According
to the El
Fildeo
website, players on 14 of the Mexican League's 16 franchises have
gone unpaid since training camps were ordered shut down and the LMB
season delayed until at least May 11, with members of the Mexico City
Diablos Rojos and Oaxaca Guerreros reportedly being given 20,000
pesos (US$800) apiece by billionaire Alfredo Harp Helu, who owns both
teams.
The
situation has not only created financial hardships for Mexican League
players, but also team owners and the league office. The regular
season was originally scheduled to open Monday, April 6 in Monclova,
where the Acereros were to host rival Monterrey, with a full slate of
eight games slated for the next day. Instead, the cash-strapped
circuit will miss a minimum of five weeks' worth of badly-needed
ballpark revenues.
Some
owners of other Liga teams were said to be considering measures
similar to Harp's in helping their players, but the nationwide
economic freeze due to the Wuhan Virus has affected most of their
non-baseball businesses as well and in many cases, the money just
isn't there. Supposedly some players were offered loans from their
teams to be returned via paycheck deductions after the season finally
opens, but that option was said to have been met with resistance by
the players, many of whom have been calling for a union.
Although
the LMB has set May 11 for opening play, the date is not set in stone
given an order from the nation's Secretary of Health for a quarantine
lasting until April 30 and the possibility exists that the season may
be delayed further. LMB president Horacio de la Vega has stated
that he'd be willing to extend a revised schedule into mid-October in
order to play the planned 102-game regular season with full playoffs,
but an even later start would seemingly make that all but impossible.
Mexican
Pacific League president Omar Canizales has said that while his loop
has set their own season opener for October 14, the LMP is waiting to
see what the Mexican League does first before making it official.
THREE
MULTIPLAYER DEALS SWUNG IN MEX PAC
Christian Villanueva's rights traded to Jalisco |
The
first deal was on last Tuesday, when the Obregon Yaquis sent the
rights to third baseman Christian Villanueva and left-handed pitcher
Alex Delgado to the Jalisco Charros for a trio of right-handed
pitchers: Octavio Acosta, Felipe Gonzalez and Jesus Camargo.
Villanueva is no stranger to LMP fans, having spent six winters in
Yaquis togs including a banner 2015-16 season in which he hit .322
with nine homers in 64 games. He spent last summer in Japan with the
Yomiuri Giants, batting .223 with eight roundtrippers over 73
contests for the Central League team after belting 20 homers with San
Diego as an LMB rookie in 2018. Delgado went 6-4 for the Yaquis last
winter after posting an 8-4 record with Oaxaca in Mexican League in
2019, earning his first All-Star berth in the process. Though only
25, Delgado has pitched in the LMB for all or part of eight seasons
(going 11-1 for Mexico City in 2016).
In
return, Acosta gives the Yaquis a pitcher who was 6-1 with a 4.16 ERA
for Jalisco last winter. He was the Mexican League Pitcher of the
Year in 2017 after turning in a 14-1 mark (2.99 ERA) for Mexico City
that year. A former Yankees prospect, Gonzalez was 2-1 with a 3.23
ERA in eight starts for the Charros in 2019-20. Gonzalez went 3-0 and
had a 3.22 ERA in 52 relief appearances last summer for Monterrey
and, like Delgado, was a first-time All-Star Gamer. While only
pitching twice for Jalisco two years ago, Camargo has been a Cubs
farmhand since 2015 and gone 13-7 for that organization over four
seasons, mostly as a starter, with a career 3.01 ERA over 221.1
innings.
One
day later, Mazatlan and Monterrey swapped four pitchers as the
Venados shipped Arturo Barradas and Jesus Alcantar to the Sultanes
for Felipe Arredondo and Oscar Arzaga. The most recognizable may be
lefty Barradas, a 14-year veteran who was 1-1 in 42 relief outings
for the Venados in 2019-20. Barradas appeared in the 2015 LMB
All-Star Game while pitching for Quintana Roo and the 2016 Caribbean
Series with Mazatlan. Alcantar has gone 2-7 with a 7.02 ERA since
2017 with Durango but the Los Mochis native has never pitched in the
Mex Pac.
A
longtime veteran hurler like Barradas, Arredondo was an Angels
prospect for four years before embarking on his 13-year LMB career in
2008 with Quintana Roo and is likewise a middleman who was 0-0 with a
1.80 ERA in 14 outings on loan for Jalisco last witner. The
21-year-old Arzaga signed with the Dodgers in 2016 and went 3-2 for
their Arizona Rookie League affiliate that summer, but has been
plagued by injuries and never pitched again before being released
last May.
Jose Oyervides will return to Guadalajara |
In
return the Charros get a veteran in Perez, who was a Puebla teammate
of Carreon's for five years as a reserve outfielder before being sent
to Aguascalientes by way of Monclova last December. A career .307
batter in the LMB, Perez adds little power (25 homers in 11 years)
but can get on base and keep a rally going. He hit .260 for Monterrey
last season, his first LMP campaign in six years. The 38-year-old
Oyervides is a Texan who signed with the Angels in 2002 and has gone
on to be one of the Mexican League's most effective pitchers, making
five All-Star appearances between 2010 and 2017 and earning Comeback
of the Year honors with Dos Laredos in 2018, leading to the question
of what he was coming back FROM the year after pitching in an
All-Star Game? At any rate, he has a 90-63 career record over 11 LMB
seasons and was 1-3 with a 4.12 ERA for the Sultanes last winter
after going 9-9 with his hometown Tecolotes in 2019.
PADRES
SEND ESTEBAN "EL PONY" QUIROZ TO TAMPA BAY
Esteban Quiroz at 2016 LMB Home Run Derby |
The
5'7" Quiroz, an Obregon product who turned 28 in February, made
his Mexican League debut with Quintana Roo as a teen in 2011. He was
overmatched at first, hitting .120 with one RBI in 24 games for the
Tigres, but showed his versatility by playing all three outfield
slots as well as second base. Quiroz improved to .255 with four
homers in 2012, playing every position but pitcher and catcher over
85 contests, but he would struggle at the plate the next two seasons
while being shuttled around defensively (when he got to play at all).
Although Quiroz had been a member of two LMB championship teams under
manager Roberto Vizcarra, he faced an uncertain future at age 22.
Quiroz
finally hit stride in 2015 for the Cancun team. Although he only
spent eight games at second as Vizcarra played him at six positions
that year, he hit .315 and knocked out seven homers over 96 games as
the Tigres won their third title in five years as El Pony filled a role similar to Gil McDougald's with the Yankees dynasty of
the 1950's. Quiroz also took part in the Home Run Derby in that
summer's LMB All-Star Game an reached the finals before losing to
Tigres teammate Alex Liddi (who runs 6'4" and 225 pounds). He
then had a banner 2015-16 winter for his hometown Obregon Yaquis,
batting .317 and winning the Mexican Pacific League's Rookie of the
Year award, then hitting an even .400 while scoring seven runs in six
errorless games at second as a reinforcement for Mazatlan's Caribbean
Series champs.
Following
a solid 2016 campaign for Quintana Roo (with career highs of a .335
average, 15 homers and 63 RBIs), Quiroz was traded to rival Yucatan.
After being named Mexico's MVP in the 2017 World Baseball Classic
(hitting .400 for the Verdes Grande), he rewarded the Leones
with a .293 average, 11 homers and his first LMB All-Star game as a
player. MLB scouts had noticed Quiroz during the WBC and Boston
signed him at the conclusion of the 2017 season. The Red Sox invited
him to their Florida training camp the following spring, assigning
him to their AA Portland affiliate in the Eastern League to begin
another odyssey.
After
getting off to a great start with the Sea Dogs, beginning the season
with a nine-game hitting streak and batting .302 with four homers and
11 RBIs over his first 15 games, Quiroz was shelved with a sports
hernia. He rehabbed with an eight-game stint for the Bosox' Gulf Cost
League affiliate before returning to Portland on August 24 and
finished what ended up being a "lost" season with a .299
average, seven homers and 24 RBIs in 24 games. After the campaign, he
was traded to San Diego for pitcher Colten Brewer.
El Pony looks to go deep for El Paso in 2019 |
After
he hit .188 as a Padres non-roster invitee at this season's aborted
spring training, though, Quiroz was sent packing to the Rays and
assigned to Montgomery of the AA Southern League, where (once the
sesaon starts) he'll be starting over. Again.
Entering his tenth season of pro ball, Esteban Quiroz has seemingly faced a litany of challenges all along the way. However, only someone who hasn't read the above seven paragraphs will doubt that he's up to facing this one.
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