Red Sox roving minor league hitting coordinator Victor Rodriguez in the LaLacheur Park dugout Aug. 3, 2011 in Lowell, Mass.
The
Greatest 21 Days is away this week. While I'm away, I'm reposting
previous interviews. This is the 14th interview I did for the site, Vic Rodriguez. The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Rodriguez in August
2011.
This interview first
appeared shortly afterward.
And watch soon as The Greatest 21 Days main project comes down the home stretch. Only 13 players remaining.
Victor Rodriguez made the major leagues for two all-too-brief stays - in a playing career that lasted nearly two decades.
Those
stays, five years apart, resulted in Rodriguez getting 12 major-league
hits in 28 big-league at bats. Those 12 major league hits stand next to
more than 1,900 Rodriguez had in the minors over 19 seasons, more than
1,200 of those at AAA.
With that background, Rodriguez appreciated every moment he spent in the majors.
"It
doesn't matter how short or how long you stay, you appreciate the the
big leagues," Rodriguez told The Greatest 21 Days in an interview last
month, "because it's something special. The travel, the stadiums that
you play, the people that you meet, the fans. Everything is different.
"That's the reason this job is special," Rodriguez added, "because you get to help kids to get to the major leagues."
The
job Rodriguez was referring to was his job as a roving minor league
hitting coordinator with the Boston Red Sox, a position he was named to
in 2006.
The Greatest 21 Days caught up with Rodriguez
Aug. 3 at LeLacheur Park in Lowell, Mass. Rodriguez was in town working
with players on the Red Sox' short-season affiliate, the Lowell
Spinners.
The interview itself was made possible by
Lowell pitching coach Paul Abbott, a teammate of Rodriguez' in 1990 at
AAA Portland, pointing that his old teammate - and member of the CMC set
- was in the park. (The Greatest 21 Days interview with Paul Abbott)
Hitting coordinator Victor Rodriguez talks to Lowell Spinners players on the dugout rail Aug. 3, 2011.
Rodriguez
works with those young players, from those fresh out of school to those
on the edge of making the majors, using his own career experiences to
help them along, Rodriguez said.
Those experiences
began back in 1977, signed by the Orioles as a teenager out of Puerto
Rico. He played that year at rookie Bluefield, adjusting to life as a
professional and adjusting to the language.
Rodriguez knew little English when he signed. On the diamond, though, that mattered little, Rodriguez recalled.
"It
was tough at the beginning," Rodriguez said. "I think the language was
the more difficult thing. But then, you know, when you get in the game,
it's about playing the game."
Rodriguez, though, worked
on his game, and he worked on his language skills. "It's been a good
thing a good experience," Rodriguez said. "Everything I've got is
because of baseball."
Rodriguez worked his way through
the minors, making AA Charlotte in 1980, then AAA Rochester in 1982. It
was in September 1983 that Rodriguez got his first of what turned out to
be two calls to the majors.
His first major league hit came in his second at bat. It also came at Yankee Stadium.
Lowell
Sinners DH Moko Moanaroa at bat Aug. 3, 2011 at Lowell's LeLacheur
Park. In town to help Lowell hitters that day was roving hitting
coordinator Victor Rodriguez.
Rodriguez
struck out in his first at bat. The second time up, though, the new
Oriole made contact. And the ball found its way past a diving third
basemen and diving shortstop, through the Yankee Stadium infield.
"The ball looked like zig zag and it went through the infield," Rodriguez recalled. "It was a good experience."
Rodriguez ended up getting into 11 games that September. He got seven hits, two of those doubles. He also knocked in two.
And he was in the major leagues.
"Everything you work for in the minor leagues," Rodriguez said, "is to get to the major leagues."
He
got there just one more time, in July 1989, with the Twins. He got five
more hits and two more doubles, ending his major league career. His
career batting average sits at .429.
Rodriguez, though,
played on at AAA. He didn't play his last professional game until 1995,
playing at AAA with the Twins, Phillies, Marlins and Red Sox
organizations.
"You know," Rodriguez said, "I didn't get a chance to play a lot. But I knew at the end I did everything I could to get there."
"After
that," Rodriguez added a short time later, "it's up to other people. I
control what I need to control. I just play the game."
Red Sox roving hitting coordinator Victor Rodriguez in the dugout at LeLacheur Park in Lowell, Mass. before a game Aug. 3, 2011.
Since
retiring as a player, Rodriguez has held several positions with the Red
Sox, including Latin American field coordinator and, currently roving
minor league hitting coordinator.
Rodriguez' son, Victor Rodriguez Jr., has even followed him into baseball, both as a minor league player and as a scout.
But
it's precisely the father's many experiences as a player himself in the
minor leagues that Rodriguez says helps him as a coordinator to connect
with players.
It's especially helpful, Rodriguez said, when working with players having a tough time, thinking the worst has happened to them.
"Me
being in the minor leagues for so long, going through all that, I got
the opportunity to tell them that it is not that bad," Rodriguez said,
"that if you allow things to work out and trust the process, things are
going to work out."
"At the end, it's all about the game," Rodriguez said a short time later, "and trying to get them to have fun."
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