Cuauhtémoc “Chito” Rodríguez |
A
widely-respected Salon de la Fama member with over four
decades of Mexican League front office experience is calling on the
LMB to cancel the 2020 season due to ongoing uncertainty regarding
the Wuhan virus outbreak in Mexico.
Cuauhtémoc
“Chito” Rodríguez was inducted last year in Monterrey after an
executive career during which his Dos Laredos Tecolotes reached the
playoffs 15 times (winning two pennants) before taking over as
president of the flagship Tigres franchise in 1994 and overseeing six
title-winning teams in Mexico City, Puebla and Quintana Roo before
his 2018 retirement after Fernando Valenzuela purchased the team from
Carlos Peralta. He was recognized as "King of Baseball" at
the Baseball Winter Meetings in 2011.
When asked by writer Angel Villegas last week about the upcoming Mexican League season, Rodriguez was quoted as saying, "cancel it," in Puro Beisbol. "I don't think baseball being played in the LMB is possible this year. The country is immersed in the virus and we don't know when it will be solved."
Rodriguez
elaborated that the Liga's plan to play games with people in the
stands is impractical: “The
situation in the country and in the world is very complex regarding
the virus. I would not recommend playing with the public in the
stands in the Mexican League. It will not be controllable until
you have a vaccine to counteract this evil. Therefore, it is not
practical for anyone to be in a sport that people go to the stadiums
and I do not only mean baseball but also others such as soccer,
basketball and American football."
Rodriguez at the 2011 Baseball Winter Meetings |
Rodriguez
suggests that calling off the season gives the Mexican League an
opportunity to create peace with the winter Mexican Pacific League,
who would not have to shorten their season to accomodate a Mexican
League schedule stretching into November. "It is time for the
two leagues to make amends," he says. "I would go with
the LMB Board of Directors and would do the same with the Winter
Council and tell them, 'Look, we must make peace. We did not do it
for many years because there are difficulties between us so
there was no approach. We've criticized each other, but now it's time
to lean on each other.'
“It's
a complicated situation so it would be best if the Mexican League
told the winter league that they can start as usual in October,
finish it and play their Caribbean Series. Everyone in peace."
DE
LA VEGA: LMB WILL NOT PLAY GAMES IN EMPTY BALLPARKS
Mexican League president Horacio de la Vega |
"We
are not going to play behind closed doors. That is our determination.
The only possibility is to do it with the capacity allowed," de
la Vega said.
According
to the Hitazo website, de la Vega explained that he expects to
start the season on August 7 to end on November 10 with a 48-game
campaign for each team in the regular season, but that will depend on
how the pandemic plays out over the next few weeks.
Unlike
leagues elsewhere, the Mexican League is not in the financial
position to play without people in the stands because the LMB does
not have deals with sponsors similar to those found in the United
States, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan while the majority of its 16
teams are dependent on revenue from ticket, merchandise and
concession sales to meet payroll and cover their other expenses.
Games behind closed doors would almost certainly lead to franchises
folding, perhaps even during the season.
Tabasco Olmecas will need fan in the seats |
The
leader of Mexico's summer baseball circuit accepted that after the
Wuhan virus, it will be necessary to change uses and customs of the
game, such as spitting on the ground (something usual between
pitches) or eating sunflower seeds.
"It will radically change the behavior of the players," de la Vega stated. "There is a protocol that will imply changes, not only for the players, but also for the fans."
BANUELOS
CUT BY MARINERS, SIGNS WITH TEAM IN TAIWAN
Manny Banuelos with Culiacan in 2019-20 |
The
29-year-old lefty will be playing in his fourth country since January
after the 5'10" Laguna native signed a one-year contract with
the Fubon Guardians of Taiwan's Chinese Professional Baseball League
last week. Banuelos will report this week to the team in New Taipei
City, where the Guardians roster includes fellow moundsmen Henry
Sosa, Mike Loree, Bryan Woodall and Ryan Bollinger.
Banuelos
was once a highly-regarded prospect after signing a free-agent
contract with the New York Yankees in 2008 at age 17. He rose as high
as AAA Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in seven years as a farmhand in
pinstripes, but never appeared in the majors until after he was
traded to Atlanta following the 2014 season. He made an impressive
MLB debut for the Braves on July 2 against Washington at home,
shutting out the Nats over 5.2 innings and striking out seven batters
in a no-decision 2-1 win. Banuelos followed that outing with another
good start five nights later in Milwaukee by holding the Brewers to
one run in 5.1 frames and was credited with a 4-3 victory. Although
he mostly pitched creditably the rest of the season, he lost his
final four decisions, including an 8-4 shelling at Washington on
September 6 in which he allowed six runs over two innings in his
final outing. That was enough to raise his overall ERA from 3.33 to
5.13 to augment a 1-4 record.
After
that, Banuelos was returned to the minors and bounced from the Braves
to the Dodgers and White Sox organizations before returning to MLB in
2019 with Chicago, going 3-4 with a 6.93 ERA in 16 appearances,
including eight starts. He had a great April for the Chisox,
finishing the month with a 2-0 record and 2.70 ERA in six appearances
(including four shutout innings on April 22 at Baltimore in a 12-2
laugher), but he allowed 27 earned runs in 20.1 entradas in
May to lose four of five decisions and pitched sparingly for manager
Rick Renteria after that. A Mexican-American, Renteria led the
Mexican League in batting with a .442 average for Jalisco in 1991.
Banuelos
spent last winter pitching in the Mexican Pacific League for
Culiacan, going 1-1 with a 5.40 ERA in four starts. He began the year
helping the Tomateros win the LMP title in the January playoffs,
traveled with the team to Puerto Rico in February for the Caribbean
Series (where Culiacan reached the semifinals, then went to Arizona
for MLB spring training after signing a free-agent contract with the
Seattle Mariners.
Banuelos made MLB debut in 2015 |
Now,
Banuelos will resume his career on the other side of the Pacific
Ocean. He'll join a Fubon team that has made nine playoff appearances
and won three pennants since their 1993 debut as the Jungo Bears, but
currently sits third in the four-team CPBL with a 17-23 record after
absorbing a 13-4 loss Sunday to the Uni-President Lions, whose roster
features former MLB pitchers Ryan Feieraband and Josh Roenicke.
While
Taiwan is not where he expected to be when the year began, Manny
Banuelos will have one decided advantage over the 750 major leaguers
and thousands of remaining minor leaguers he left behind when he
departed from North America last week: He'll be playing baseball.
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