Mexican League president Horacio de la Vega |
The
227-acre complex opened in 1958 and was used when Mexico City hosted
the Summer Olympics ten years later. The multi-sport facility
underwent extensive renovations while de la Vega served as director
of the Mexico City Sports Institute, which overees the Sports City,
prior to his resignation from the post last year. The Magdalena
Mixihuca Ciudad Deportes is the site of several sporting events
throughout the year, and contains the Foro Sol and Estadio Alfredo
Harp Helu, past and present home stadiums for the LMB Mexico City
Diablos Rojos. Both structures sit within the Autodromo Hermanos
Rodriguez, a 2.76-mile long motorsports race track.
Quintero's
complaint alleges that more than 26 million pesos (US$1.2 million)
worth of fraud was committed by de la Vega and others in relation to
the renovations, that were done while he headed the facility under
former Mexico City mayor Miguel Angel Mancera, a former city attorney
general and longtime figure in the Party of the Democratic
Revolution, or PRD, a political rival of Quintero's Morena party
(from which Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador formed a coalition with two
other parties to win Mexico's 2018 presidential election).
Map of Magdalena Mixihuca Sports City |
The
45-year-old de la Vega, who represented Mexico in the 1996 and 2000
Summer Olympics as a pentathlete, became director of the Sports
Institute in 2013 and led the organization for six years. He is
credited with bringing events connected with the NFL, NBA, MLB and
Formula 1 racing to Mexico City during his time in the position
before stepping down last October, two months after the Sports City
held reopening ceremonies. De la Vega was named to succeed Javier
Salinas as president of the Mexican League last November.
PERICOS
SLUGGER ORTIZ TO PLAY WINTERBALL FOR MONTERREY
New Monterrey OF Danny Ortiz |
A
former Reds farmhand, the Cuban-born Perez led Sultanes regulars last
season with a .270 average and 48 RBIs while whacking 10 homers for
the LMP expansion team, but is refusing to return to Monterrey at a
reduced salary. Since the Sultanes also own his Mexican League
rights, things could be sticky for the 35-year-old Perez next spring.
Bringing
in Ortiz will hardly be a downgrade for the Nuevo Leon-based team,
who will play their home games in Mazatlan for the Wuhan
virus-altered season to save on travel expenses. The 30-year-old
Puerto Rican was a fourth-round draft pick for the Minnesota Twins in
2008, but made his Major League debut with Pittsburgh on April 29,
2017 after signing with the Pirates as a free agent one year earlier.
Ortiz went 1-for-12 for the Buccos in nine games before returning to
the minors. He spent 2018 with the Phillies' AAA affiliate in Lehigh
Valley before signing with Puebla after the season. In ten MiLB
campaigns with three organizations, Ortiz hit a collective .257 with
121 homers and 572 RBIs over 1,102 games.
Felix Perez taking batting practice last summer |
This
will be his first season in the LMP, but Ortiz is no stranger to
playing baseball in the winter months. The Caguas-born gardener spent
all or part of ten seasons in his native Puerto Rico with the
Mayaguez Indios between 2010 and 2019. Although his career winterball
numbers aren't the most imposing (a .248 average, 15 homers and 132
RBIs in 332 contests), he's a two-time postseason All-Star and 2017
league MVP who's played on four pennant-winnters and in five
Caribbean Series.
MLB:
GONZALEZ MAKES DEBUT, URIAS EARNS FIRST WIN
Victor Gonzalez during first MLB outing |
A
24-year-old native of Tuxpan, Nayarit, Gonzalez was sent to the mound
the open the bottom of the fifth inning by Dodgers manager Dave
Roberts with a 2-0 lead after starter Tony Gonsolin had tossed four
frames of one-hit shutout ball. Although he showed good control by
throwing 17 strikes in his 24-pitch appearance, Gonzalez did not come
away unscathed.
Diamondbacks
leadoff batter Christian Walker welcomed the recent call-up from the
minors with a first-pitch single to shallow right field on a 96 MPH
fastball, then advanced to second on David Peralta groundout to
third. After getting Stephen Vogt swinging on a slider for the second
out, Gonzalez plunked Jake Lamb on an 0-2 pitch to put runners and
first and second before inducing Idelmaro Vargas into a groundout to
short to end the threat with a scoreless entrada.
Things
didn't go much better in the sixth for Gonzalez, who gave up a single
to right by first batter Ketel Marte followed by a run-scoring double
(also to right) by Kole Calhoun that cut the Dodgers lead to 2-1.
That was enough for Roberts, who called it a night for Gonzalez by
signaling to the bullpen for Tony Floro, who went on to end the
inning with no further scoring. Arizona went on to a 5-3 comeback
win, thanks to a four-run outburst in the eighth.
A
6'0" lefty, Gonzalez signed with Los Angeles in 2012 as a
17-year-old after being scouted by Mike Brito. He struggled his first
four summers in the Dodgers organization, going 11-20 before missing
the 2017 season after Tommy John surgery. His future remained in
doubt upon his return when he went a combined 1-4 for Class A Great
Lakes and Rookie Ogden in 2018.
However,
he turned things around last year by starting out 2-1 with a 1.65 ERA
in eight appearances (five starters) at Class A Rancho Cucamonga. He
then went 3-1 with a 2.23 ERA in eight starts after a May call-up to
AA Tulsa before finishing the season with AAA Oklahoma City, where he
had no decisions and a 3.86 ERA in 15 relief outings. Gonzalez was on
the Dodgers taxi squad prior to being brought to the big club
Thursday and making his MLB debut one night later.
Julio Urias earned first win in over a year |
A
product of Culiacan, Urias shares four things with Gonzalez: He's from Mexico, he's a
lefty, he was scouted by Mike Brito and he signed with the Dodgers in
2012. He was also the last Mexican to debut for Los Angeles before
Gonzalez, making his first appearance in 2016.
3 comments:
Hi. When I was a kid or teenager (late 80s to 90s), I loved to watch Formula 1 Grand Prix. I rememeber 1992 Mexican Grand Prix so well and the Hermanos Rodriguez circuit was one of my favorite.
It's amazing that I am now following the Mexican professional baseball and reading the news about the sports complex containing the circuit and the baseball stadium!
That IS quite a sports complex, isn't it? I can't think of any in the United States that really compares to this one. I like the driving skills needed to succeed in Formula 1, although I admit sprint car racing is my favorite. NASCAR? I have never been interested.
Went to a NASCAR race at Hermanos Rodriguez a couple of years ago. A fun way to spend an afternoon.
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