Baseball to return to Uni-Trade Stadium, Laredo |
The
decision, which was unanimous among the LMB's 16 teams, was released
by the Liga's Mexico City office last Thursday. After the August 8
openers, teams will play six games per week for eight weeks before
concluding the regular season on Thursday, October 1. Games will be
limited to teams within their respective eight-team divisions,
meaning no LMB North teams will face their LMB South counterparts
until the Serie del Rey. Since a 48-game schedule does not
balance out among seven competitors, it may be assumed that each team
will face one "rival" two extra series for a total of 12
games over four series, as opposed to six games over home-and-away
series with the remaining divisional opponents. There will be no
All-Star Game, which had originally been schedule for June 14 in
Monclova.
The
Mexican League playoffs will commence Saturday, October 3, two days
after the regular season concludes with six of eight teams in each
division being given a berth. The LMB has not announced a format for
their postseason. There may be a possibility that the Liga could
adopt the Mexican Pacific League's old "Lucky Loser"
system, in which the first round loser with the most wins in their
series advances to the second round along with the three winners.
That system was discarded after several seasons by the LMP last
winter after the loop expanded to ten teams with eight advancing to
the playoffs. Another possibility is that the top two teams in each
division earn a first-round bye with the remaining four teams playing
for the two remaining slots in the division semifinals, but it's all
speculation at this point.
Estadio Monterrey could be crowded in October |
However
the format turns out, the Serie
del Rey is scheduled to
begin on Monday, November 2, with Game Seven (if needed) slated for
Tuesday, November 10 in what will be the latest season in LMB
history. The Mexican Pacific League announced Saturday that if the
LMB ends up canceling their season, which is still possible, they
would go ahead with their planned season opener on Monday, October
13. If the LMB does play into November, however, the Mex Pac will
delay their season opener several weeks for THEIR latest start ever.
In announcing his league's options, LMP president Omar Canizales did
not outline how their regular season and playoff schedules would be
altered.
The
situation could create an even tighter player crunch than had been
anticipated due to the Wuhan virus. Concerns are that players in the
United States might take the winter off instead of venture south of
the border, where the virus is still very much a concern. A real
scheduling logjam may occur in Monterrey, where the MLB Sultanes may
still be playing in the postseason at the same time their LMP
namesake begins their regular season, with only one ballpark between
them.
The two
leagues appear to be taking different courses as to whether they will
play in empty ballparks. Canizales has said the Mex Pac is
considering going that route in response to safety concerns, but the
LMB announced they WILL open their stadia to fans. The latter
decision is economically based, since many financially-struggling
Liga teams are dependent on revenue from ticket sales, concessions,
merchandise and ballpark display ads to survive because the LMB has
no large media contracts to share among its member franchises. The
league has developed a so-called "Diamond Plan," based on
WBSC guidelines and administered by federal health authorities, to
maximize safety among players, coaches, umpires and fans during
games.
HERMOSILLO
NATIVE RAMOS TEARING UP LOOP IN KBO DEBUT
Roberto Ramos is the talk of Korean baseball |
A
25-year-old native of Hermosillo, Sonora, Ramos has worn Korea
Baseball Organization pitchers out to the tune of a .375 batting
average with 10 homers and 21 RBIs over his first 23 games with the
LG Twins of Seoul. He stroked two doubles and drawing a walk over
four plate appearances in his May 5 KBO debut against their in-house
rivals Doosan Bears (the two teams share the 25,553-seat Jamsil
Stadium) to begin an eight-game-hitting streak. Ramos had a two-homer
game May 10 against the NC Dinos and a walkoff grand slam May 24 to
defeat the KT Wiz, drawing global attention as the KBO and Taiwan's
Chinese Professional Baseball League are the only two circuits in the
world currently playing regular season games. Through Sunday,
Ramos led the KBO in homers by three longballs, was tied for fourth in
RBIs and stood fourth in batting average.
The
6'3" 220-pounder was Colorado's 16th Round draft pick in 2014
out of College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita, California. He
struggled that summer while splitting time with the Rockies' Class A
Tri-Cities and Rookie Grand Junction farm teams, hitting a combined
.213 with three homers in 39 games. However, he started regaining his
stroke with Class A Asheville (.341 with 10 homers in 42 games) in
2015 and began climbing the organization's ladder. Ramos socked 32
homers playing for both Class A Lancaster and Class AA Hartford
affiliates in 2018, but he really found his groove last summer with
Albuquerque in the Pacific Coast League, abusing pitchers to the tune
of a .309 average with 30 homers and 105 RBIs in 122 games for the
Dukes.
After
six years in the minors, Ramos accrued 98 roundtrippers and 349
ribbies to augment a .292 average in 496 outings, playing in All-Star
Games in both the California League and PCL. Even so, he was released
by the Rockies off the Albuquerque roster in January and sold his
contract to the Twins, who gave him $300,000 (including a $50,000
signing bonus) for 2020. Thus far, he's been worth every won
LG has paid him.
Ramos hits a grand slam for Hermosillo in 2016 |
Now
Ramos is drawing notice for his bat work in South Korea, including
among Rockies fans he left behind. One of them is Noah Yingling, who
wrote on the Roxpile.com website, "While he was never a top
prospect in the Colorado Rockies organization, they should have held
on to Roberto Ramos." Yingling posted those now-prophetic words
on May 6, the morning after Ramos' KBO debut.
MONCLOVA
SIGNEE COLON WANTS BACK IN MLB, EVEN AS BATBOY
Bartolo Colon (c) at Monclova press conference |
A
native of the Dominican Republic, Colon posted a career 247-188
record over 21 MLB seasons, pitching in four All-Star Games and one
World Series while winning the American League's Cy Young Award in
2005 after going 21-8 for the Los Angeles Angels, who copped the AL
West title and reached the second round of the playoffs that year.
Colon finished among the top six in CYA balloting three other
seasons. His last year in MLB was in 2018, when he went 7-12 with a
5.78 ERA in 28 games (24 starts) for the Texas Rangers, who finished
last in the AL West and granted Colon free agency after the season.
He did not pitch in 2019.
Amid
great fanfare, Colon signed a one-year deal in February with Monclova
and was expected to be in the starting rotation for manager Pat
Listach's defending LMB champions, who also signed former Cleveland
outfielder Rajai Davis the same week. The man nicknamed "Big
Sexy" by former New York Mets teammate Noah Syndergaard reported
for training camp in early March, telling gathered media, "I
feel very happy and thank the organization for calling me." At
the same press conference, Listach (a former American League Rookie
of the Year) remarked, "Bartolo brings a lot of experience and a
lot of victories. He knows how to win and he'll bring more wins to
the Acereros."
Instead,
training camps were halted weeks later by the Mexican League, who
postponed their regular season after the Wuhan virus landed in the
country after it looked for a while that the LMB might be able to
play as scheduled. Colon, like all ballplayers, has been in a state
of limbo ever since. "This situation with the pandemic is very
difficult for everyone," he told Rivera. "I left all my
stuff in Monclova and I told them I wanted to come back to play this
season. But we'll all see what happens with the virus because it
doesn't seem like this is going to end anytime soon."
Colon poses in t-shirt as a Mets pitcher |
Although
it's fairly likely the Acereros would prefer that Colon fulfill his
contract with him, the corpulent right-hander says he's hoping to be
back in the majors, even if it means a role outside pitching.
"I
just want to go back to the big leagues," he maintains, "even
if I'm just picking up bats."
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