However,
due to the Wuhan virus, the "unheard of" is becoming
commonplace throughout the world of baseball. It's no different in
Mexico, where as of Sunday, over 113,000 people had contracted the
virus and total deaths were approaching the 14,000 mark. All leagues
south of the border have postponed their seasons indefinitely and
while the Mexican League is hoping to play a shortened 48-game season
plus playoffs beginning August 7, one call from a federal health
authority could scuttle that plan.
Facing
that uncertainly, both Mexican League president Horacio de la Vega
and his Mexican Pacific League counterpart, Omar Canizales, are
already hoisting fiscal white flags and hoping to minimize the
pending damage the Wuhan virus will cause their loops. "We are
in a losing scenario," de la Vega told the El Jonronero
website. "The teams are not going to gain or break even. We
are trying to minimize costs to the maximum." The LMB's proposed
schedule would partly address that by eliminating games outside a
team's division in order to cut air travel costs while avoiding
potential contagions.
De la
Vega, who noted his 45th birthday last week, says the majority of Mexican League teams can't afford to play
games behind closed doors as leagues in Asia have done because they
can't survive without gate receipts or concessions and merchandise
sales, but he admits they may have no choice in some places: "The
entire league can't play behind closed doors, but if in a particular
state the local authorities mandate that the only possibility is to
play behind closed doors, we are considering that some places may
start behind closed doors." The governor of Coahuila, where
three LMB teams play (including defending champion Monclova), has
said that teams will have to limit the number of people admitted to
ballparks in order to adhere to social distancing policies.
Mexican Pacific League president Omar Canizales |
Regardless
of where players come from, Canizales repeats de la Vega's refrain
that his league and its ten teams will look to cut expenses wherever
they can, including salaries on the field and in the front office.
"It is very likely that we all have to sacrifice something in
order to make the season feasible, trying to make the players least
affected, but I think it will be necessary to make some adjustments,"
he said by telephone to RG La Deportiva. "Everything will
depend on the level at which we are allowed to play in terms of
stadium occupancy," alluding to the possibility that the LMP may
have to play in front of unoccupied stands.
Canizales
says that the MexPac is now penciling in November 15 as opening day,
a month later than usual, should the Mexican League playoffs go into
November for the first time ever. He adds that there are three more
LMP league meetings between now and October. "We are not against
the wall. There is time."
JUAN
NAVARRETE NAMED NEW HERMOSILLO MANAGER
It will
not be the first time Navarrete has entered a confusing situation as
an LMP manager. His hiring as the first dugout boss of the expansion
Guasave Algodoneros was announced at a press conference last June,
although his duties as an instructor in the Oakland A's minor league
system prevented him from attending. However, Navarette never came to
formal terms with new owner Alfredo Aramburo, who bought the team
after the reported hiring in mid-July, and ex-MLB pitcher Rigo
Beltran ended up being the Cottoneers new skipper instead. Beltran
lasted less than a month into last season before he was fired.
Although
he's been a manager, coach and instructor in the Oakland system for
over two decades after playing minor league ball for seven seasons
for the Montreal Expos in the 1970's (he was a teammate of Hall of
Famers Gary Carter and Andre Dawson), the Gomez Palacio-born
Navarrete spent most of his 21-year playing career as a second
baseman in the Mexican League, where he hit .327 with 1,979 hits over
1,607 LMB games before retiring in 1990. He also spent 19 winters
playing in the Mex Pac. He was elected to the Salon de la Fama in
1998, by which time his second baseball career was already well
underway. Navarrete has tutored such future MLB All-Stars as Miguel
Tejada and Max Muncy and is currently a defensive coordinator in the
Oakland system.
Monterrey Industriales player-manager Juan Navarrete |
Besides
playing nearly two decades in winterball for Obregon, Navojoa,
Mexicali and Guaymas, Navarrete has managed five teams in the LMP:
Guasave, Jalisco, Obregon, Mexicali and Los Mochis. He was named
Manager of the Year in 2014-15 after leading the Jalisco Charros to a
46-26 record their first year in Guadalajara after moving from
Guasave.
Now
he'll put on a Naranjeros uniform for the first time as a player or
manager, replacing another Mexican baseball legend in Castilla, who
took Hermosillo to a 38-27 record in his first year at the helm
before falling to Mazatlan in six games in their first-round playoff
series. In announcing the 66-year-old Navarrete's hiring, Orangemen
general director Pablo de la Pena said about Castilla's ouster, "It
was considered that some things failed and the sporting goal was not
reached." De la Pena then explained why Navarrete was chosen:
"We sought experience and knowledge of the league. We believe
that his knowledge and his way of communicating with the players will
help us to achieve good results." That same experience and knowledge informs Navarrete what will happen if he
doesn't.
The hiring leaves Monterrey and Mexicali as the last two LMP franchises with unsettled managerial situations. The Sultanes have not confirmed that Homar Rojas will be back with the team while the Aguilas have been mum about Pedro Mere's status. Otherwise, besides Navarrete in Hermosillo, the other seven Mex Pac skippers going into the season will be Roberto Vizcarra in Jalisco, Juan José Pacho in Mazatlan, Benji Gil in Culiacán, Oscar Robles in Guasave, Victor Bojorquez in Los Mochis, Lorenzo Bundy in Navojoa, and Sergio Gastelum in Obregón.
The hiring leaves Monterrey and Mexicali as the last two LMP franchises with unsettled managerial situations. The Sultanes have not confirmed that Homar Rojas will be back with the team while the Aguilas have been mum about Pedro Mere's status. Otherwise, besides Navarrete in Hermosillo, the other seven Mex Pac skippers going into the season will be Roberto Vizcarra in Jalisco, Juan José Pacho in Mazatlan, Benji Gil in Culiacán, Oscar Robles in Guasave, Victor Bojorquez in Los Mochis, Lorenzo Bundy in Navojoa, and Sergio Gastelum in Obregón.
TIJUANA
TO HOST TWO BASEBALL WORLD CUPS IN NOVEMBER
Two WBSC Baseball World Cups awarded to Tijuana |
The
fifth U-15 Baseball World Cup is slated for the so-called "Heart
Between Two Seas" between October 30 and November 8, with the
ninth Women's Baseball World Cup to be played from November 12 to the
21st. Games for both tournaments will be played at La Nida, the
17,000-seat home of the Mexican League's Tijuana Toros, although
another venue such as the smaller Estadio Angel Camarena may be
pressed into duty if the need for another field arises, especially if
the Toros make a playoff run into November. Estadio Camarena, which
is being remodeled, was to be the home of the expansion Otay
Inustriales of the Northern Mexico League, but the LNM is struggling
for survival with an uncertain future. Another ballpark, the
5,000-seat Estadio Manuel Cecena, sits 30 miles to the east in Tecate
as a last resort.
WBSC
President Riccardo Fraccari said, "Having Tijuana confirmed to
host two major WBSC World Cup events in a row represents how much
baseball means to the city. This is the first time we've had a city
host two World Cups in our history, providing a wonderful opportunity
to celebrate baseball and sport as we await the restart of the
international calendar."
The
U-15 Baseball World Cup had originally been scheduled for August
before the pandemic shut baseball down in most of the countries
taking part. Of the twelve teams expected to take part, eight
currently hold Top 12 status in the WBSC's latest rankings for that
category: Japan (1), United States (2), Taiwan (4), Mexico (5), Cuba
(7), Venezuela (8), Dominican Republic (10) and Panama (12). Rounding
out the field will be Italy (17), Germany (19), So. Africa (24) and
Guam (36).
This
will mark the first time that Guam has sent a contingent to any World
Cup competition since being admitted to the International Baseball
Federation (the WBSC's predecessor) in the 1980's after winning the
Oceania championship last year. Japan, the United States and Germany
won their continental tournaments while South Africa was chosen as
Africa's representative after no qualifier was held there. The USA
defeated host Panama in the title game of the 2018 U-15 Baseball
World Cup while Taiwan finished third.
Mexico pitcher Rosy del Castillo |
Japan
defeated Taiwan in the 2018 championship game in Florida for their
sixth straight World Cup title and will come to Tijuana riding a
30-game win streak. The USA won the first two World Cups in 2004 and
2006. Not only will this be Mexico's first time playing in a Baseball
World Cup, last year marked their initial entry in women's baseball
competition. Last August 19, in their opening game at the first Pan
Am Women's Baseball Championship held in Aguascalientes, pitchers
Rosy del Castillo and Veronica Romo combined on a no-hitter in a 16-0
win over fellow debutante Nicaragua. Mexico went on to finish fourth
in the eight-team event, overseen by the Pan American Baseball
Confederation (or COPABE).
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