That’s Amaury News and Commentary: Exclusive Interview with Manny Sanguillen

KDKA CBS 2 Pittsburgh file photo: Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Manny Sanguillen (left) and rightfielder Roberto Clemente (right) pose for a photo in the glory days of the 1970s their best years in Pittsburgh

Exclusive Interview with Manny Sanguillen

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

Back in the 1970’s when he was catching for the Pittsburgh Pirates, Manny Sanguillen, Roberto Clemente and Willie Stargell walked into a Howard Johnson and could not get service, They were a couple of hours late to Spring Training that day in Ft Myers, Florida.

This is one of the many stories told to me by a man born in Colón, Panamá, an excellent catcher for 12 seasons in the major leagues, 11 of those with the Pirates and one, in 1977 with the Oakland Athletics. He ended his excellent career with a solid .296 batting average (something not common these days) especially for a catcher,  Sanguillen was selected to three All Star games and won the 1971 World Series when the Pirates defeated the Baltimore Orioles.

Sanguillen was one of the best catchers in major league baseball during the 1970’s his lifetime average was higher that Hall of Fame catcher Johnny Bench. The Pirates catcher was a contact hitter and an integral part of the success by the Pittsburgh teams of that time.

As a contemporary of Manny Sanguillen, I remember interviewing him when he played for the Athletics in 1977, he always had a kind smile great attitude and very proud of his Panamanian roots. Living now in Boynton Beach, Florida, he was very gracious and courteous when I called to talk to him. “I had my friends in Oakland when I played there, like Vida Blue and Billy North” he said. My friends in the media that also covered Sanguillen, all tell me he was very good with the media in the bay area.

Sanguillen, like many other Latino players suffered discrimination and humiliation, when I asked him about the years in Pittsburgh where Clemente and the media did not get along, as he would complain of being misquoted by newspapers, Sanguillen told me “Yes, that was true, they just didn’t like him because some were racist” The 76-year old catcher told me about himself and his career in Pittsburgh “they wanted me fired, there were always rumors that I was going to be traded, at that time there were very few Latino catchers”. (He paused) other catchers like Eliseo Rodríguez and Paul Casanova”

About the story that he was going to Managua, Nicaragua, with Roberto Clemente on that DC-3 chartered plane Clemente was taking a loaded plane with help for the victims of that earthquake, he said that was not true. But he did talk to Roberto before he left from San Juan, Puerto Rico, but Sanguillen tells me he was not planning to go, Clemente had a lot of friends with him, he was always surrounded by people. He learned about the plane crash from Luis Mayoral, a veteran sports journalist and broadcaster born in Puerto Rico.

Manny Sanguillen “Clemente told me once, if we make it to a World Series, I will take care of everything”. He did, in 1971 Clemente hit .411 won the World Series MVP like Bill Blass, who pitched a complete game seven to clinch it for the Pirates said after the game about Roberto: “Clemente did it all”.

He talks about his three All Star Games, like the one in Atlanta in 1972 when he was hitting behind Billy Williams: “I got a single to centerfield against pitcher Wilbur Wood advancing Williams to third.” His memory is sharp as a tack. He has not played since the late 70’s but he remembers stuff like it was last year.

Like many Latino players he had to handle the discrimination that did not go away after Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier in 1947. He played in the 1970’s and still, like former A’s outfielder Tony Armas once told me “for us Latino players, we have to be twice as good as a white player to prove ourselves here.”

I asked Sanguillen about what Armas told me back then and he told me Armas was correct. Orlando Cepeda once told me that when he arrived in the major leagues, there was a pecking order; the White players, then the African-American players and then the Latino players, we were at the bottom of the totem pole, not only because of skin color, but also the language barrier”.

Born in Panamá, he is friends with three of the most famous athletes in that country – three institutions. “I talk to Rod Carew with frequency, saw him in Miami, as far as Mariano Rivera he lives in Panamá and I do not see him as often, Roberto Durán, yes I see him”

Manny Sanguillen is part of the great tradition of Latin American ballplayers in the major leagues. Manny is an Evangelical Christian and although he only played with the A’s for one season he left many good memories and friends here in the Bay Area, during a time where the number of Latino players was not as it is today, which is close 30 percent of all players.

Sanguillen was inducted into The Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum and Hall of Fame/ His good friend Roberto Clemente not only has a statue at PNC Park, but also a bridge in Pittsburgh named the Roberto Clemente bridge. Not many superstars have a bridge with his name on it.

Muchas gracias a Manny Sanguillen por la entrevista, espero que siga bien con su buen humor, muy positivo con esa gran sonrisa tan contagiosa.

Thanks to Manny Sanguillen for the interview, hope he stays well, with his good humor his positivism and that great contagious smile.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: MLB Final Score – Both sides Lost; Opener set for July 24th

Statement from the Players Association saying their prepared to get back to work July 24th. The players will be getting their full prorated pay. The season will last for two months and a week prior to the post season starting in October (MLB Players Association image)

MLB: Final Score – Both sides Lost; Opener set for July 24

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

There will be baseball. An abbreviated regular-season starting by the end of July and ending by the end of September. The only hurdle left is the unpredictability of this Covid-19 virus. Because of the history of the two protagonists, you could have predicted the final result. And there is no winner here. If you believe there was a winner then you are a great candidate to buy beach front property in Tennessee.

Anybody that loves this game, now feels like when you wake-up the morning after with a terrible hangover after a party, that was not really what you where hoping for. Unlike other sports, a game that ends in a tie is not part of the game of baseball (for now anyway) and after three months of negotiations just regurgitated all the distrust between both sides, we are going to play for about two months and a few days, plus playoffs.

In a season of this kind, teams like the Seattle Mariners, who have never won a World Series since their franchise was born in 1977, have the best chance. Ironically the Mariners last year had a 13-2 start; something very rare in baseball history, they were the 17th team since 1900 to win at least 13 of their first 15 games. If they repeat such start during a season of some 60 games, they might just do it.

Hopefully the two month and a week season will go without a hitch, since the navigation would be a virus that is still without a vaccine.

Nobody won. At the end, there was an even bigger loser than the owners, players, and the fans.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum at the Oakland Coliseum and does News and Commentary at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB Two Month Season or No Season

MLB logo image from wamc.com

MLB Two Month Season or No Season

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

The clock has ran out.

Today MLBPA voted against the 60-game season proposed by the owners, by a vote of 33-5. Now the Final, REAL FINAL decision rest in Commissioner’s Manfred’s next announcement. By fiat he can set the schedule for a season, which will be around 50 games, basically two months of baseball. Or he can opt on cancelling this Soap Opera and saying, No season, for reasons he will then explain. There are owners that are fine with no season at all, it is a minority, but now that the players rejected the last pitch by the owners, others might join in the cry to cancel 2020.

The wild card continues to be Covid-19. Is it going to comeback in the fall or not? There are many opinions on that, depends who you listen to, but even the “experts” in science who study this stuff for decades have already contradicted themselves. This is no secret and is for everybody to see. But, in this subject both sides agree. There is a possibility the season begins and then has to be stopped because the cases of Covid would continue to rise and players will have contracted the virus.

If Manfred announces the shortened season, he must guarantee the security and well-being of the players. If he makes the decision to play this year, then the Players Union have the right to file grievance, mostly alleging that the owners did not negotiated in good faith.

I am sure there will be re-runs of this very sad exercise between owners and players, from the time MLB stopped Spring Training to the day and time Mr. Manfred makes his final decision. It would be documented and recorded in history as not one of the great moments for the National Pastime.

Season or no season, baseball has hurt themselves like never before. The old saying “timing is everything” could have not been more accurate in 2020 as MLB and MLPBA battle for two months and will come down to one of two very sad decisions.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Heritage Museum located at the Oakland Coliseum and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: MLB Saturday is the 100th Day without Baseball

photo from millcreeksports.com:

MLB Saturday is the 100th Day without Baseball.

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-Gonzalez

If this saying is accurate, we have nothing but losers so far during this negotiations between owners and players. “In any negotiation, the one who first gives a number is the loser”. Both sides have been throwing number(s) for amount of games they wish to play.

“You must never try to make all the money that’s in a deal. Let the other fellow make some money too, because if you have a reputation for always making all the money, you won’t have many deals.” – J. Paul Getty

He was once one of the richest men in the world, American-born oil billionaire who was very frugal. So much, that he once negotiated with some low life characters who were the kidnappers of his own grandson.

The current negotiations between these two sides trying to resolve this impasse in baseball have a turbulent history. It is almost like a couple that has lived together for decades, marrying and divorcing and re-marrying and divorcing. Kind of a crazy relationship, but it is what it is.

Yesterday the players union proposed a 70 game season, just a few hours later it was rejected by the owners, represented by Commissioner Rob Manfred..

We are left this weekend in sort of a limbo waiting for some news. The Commissioner still have by decree the nuclear option, that to order a 50 game season, to start at a specific day.

If and when a deal is finally reached and both sides have it totally approved, the person that will make the announcement will be Rob Manfred. That is his job and history will judge him for his leadership or lack off during this wild 2020.

In the meantime, stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum located at the Oakland Coliseum and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsadioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: MLB Players Proposed 70 games instead of 60

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred proposed a 60 game schedule and the players union is asking for 70 games the baseball is in the owner’s court now as the players wait for MLB’s decison (New York Times file photo)

MLB Players Proposed 70 games instead of 60

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

A day after the owners proposed a 60 game season beginning July 19 and ending September 29, the players union today made a counter-proposal according to ESPN this is what it calls for:

-70 game season from July 19 to September 30. -$50 million in playoff bonuses -50/50 split of new postseason TV revenues in 2021 -Universal DH -Forgiveness of salary advance for Tier I-III players -Mutual waiver of grievance

This should probably fly, but with these two sides never bet anything.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Spanish radio voice for the Oakland A’s on 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB 60 Game Proposal Looking Good

yahoo.sports.com file photo: MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred (left) and MLB Players Association Rep Tony Clark (right) met for a one on one discussion to bring baseball back on Wednesday

MLB; 60 game Proposal looks Promising

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

After Commissioner Fred Mandfred for the owners and Tony Clark,representing the players Union met in Arizona on Tuesday.

“The owners are 100% committed to getting baseball back on the field,’’ Manfred says.

Says Clark: “The players want to play.’’

The new proposal is from the MLB/owners going to the MLPA/players, is to play a 60-game season in 70 days with prorated salary to the players and an extended playoff. The season would begin,(if this is approved) around July 19.

So far, looks like booth sides are in agreement (at least)to formally submitting this for an approval or rejection.

So if you are exhausted about this, that is normal, but this story, even if they play, would not end, because we have an unpredictable Pandemic going on, and at the end, that might be the “wild card” with cases currently spiking all around the country.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury is the Spanish radio voice for the Oakland A’s on 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary weekly at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcast: Manfred puts doubt on baseball’s return; The latest on the season shortened or put off

MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred now says that baseball might not return at all after the owners have offered a 50 game season to the players which was rejected (yardbarker.com file photo)

On That’s Amaury’s podcast:

#1 How huge is it that baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred would say that he’s not sure if there will even be a baseball season in 2020?

#2 Supposing baseball is canceled for the 2o20 season will the damage be as bad as it was like the strike shorten 1994 season?

#3 Owners want to limit the salaries they pay and the players are looking for a full prorated pay, if this negotiating to get the ball rolling by mid July is a sampling of whats to come in next season’s collective bargaining you could be assured the game is in danger.

#4 Rob Manfred is known as a Commissioner who likes a challenge and taking on the players union head on in a situation like this will get the idea across and is known for his attack dog style.

Join Amaury Pi Gonzalez each week for That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary podcasts at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

 

That’s Amaury’s News and Commentary: MLB Commissioner Not Sure of a Season

Major League Baseball Players Association representative Tony Clark said the latest offer from the owners of 72 games and cuts in player salaries was unacceptable on Sunday (USA Today file photo)

MLB Commissioner: Not Sure of a Season

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

Last week Commissioner Rob Manfred said “100 percent is going to be a season”. Today after his weekly conference call with the 30 owners said he was “not very sure we will have a season”. According to Manfred the league doesn’t want to open a season with the risk that the union could file multi-billion dollar grievance saying that MLB did not act in good faith to play as many games as possible this year. With the Covid-19 situation players could choose not to report for work.

The Commissioner lacks the ownership votes to open the season. MLB/owners after they rejected the 72-game proposal by the MLPA this past weekend, and after the union told the owners they are “done” negotiating, and told them to “go and set a schedule”, the players now do not seem to want to go any further.

This is what the Commissioner told ESPN today. “I had been hopeful that once we got to common ground on the idea that we were going to pay the players full prorated salary that we would get some cooperation in terms of proceeding under the agreement that we negotiated with the MLBPA on March 26th. Unfortunately, over the weekend, while Tony Clark was declaring his desire to get back to work, the union’s top lawyer was out telling reporters, players and eventually getting back to owners that as soon as we issued a schedule — as they requested — they intended to file a grievance claiming they were entitled to an additional billion dollars. Obviously, that sort of bad-faith tactic makes it extremely difficult to move forward in these circumstances.”

Commentary: Many epitaphs will be written about MLB 2020, I believe it will be remembered as the weird year where greed killed the game, suicide by the numbers. Nobody was arguing about a $15 per-hour salary here, in a game where the owners can make billions in television deals and a rookie makes around $563,500 per-season, and the rest of the country is struggling in many ways with 30-40 million unemployed, many will lose their jobs and businesses forever, this was as ridiculous as it could get.

Unless there are last second surprise(s), the great Lon Simmons would say today about the 2020 season: “Tell it goodbye!”

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the Spanish radio voice for A’s baseball on the A’s Spanish radio flagship station 1010 KIQI San Francisco and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: 1971 Pirates First All Black and Latino lineup

blogspot.com file photo: 1971 Pittsburgh Pirates who defeated the San Francisco Giants in the NLCS to advance to the World Series and the Bucs defeated the Baltimore Orioles for the Championship

1971 Pirates First All Black and Latino lineup

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi Gonzalez

On September 1, 1971 the Pittsburgh Pirates fielded the first all-black and Latino line-up.

Rennie Stennett (second base) Panamá, Gene Clines (center field)USA (Bay Area native), Roberto Clemente (right field), Puerto Rico Willie Stargell (left field) USA, Manny Sanguillen (catcher) Panamá, Dave Cash (third base) USA, Al Oliver (first base) USA, Jackie Hernandez (shortstop) Cuba, 2019 Opening day rosters included players from the United States, Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Cuba, Puerto Rico México, Canada, Japan, Curacao, South Korea, Brasil, Colombia, Panamá, Aruba, Germany.

Honduras, Australia, Honk Kong, Saudi Arabia, Taiwan. Five teams have the most players born outside the US: Dominican Republic, Venezuela, Cuba, Puerto Rico and México.

Today about 7. 7% of all Major League Baseball players are African-American and close to 29% are Latinos/Hispanics. In the country (total population) As of July 2019 Hispanics/Latinos made 18.3 percent of the total population, Black/African-Americans 13.4 percent. When it comes to African-American participation in the big three professional leagues in the US, baseball still way behind the NBA and the NFL. In the NBA 75% while in the NFL 68% are African-Americans.

Arizona Diamondbacks all-star outfielder Adam Jones fills in on his belief in this detachment between blacks and baseball. “The decisions made in baseball are white made decisions. The league has experimented with various rule changes to speed up pace of play and reach younger fans, but the racial politics of baseball are the most in need of an update,” claims Jones. Simply put, Jones feels the league can do a better job connecting with African-American social issues as the other sports have made a priority.

The MLB (RBI) Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities is sponsored by Major League Baseball and it is designated to promote the game to teenage boys and girls in disadvantaged areas. The RBI Program is in partnership with the Boys & Girls of America.

Note: This year (in progress) the 2020 US Census started in April 1 and will conclude in December.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Heritage Hispanic Museum located at the Oakland Coliseum and Catch That’s Amaury’s podcasts each Tuesday at http://www.sportsradioservice.com

That’s Amaury News and Commentary: MLB Commissioner “100 percent” There Will Be A Season

Washington Nationals pitcher Max Scherzer who sits on the Major League Players Association negotiating board said the owners proposal to cut players salaries a second time and order to play 50 or less games is unacceptable (msn.com file photo)

MLB Commissioner “100 percent”There Will Be A Season

That’s Amaury News and Commentary

By Amaury Pi-González

During an interview with the MLB Network and also with ESPN, Commissioner Rob Manfred said is “100 percent” that a 2020 season will take place.

1-What he said: He hopes a settlement between both sides, owners and players union is reached.

2-How: Under the current rules. He would mandate a structure of the season, if both sides cannot come to an agreement. The March 26 accord gives the Commissioner the power to implement a season as long as the negotiations are in “good faith * The “good faith”part is a matter of interpretation, both sides alleged they’re negotiating in good faith.

3-Bottom Line: If these negotiations cannot come to a conclusion with an amicable agreement Manfred would implement a regular season of 48 to 50 games.

On Tuesday: The players union responded to MLB/owners plan with an 89 game season of their own. But an executive from the owners was quoted as saying “We’re nowhere” -after the players proposal was submitted. This season-proposal would have run from July 10 to October 11 with postseason into November. But MLB wants to avoid this, because(potential second COVID-19 wave)as well as new broadcast deals. Included was a $5 million fund for minor leagues players and social justice organizations.

Conclusion: Commissioner Rob Manfred is fighting the clock, if both sides run the clock and do not come to an agreement, the only feasible solution for a “season”will be for him to implement the 48 to 50 games option. Considering we are close to the middle of June(this was the time for Spring Training part two) and for season to begin on July 4, but this is now out of the question.

Stay well and stay tuned.

Amaury Pi Gonzalez is the vice president of the Major League Baseball Hispanic Heritage Museum and does News and Commentary each week at http://www.sportsradioservice.com