robles, was kidnapped for a day in Tijuana. Two years ago, Padres All-Star Adrian Gonzalez, also from Tijuana, was harassed with terrorizing phone calls from Mexico but has said the threats have subsided.
“It’s not like I’m not going to go back to Tijuana, but I think everybody knows what is happening, and it’s part of what’s going on,” Gonzalez said. “You just go about your business, and if you are not doing anything wrong, you will be fine.”
Sinaloa, once famous for baseball, is now infamous as home of the most powerful and ruthless drug-trafficking organizations in the country. The Culiacan, Mazatlan, and Los Mochis baseball teams of the Mexican Pacific League all operate in the state but have not been affected by the escalating crime, according to league president Omar Canizalez.
“Mexico has been and always will be a country full of hard-working people, good people that love sports,” Canizalez said. “Unfortunately, we border a country that many people want to get drugs into. The violence a lot of times is between the people who are involved in that type of trafficking. We don’t have to be worried or be timid doing our business. We are fine.”
Dodgers pitcher Luis Ayala, who was born in Los Mochis, understandably has a different opinion. In January, Ayala and his family were held at gunpoint for 40 minutes after burglars broke into his Culiacan home. The assailants left after they realized they hit the wrong house.
“That was the scariest night of my life. We could have died over confusion,” Ayala said. “There’s just not enough security for players. That’s the biggest problem. You don’t always feel safe.”
Major League Baseball, its security department and investigative wing are all closely monitoring the activity in Mexico and working with the U.S. State Department to make sure the clubs receive the most recent travel warnings and advisories. Security assistance is provided when requested by a player or a club.
“We are very cognizant of what is happening and we make all information available to the central office and the clubs,” said Earnell Lucas, Major League Baseball’s vice president of security and facilities management. “I like to think our clubs and players are sensitive to the issues going down in parts of their countries and they are aware of what’s occurring in the world, but we still reach out to them and they reach out to us. To the extent that baseball can, we want to be a resource for safety awareness.”
Ayala now lives in an Arizona suburb. Sandoval moved from Tijuana to Arizona last winter and is trying to get his parents to join him.
“My dad comes home from work around 4 o’clock and they just stay home,” Sandoval said. “Their lifestyle has completely changed. You have to think twice before you do normal things like go out to dinner. I call home and the first thing my dad says is ‘They killed five, six, seven, eight or 15 today.’ It’s too much.”
Caribbean Series: Puerto Rico is back
A sense of normalcy has returned to the island. Order has been restored at the Caribbean Confederation.
After a year-long hiatus, professional baseball in Puerto Rico is back. The island will be represented at the 2009 Caribbean Series in Mexicali, Mexico, with its Winter league champion.
“The bottom line is that last year’s Caribbean Series — with two teams from the Dominican Republic and no team from Puerto Rico, — was heartbreaking for me,” said former Major Leaguer Eduardo Perez, a longtime Winter League player and supporter of baseball on the island. “I grew in those ballparks and to see it back is going to be a lot of fun. Hopefully, the league knows its mistakes and the players know its mistakes and they can grow and learn from it.”
Puerto Rico suspended Winter League play last year for the first time in 69 years because of financial difficulties, but has made strides to avoid another stoppage in play. For this season, which opens Nov. 6, the league created new business model, a new baseball marketing arm and made plans for interleague games with the Dominican Republic. A new league Web site and a television deal are also possible.
The league also replaced the team in Manati with the historic Santurce franchise. Mayaguez, Caguas, Ponce, Carolina and Arecibo also will have teams this winter.
Major League Baseball will provide three umpires, a paid intern for the executive director of the league and photographs of native Puerto Rican and import players for use by the league.
“Having baseball in Puerto Rico is very important because we want to continue the long history of baseball and it’s important for the development of players for MLB,” said Lou Melendez, vice president of international operations for Major League Baseball. “It’s also important for the Confederation. There shouldn’t be a Caribbean Series with three teams. Puerto Rico’s absence was evident, and I’m sure other teams were not happy about it.”
Puerto Rico’s ties to the Caribbean Series date back to the union of the baseball leagues in Cuba, Panama, Puerto Rico and Venezuela in 1948. After Cuba in 1949, Puerto Rico played host to the Caribbean Series 1950, Venezuela in 1951 and Panama in 1952.
From 1949 to 1960, Cuba won the title seven times. Puerto Rico won four times during that span and Panama won its first and only crown in 1950. In 1970, the Dominican Republic and Mexico were added while Panama was removed from the tournament.
Earlier this year, the Licey Tigres won the 2008 version with a 5-1 record, the club’s 10th Caribbean Series title and the 17th overall for the Dominican Republic. The Aguilas Cibaenas (3-3), also from the Dominican Republic, finished second, while Venezuela and Mexico each finished with 2-4 records.
Mexico could use the home-field advantage in 2009. The country is 3-15 since it won the 2005 Caribbean Series in Mazatlan. Puerto Rico has not won a Caribbean Series since Santurce won the title in 2000.
“Baseball is Puerto Rico,” Perez said. “We breathe it and live it. Every corner now, people are talking about it.”
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