San Diego Padres 'Outsource' Baseball
(Sign Five Foreign Players for $4.8 Million - Four of Them Are Only 16 Years Old!)
Two of the child athletes are from the Dominican Republic, two are from Venezuela, and one is Australian. The sixteen year old pitcher from Venezuela, Adis Portillo, was guaranteed a two million dollar signing bonus, a Padre record for a foreign amateur and more than they have paid any player drafted for the past four years - Americans included. (The poor Australian boy only received $500,000.)
The Padres have been courting these kids, probably not even shaving yet, for a time. Such exorbitant spending can be neither healthy for baseball nor these young kids. It will be years before they can make it to the majors and even that is iffy. So many things can go wrong with kids growing up and developing into adult players. What a gamble when the Padres need desperately to spend now on a team struggling to keep afloat in the National League West where they have resided in or near the basement most of the season. That kind of money could have gotten them a pretty good hitter which is so needed.
The Padres have made their presence known in Latin America with an elaborate $8 million baseball complex opening this spring in the Dominican Republic, an academy of baseball for foreign players - mostly Latin Americans. Their future is apparently hinged on Latin players.
Foreign players are not new to baseball here in the United States. What is new is the percentage of them now playing for major league teams. According to sources, of 855 players on major league rosters at the beginning of the 2008 season, 239 were foreign born. This is about 28% of all players; while it dropped very slightly from 2007 rosters (29%) the drop is an illusion. The trend is increasingly to sign foreign players. Every team does so to a degree; some more than others. The New York Mets have the most foreign players, fifteen, followed by Seattle with fourteen. The Chicago Cubs, Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, and New York Yankees each have eleven. All teams have them. I ask why? Or, perhaps, why so many?
My main gripe with this 'outsourcing' of 'America's Pastime' is that it has become perverse. For every foreign player brought here to play baseball, some American boy somewhere in the United States has just lost a job opportunity. I am certain there are superstars overseas who will and do bring excitement to Major League Baseball. Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki comes to mind immediately. In the past, such players as Roberto Clemente thrilled fans with his athletic playing ability. There is a place for foreign players in America. But to recruit overseas so extensively that American youth are overlooked to the extent they are in the small towns and inner cities throughout the land is not a good idea nor is it a good business practice. Fans will eventually - many already do - resent the 'foreignization' of our game here at home. And I am not so sure extensive cultural diversity in the clubhouse promotes the 'team' aspect which baseball is so dependant upon; I cringe to think that hallowed cry "Play Ball!" may someday be given in Spanish or perhaps Japanese.
What can you do? Do what I am doing - letting Major League Baseball know I am not happy with the trend. I want baseball owners, especially baseball owners swimming in profits, to first look here at home for young boys with potential. I want Major League Baseball to invest their money in small town America and the inner cities where there is not the money to build parks to encourage our youth to play baseball. I want Major League Baseball to stop outsourcing jobs that surely Americans have done for over a 100 years and can continue to do. I don't resent baseball signing some few foreign players; I do resent Americans losing jobs so unnecessarily.
If Major League Baseball, and my hometown San Diego Padres, don't address this issue, I just may 'outsource' my ticket money to the NFL!
Published by Major Dennis Copson, USMC (ret)
Major Dennis Copson retired with 20+ years in the USMC, now lives in Oceanside, CA where he is the Director of Sales and Marketing for Nature's Big Bud Worm Castings, Inc. He is available for editing assigne... View profile
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2 Comments
Post a CommentWel, thanks for taking the time to read my article on foreign players in baseball. "Xenophobia' had no part in it. I was simply pointing out the trend in baseball today to go offshore to find baseball players at the expense of looking homeward and maybe supporting local kids programs. Do you really believe giving 2 million dollars to a kid from Venezuela - 16 yrs old - is a good thing? And, I come from an era of "Made in the USA!" which was a good thing and we were always proud to 'Buy American'. If that is a bad thing in your eyes, you lack vision. We need to confront companies on this outsourcing issues before we have no jobs left for your kids and grandkids. And, 80 players in the NFL is a drop in the bucket compared to 300 in baseball. A recognize that we can and should allow foreign players to come to our baseball teams. The question is how many? For every one of those brought in, an American kid is left out. Japan limits the number of foreign players. As a fan, I care about the
If your tongue was planted in your cheek when you wrote this - well done! And if the xenophobia in the article was real, I'd point out an ESPN article from two years ago which said, "There were 80 foreign-born players, from venues as disparate as Ghana and Ukraine, in NFL training camps last year. Fueled in part by the 2006 draft, there are likely to be even more this summer."