During
a four-way videoconference last Thursday featuring Caribbean
Professional Baseball Confederation president Juan Francisco Puello,
Mex Pac president Omar Canizalez, Venados executive president Ismael
Barros and Mazatlan Mayor Luis Guillermo Benitez, Puro
Beisbol editor Fernando Ballesteros reports
that it was Mayor Benitez who made the official announcement that his
city will indeed be the site of the Crown Jewel of Latin Baseball
next winter as the other three indicated their agreement.
There
was doubt that the Serie del Caribe
would be played in Mazatlan until last week's announcement. Puello
had given the LMP a June 30 deadline to confirm issues in the coastal
city had been resolved or run the risk of the tournament being moved
to another Mex Pac city or even out of Mexico. For their part,
Canizales warned the Venados that the LMP would move the Caribbean
Series elsewhere themselves if matters had not been settled by the
time the videoconference was convened.
The
simmering controversy between the City and the Venados erupted on the
morning of Monday, April 6 when a contingent of people from the
Mazatlan Legal Department led by city council secretary
Jose
de Jesus Flores entered
publicly-owned Estadio Teodoro Mariscal and physically removed team
employees from the ballpark with orders to retrieve their belongings
by the end of that week, then padlocked the ballpark shut with
security placed on the premises.
The
move was the culmination of a dispute in which the City accused the
Venados of breach of their lease of the 16,000-seat facility. Among
the charges were that the team failed to deliver free game tickets to
local seniors, withheld promised support to local basketball players
and boxers and refused to allow the City to use the stadium to
deliver Wuhan virus relief services to seniors.
Perhaps the most crippling blow to the Venados was the City's removal of the ballpark's concessions contract from team owner Jose Antonio Toledo, whose family has controlled that activity for four decades. Although details of any tentative agreement between the City and ballclub have been announced, it can be presumed that none of the issues have been resolved (including the concessions contract) and that pending lawsuits are expected to move ahead upon the conclusion of the Serie del Caribe.
Tensions
between the City and Venados go back at least as far as November
2018, a month after the ballpark was officially reopened following an
offseason renovation costing 416 million public pesos (US$18
million), when a clandestine drinking system was discovered and water
to Estadio Teodoro Mariscal was shut off by by municipally-owned
Jumapam,
who also stated the team owed over a million pesos in unpaid water
bills. That imbrogio was eventually resolved but relations have
remained shaky ever since.
Differences
have been set aside for the time being, however, and Puello predicts
a successful Caribbean Series next February. “We are going to have
a very good Serie del Caribe,” he said. “The Covid is there but,
by the grae of God, we are going to overcome it.”
Mazatlan
last hosted the Caribbean Series in 2005, when the hometown Venados
won the championship, marking the only time that a Mexican host team
has won the tournament.
LMP
CONFIRMS PLAN TO PLAY IN 2020-21, 3 FOREIGNERS PER TEAM
Sinaloa governor Ordaz and Omar Canizales in Guasave |
In
a press release from the league office in Guadalajara, Canizales
stated, “I thank the owners of the teams for the degree of
commitment they show in this complex scenario. Their commitment to
the players, staff, collaborators and the communities where they
participate have inspired them to make extraordinary efforts to carry
out our next season, even at the cost of having economic losses.”
He added that strict health-related protocols will be put into place
to ensure the safety of everyone in the stands and on the playing
fields.
Canizales
earned a marketing degree at Universidad Regiomontano in Monterrey
and spent
five years as a Cuauhtémoc
brewery executive in the state of Chihuahua before becoming
the Mex Pac president in 2009 following the death of Renato Vega. He
has since overseen the circuit's remarkable growth ever since but
admitted in June that the LMP and its teams all expect to lose money
over the coming season if they play behind closed doors, a likely
scenario. A schedule will be released in the coming weeks.
Baseball to return to Navojoa, LMP in October |
That's
if there IS a winterball season in 2020-21, of course, although
Canizales says his office and member teams will do everything they
can to make it happen, with a targeted Opening Day of October 12: “We
have reached the conclusion and with the importance that it
represents for Mexican baseball, for families and for society, that
we will play the 2020-2021 season of the Mexican Pacific League."
"The
owners have stuck out their chests to be responsible and despite the
uncertainty that this pandemic represents, the commitment with
players, the coaching staff and many people who work within baseball
is confirmed, it has been decided to start in October with the
season."
SULTANES
REPLACE ROJAS AS MANAGER WITH GERARDO ALVAREZ
In as Monterrey manager: Gerardo Alvarez |
A
native of Oceanside, California who played collegiately at Texas
Tech, the 40-year-old Alvarez was Baltimore's 16th round draft pick
in 2002 and went on to play infield for six seasons in the Orioles
system, batting .236 with 32 homers while getting as far as AAA
Norfolk, for whom he played five games in 2007. Alvarez then hit .178
for Somerset of the independent Atlantic League in 2008, his final
year as a player. Known more for his versatility than his bat,
Alvarez played every position on the field but catcher.
Alvarez
made his debut as a manager with the Oakland County Cruisers of the
Frontier League in 2010, leading the Michigan-based indy team to a
53-43 record and third place in the East Division. He then managed
Pittsburgh's Dominican Summer League affiliate two years later as the
Rookie-level Pirates went 44-26 in the regular season and went on to
win the DSL pennant. Alvarez has remained in the Pittsburgh farm
system since, managing Bradenton of the Class A Florida State League
in 2017 and 2018 before taking the Pirates Gulf Coast League squad to
an 18-26 mark last year
During
that time, he was also coaching during the winter in the LMP with
both Mexicali and Mazatlan, with whom he was the third base coach for
the 2016 Caribbean Series champion Venados. Alvarez' hiring marked
final confirmation of which ten managers would open the Mex Pac
season in October.
Although
he has a decent background on both sides of the foul lines, Alvarez'
hiring might have raised some eyebrows in Monterrey, where team
co-owner Jose “Pepe” Maiz' virulent opposition to
Mexican-Americans led to a near-split of the Mexican League in recent
seasons. It's not unreasonable to believe that Alvarez' managerial
leash will be even shorter
with the Sultanes than it would be would
be elsewhere and that the team's press release telling him “Together
with you in search of victory, supporting you in every decision”
can be taken with a grain of salt.
Out as Monterrey manager: Homar Rojas |
As
for Rojas, who spent over 20 years as a catcher before starting his
managerial career in 2005, the 56-year-old Nuevo Leon native was not
given the almost perfunctory thanks for his professionalism and best
wishes for his future projects by the Sultanes. Although he is
currently without a job in either summer or winter baseball in
Mexico, his vast experience (including LMP pennants with Obregon in
2007-08 and Hermosillo in 2009-10) and the high turnover of managers
south of the border practically ensures that Rojas will find work
sooner rather than later.
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