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Bruce
Baskin /
Jackie
Robinson Moments
B a s e b a l l
M e x i c o
May
21, 2 0 1 7
WALLY BACKMAN FIRED IN
MONCLOVA; WILL TIM JOHNSON TAKE
OVER?
When Wally Backman was
hired last winter to manage the
Monclova Acereros, all that was missing was a betting line from Las
Vegas
oddsmakers on how long the former Mets infielder would stay. Speculation was that Backman, who's had
success managing teams (including Vegas) in both affiliated and
independent
minor leagues, was viewing Monclova as little more than a placeholder
until he
got another offer from a team in the States.
USA Today writer Bob Klapisch
quoted Backman
at the time as saying, "I would take it in a minute.
What I'm worried about is being out of sight,
out of mind. If I go to Mexico, I'll be
out of sight from the people I'm trying to connect with."
After new Acereros owner Gerardo Benavides
transferred several key players to Monclova from his 2016 champions in
Puebla,
the Steelers were considered a favorite to win the Mexican League's
North
Division title and contend for the city's first LMB championship. As manager, Backman was obviously a major
component
of Benavides' win-now philosophy.
Backman has indeed left
Monclova, but not the way a lot of
people (including himself) expected after he was fired last Friday with
the
Acereros holding a 22-20 record and fifth place in the LMB North. In his defense, the team was not playing all
that badly in what has been a very competitive division over the first
eight
weeks of the season, neither winning more than three consecutive games
once nor
suffering longer than one three-game skid either while averaging about
six runs
per contest with a team ERA of 4.43.
However, there were two
problems the fiery Oregonian couldn't
overcome. One was his inability to speak
Spanish, something that can be a detriment to effectively managing a
baseball
team in Mexico (let alone writing about Mexican baseball, believe me). Another is that while Benavides has spared
little expense in collecting enough talent to elicit title talk among
Liga
observers, he is also a native of Monclova who now owns the team his
grandfather, Harold Pape, formed in 1974 and keenly aware that no
pennant flag
has ever flown atop Estadio Monclova.
Managers in Mexico typically face much more pressure than their
counterparts in other Class AAA leagues because the latter group are
less
concerned with winning than player development, but Backman worked
under less
margin for error than the 15 other Liga skippers who opened the season.
Although Backman has been
replaced at the helm in Monclova by
Jorge Luis Loredo, who hit .247 with 24 homers as an infielder for five
LMB
teams between 1987 and 2000 before embarking on a coaching career, at
least one
Puro Beisbol columnist has speculated
that another former big league infielder, Tim Johnson, may end up with
the
Acereros job. It's far from a
far-fetched notion. Benavides has shown
a proclivity for hiring ex-MLBers to manage his teams (Cory Snyder and
Von
Hayes in Puebla, Backman in Monclova), Johnson has had success managing
Toronto
to an 88-74 record in 1998 after copping two winterball titles for
Hermosillo
in the early Nineties, and he's currently managing in the Northern
Mexican
League's San Luis Algodoneros, who are currently 22-19 in the LNM and
conveniently a farm team for both Benavides LMB clubs.
Johnson has effectively been blackballed from
organized baseball after stories he told Blue Jays players about his
exploits
during the Vietnam War were proven false, but both his MLB playing and
managing
experience plus his track record in Mexico may be attractive to
Benavides, who
didn't hesitate to hire another controversial manager in Backman. Time will tell.
The Acereros will have to
pick up the pace soon, no matter
who their helmsman is. Monterrey has won
three straight game (and 8 of their last 10) to run their LMB-best
record to
30-11 under yet another former big league infielder, Felix Fermin. Tijuana has stumbled a bit by losing four of
their last ten contests to fall three-and-a-half games behind the
Sultanes at
28-15. After a halting start to their
season, the Mexico City Diablos Rojos (with an all-Mexican roster) have
won
eight eleven games to pull into third place with a 25-20 mark. There are a number of reasons, but the season
shortstop Ramon Urias is having may the the biggest.
Although he won't turn 23 until June 3, Urias
is in his fourth season with the Diablos after spending two summers in
the
Rangers organization as a teen. After an
injury-plagued 2016 campaign, the 150-pound Sonora product is hitting
.331 with
nine homers in 43 games. The Red Devils
are battling Monclova, Union Laguna and Aguascalientes (who released
last
year's RBI champ and BBM Summer Batter of the Year Diory Hernandez last
week
without explanation and no more notice than a line on the Transactions
list) in
the middle of the pack. Saltillo and
Durango are both more than 14 games out of first in the LMB North.
Yucatan has leveled off a
bit, winning five of their last
ten, but that early cushion they build has come in handy as the Leones
still
have a five-game lead in the LMB South over Puebla with a 27-16 mark. The 23-22 Pericos have gone 7-3 over their
past ten tilts to take over second place from Quintana Roo (20-21). The defending champs are 16-11 away from home
(including a three-game sweep in Tijuana last week in a rematch of last
year's
Mexico Series) but only 7-11 in Estadio Hermanos Serdan.
Steadily-improving Veracruz, Campeche and
Oaxaca are all within eight games of Yucatan with Leon and Tabasco
bringing up
the rear.
Saltillo's six-time
All-Star second baseman Luis Borges leads
the Liga with an even .400 average, ten points ahead of Monterrey
centerfielder
Chris Roberson (himself a four-time LMB All-Star and the 2014 Caribbean
Series
MVP). Tijuana outfielder Corey Brown has
homered just once since his two-dinger game at Aguascalientes on May 4,
but his
total of 13 roundtrippers is still tops in the loop by two over the
Rieleros'
Jesus Castillo and Toros teammate Alex Liddi.
Castillo's 49 RBIs top that category, with Laguna's Ricky
Alvarez in
second at 47. Justin Greene of Saltillo
has 19 stolen bases, five more than Quintana Roo's Freddy Guzman. Guzman's 14 swipes have come in 25 games
since signing with the Tigres as a free agent on April 23.
Monterrey pitcher Angel
Castro survived a so-so start (4
earned runs, 11 hits over 7 innings) on Saturday at home against the
Tigres to
lift his perfect record to 7-0, becoming the first hurler to reach
seven
victories. Dustin Crenshaw of Laguna
tossed five shutout frames at Oaxaca last Tuesday to go to 6-1 for the
season. Durango won four of six games
last week, all saved by Tiago Da Silva (as he has for every Generales
victory
in 2017). Da Silva's 16 saves leads the
LMB, four up on Monclova's Chad Gaudin and Jairo Asencio of Yucatan. Mitch Lively and Walter Silva continue to do
well for hapless Leon. The Bravos' 16-18
record hasn't prevented the pair from posting the top two ERAs in the
Liga,
with Lively at 1.98 and Silva registering a 2.15 on the scale. The tandem has gone 7-4 for the newcomer
team, who continue to struggle at the gate with an average attendance
of 2,300
through 13 openings (15th in the 16-team circuit).
Conversely, Durango has overcome a myriad of
problems, including a delayed home opener of their own, to draw an
average of
3,616 to place eighth on the turnout table.
There'll be a pair of matchups highlighting upcoming midweek series when Monterrey visits Puebla and Tijuana travels to Yucatan Tuesday through Thursday. Attention will be maintained on Puebla next weekend when the ascendant Pericos play host to Monclova in a duel between the two Benavides-owned ballclubs.
FOR MORE BASEBALL NEWS
FROM MEXICO, VISIT
www.BaseballMexico.com