CBPC president Juan Francisco Puello |
According
to the Septima Entrada website, CBPC head Juan Francisco
Puello says that one reason for an earlier start is so more national
winterball champions can take part in the event "as long as they
meet the requirements and that we have the time for that...time is
very important." Puello also told Septima Entrada that
"we have a term according to the agreement with Major League
Baseball, a limited period, so I have always insisted that this
series should start at the end of January and conclude at the latest,
in my opinion, on February 1."
Such a
move would almost guarantee the demise of the Latin American Series,
a second-tier competition that was scheduled for January but
cancelled after Panama and Colombia both took part in the CS instead
while the Veracruz Winter League in Mexico went dark, leaving
Nicaragua and Argentina as the sole LAS nations free to participate.
Curacao was set to send champions Santa Maria to the 2019 LAS in
Veracruz last winter but pulled out of the tournament, leading to the
host LIV to be represented by two teams, Acayucan and Xalapa.
Mazatlan will host 2021 Serie del Caribe |
For his
part, Mexican Pacific League president Omar Canizales is open to the
idea of his league concluding its season earlier to accommodate the
Caribbean Series in late January. "We have to analyze the
schedule we assembled this last season with ten teams," said
Canizales. "This forces us to put together a mirror calendar so
teams can have road trips, home games, weekends...it can be a bit
complicated. However, we are always in the best position to find
formulas that help the Caribbean Series.
"At
the same time, we have to take care of our local championship,
without a doubt. Our local championship is very important."
16
CANDIDATES NAMED ON 2020 SALON DE LA FAMA BALLOT
Ex-Tigres OF Matias Carrillo |
Here's
a list of the top ten vote-getters: Matias Carrillo (53 votes),
Isidro Marquez (48), Vinny Castilla (43), Jose Luis Sandoval (43),
Eduardo Jimenez (37), Luis Arredondo (29), Erubiel Durazo (22), Juan
Manuel Palafox (21), Roberto Vizcarra (21) and Cecilio Ruiz (18).
A
native of Los Mochis, Sinaloa, Carrillo batted .251 over 107 Major
League games for Milwaukee and Florida spread over three seasons
between 1991 and 1994 but by far had his greatest success in the LMB.
In 22 Liga seasons, El Coyote hit .336 with 2,531 hits,
including 330 homers, 420 doubles, 1,631 RBIs and 276 stolen bases.
He is the only player in Mexican League history to top the 250 mark
in both homers and steals and has gone on to become a successful, if
well-traveled, manager.
LMB all-time saves leader Isidro Marquez |
The ten
aforementioned players will be on the ballot with holdovers Nick
Castaneda, Alex Trevino, Antonio Pulido, Francisco Garcia, Homar
Rojas and Pablo Gutierrez, who've all been up for election in years
past. From the
ballot of 16 nominees, voters will determine the next
five new members of the Salon de la Fama. Results will be
announced in April and induction ceremonies held n November.
Salon de la Fama in Monterrey |
The
Salon de la Fama spent seven years in limbo after the
Cuauhtemoc brewery in Monterrey shut down the building where the
museum had been housed in 2012. A new hall of fame in Monterrey was
paid for by Mexico City Diablos Rojos owner Alfredo Harp Helu and
formally opened February 20, 2019. In its first year, the Salon
welcomed nearly 65,000 visitors from 27 countries.
"PANCHO
PONCHES" NAMED NEW CAMPECHE MANAGER
Francisco Campos is new Piratas skipper |
Campos
made his professional baseball debut in 1991 with Houston's Gulf
Coast League affiliate as a catcher after wowing scouts at a tryout
in Hermosillo. However, the 18-year-old hit just .147 for an Astros'
rookie league squad that included future MLB star Bobby Abreu, then a
17-year-old outfielder. Campos also struggled defensively committing
four errors and waving at nine passed balls, although the
strong-armed backstop nailed 15 baserunners over his 21 outings.
Campos' switch to the pitcher's mound following his release proved to
be a prescient move.
Originally
a Monclova property, Campos was sent to Campeche in 1993 and, except
for stints in the Brewers and White Sox organizations and a
late-season loan in 2006 to Monterrey (where he went 5-0 for the LMB
North champ Sultanes), the man eventually known throughout Mexico as
"Pancho Ponches" remained a Piratas mound mainstay
for 27 seasons. After coming into the 2016 with 192 career wins,
Campos struggled for four years to record his 200th victory, finally
doing do last July 2 at home against Union Laguna and immediately
going on the reserve list following what proved to be his last game.
His 2,181 strikeouts place him fourth on the LMB's all-time list and
he holds the record with five ponches titles. Campos also won
the Pitching Triple Crown in 2004 with a 12-2 record, 99 K's and a
1.47 ERA, becoming the only hurler since Reynosa's Jim Horsford in
1968 to turn the hat trick. He tossed a no-hitter against Puebla in
2008, the year before he won his third ERA title.
New Rieleros manager Luis Carlos Rivera |
Francisco
Campos is arguably Mexican baseball's best pitcher of the 21st
century and a sure bet for the Salon de la Fama, but now he'll
take over from Jesus Sommers (a Salon member himself) to
manage a team that finished 47-68 in 2019 and missed the playoffs for
the third straight year. He becomes the LMB's latest managerial hire
after Aguascalientes replaced Felix Fermin (gone to Durango) with
Luis Carlos Rivera, who was canned in Yucatan last season after a
previous stint in Leon.
Campos
and Rivera bring the total number of Mexican-born managers in the LMB
to ten (seven in the South Division) as teams open training camps.
Campos is one of three homegrown skippers making their managerial
debuts in 2020, joining Erick Rodriguez in Oaxaca and Dos Laredo's
Pablo Ortega. Rodriguez, who played in his seventh All-Star Game of
the decade last season, will become the LMB's first player/manager
since Saul Soto performed double-duty on an interim basis with
Aguascalientes in 2016. Tim Johnson, who'll make his Leon debut this
spring, is the only extranero helmsman in the LMB South.
The
following is a list of current Mexican League managers (as of
February 23) and their countries of origin:
NORTH
DIVISION
Aguascalientes
- Luis Carlos Rivera (Mexico)
Dos
Laredos - Pablo Ortega (Mexico)
Durango
- Felix Fermin (Dominican Republic)
Monclova
- Pat Listach (United States)
Monterrey
- Roberto Kelly (Panama)
Saltillo
- Roberto Vizcarra (Mexico)
Tijuana
- Omar Vizquel (Venezuela)
Union
Laguna - Omar Malave (Venezuela)
SOUTH
DIVISION
Campeche
- Francisco Campos (Mexico)
Leon -
Tim Johnson (United States)
Mexico
City - Sergio Gastelum (Mexico)
Oaxaca -
Erick Rodriguez (Mexico)
Puebla -
Carlos Gastelum (Mexico)
Quintana
Roo - Adan Munoz (Mexico)
Tabasco
- Pedro Mere (Mexico)
Yucatan
- Geronimo Gil (Mexico)
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