Daily Clips

January 15, 2018

NATIONAL

Hall of Fame umpire Harvey, 87, passes away

January 14, 2018By Ben Weinrib/MLB.com

MLK's spirit rings strong at Dream Series

'I want these young men to have a connection to what Martin went through,' Manuel says

January 14, 2018By Jesse Sanchez/MLB.com

MLB TRANSACTIONS
January 15, 2018 •.CBSSports.com

NATIONAL

Hall of Fame umpire Harvey, 87, passes away

January 14, 2018By Ben Weinrib/MLB.com

Hall of Fame umpire Doug Harvey passed away due to natural causes on Saturday. He was 87.

Harvey was the ninth umpire elected to the Hall of Fame and one of the final Major League umpires who never attended an umpiring school. Over his 31 years in baseball, spent entirely in the National League, Harvey worked 4,673 games, which is the fifth most all-time and was the third most for any umpire at the time of his retirement in 1992.

"Hall of Famer Doug Harvey was one of the most accomplished umpires of all-time," Commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement on Sunday. "Known for his strong presence and communication skills, he umpired some of the most memorable moments ever, including from behind the plate for Kirk Gibson's walk-off home run to open the 1988 World Series. A generation of umpires learned as a result of Doug's example, his eagerness to teach the game and his excellent timing behind the plate.

"On behalf of Major League Baseball, I send my deepest condolences to Doug's family, his friends and the umpiring community."

Inducted into the Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee in 2010, Harvey umpired five World Series, nine NL Championship Series and six All-Star Games. He served as a crew chief for 18 years.

"Doug Harvey demonstrated exceptional character during a distinguished umpiring career, and was universally respected in baseball," Jane Forbes Clark, chairman of the Hall of Fame, said in a statement on Sunday. "All of us at the Hall of Fame thought highly of him, and we are deeply saddened by this loss. We send our sympathy and love to his wife, Joy, and their family."

Harvey began umpiring for a living after his father's suggestion and worked games in the Class C Sunset League at 19. Eventually he would umpire in San Diego in a grueling five-month, 155-game schedule before making it to the professional ranks.

"I remember that while watching Don Larsen throw his perfect game on TV, I told the guys with me that I was going to go into professional umpiring, and someday they would be watching me on TV," Harvey said in his Hall of Fame speech. "They laughed me out of the room. Eleven years later, they were watching me on TV, working my World Series plate job."

Harvey was known for his silver hair that grayed in his 30s, and his style was hard to miss. His methodical-yet-authoritative signals and presence earned him the nickname "God" from players.

"You always respected him because he came out to his job and [did it] with a lot of class," Joe Torre, a Hall of Fame manager who became the first player Harvey ejected, said after Harvey retired in 1992. "He was very consistent, and that's the highest compliment you can pay anybody."

Harvey was named the second-greatest umpire in history by the Society for American Baseball Research in 1999, and Referee magazine named him among the 52 most influential figures in the history of sports officiating in 2007.

"Doug Harvey set the bar for future umpires," Jeff Idelson, Hall of Fame president, said in a statement on Sunday. "He was revered for his calm demeanor, ability to control the game, knowledge of the strike zone and comprehension of the rules, leading many players to refer to him as 'god.' He umpired with integrity, heart and common sense for 31 seasons, including 18 as a crew chief, resulting in his richly deserved 2010 election into the Hall of Fame."

A public memorial is being planned for the near future in San Diego.

MLK's spirit rings strong at Dream Series

'I want these young men to have a connection to what Martin went through,' Manuel says

January 14, 2018By Jesse Sanchez/MLB.com

The famous words could be heard on the back fields at Tempe Diablo Stadium.

The message echoed on the main field and in the batting cages.

Former manager Jerry Manuel's inspirational playlist during the Dream Series included Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech set to light jazz and helped set the tone for the five-day event for baseball dreamers that concludes Monday. The speech used to be Manuel's cell phone ring tone.

"Dr. King. That's my guy," Manuel said. "A lot of his dream has been fulfilled, but it wouldn't have been if he hadn't gone and done what he did, stepping out in the spirit in which he stepped out. I want these young men to have a connection to what Martin went through to give us the progression that we've made as human beings."

Dr. King spoke of the struggles of African-Americans and his dreams of equality for the future on that memorable day in 1963. His message resonated during the Dream Series, an initiative of Major League Baseball and USA Baseball that features a diverse group of some of the nation's top high school pitching and catching prospects. The series began on Thursday.

"Some of them have the knowledge, some of them know what Dr. King meant -- but we're implementing it in a different way, whether it be on the field, in bullpen sessions, the music in the background, the speeches, or Jerry Manuel giving a presentation on Dr. King," said Tony Reagins, MLB senior vice president of youth programs. "There are a lot of different avenues you can take in this game. For me, myself, the path that I took off the field. We have scouts, we have coaches, big league players, All-Stars, Major League managers. It's important they see that."

The series -- which is connected to Martin Luther King Jr. Day and concludes on the holiday -- includes on-hand coaching from former players, presentations on baseball-career opportunities on the professional and collegiate levels, and athletic assessments through the Prospect Development Pipeline Premier Events.

"This is everything Dr. Martin Luther King stood for, the equality, and just giving these kids a chance to get some of the exposure that the other kids get and they don't get," said former Major League pitcher LaTroy Hawkins, who is one of the Dream Series coaches. "It's about empowering these kids. Even if they don't go on to play professional baseball, we are trying to make an impact on their lives, not just for their baseball career, but for the rest of their lives."

In addition to Hawkins, the coaching staff featured former MLB All-Stars Tom "Flash" Gordon, Charles Johnson, Ken Hill, Junior Spivey and Marquis Grissom. Former pitchers Darren Oliver and Pat Mahomes, Manuel and former MLB front-office executive Reggie Waller and others have also worked with the teens daily.

"[Dr. King] had a dream that everybody was going to be together, and this kind of proves it," Mahomes said. "In the end, we're all just playing baseball and we're all just brothers, and that's the message we try to portray to them."

Grissom, who grew up in Atlanta, has a deep connection to Dr. King's legacy. King's lessons were taught in the former outfielder's home. An inspired Grissom has dedicated his life to coaching youth full-time since he retired in 2006 after a 17-year playing career.

"I learned that equality, integrity, what's right, what's wrong, and in becoming older -- not just becoming a professional baseball player but even when I went off to college -- I just wanted to know what could I bring to the table to make a difference and an impact on our community," Grissom said. "And when I say 'our community,' I mean all communities, not just the African-American community. I'm all about teaching and educating all of baseball, not just in the African-American community, not just black kids, not just Latino kids, but all kids."

"What we are doing here right now is highlighting those guys that have the opportunity, making sure they are prepared, making sure they have all the knowledge and the tools that they need to have success at the next level," said Anthony Manuel, a Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities (RBI) regional coordinator for MLB and a coach during the event. "I think this advantage is a primetime opportunity for a lot of these guys to put themselves on the map."

The event is also an opportunity for the teens to have fun and build lifelong friendships.

"For people to come here and celebrate MLK weekend with young African-American pitchers and catchers in an MLB setting, MLB environment, with the coaching and instruction we have, it really sets the foundation," said Del Matthews, MLB's senior director of baseball development. "This gives the kids inspiration for the start of their seasons, and hopefully it's something where we can inspire these kids to continue to play those positions and really take to it."

MLB TRANSACTIONS
January 15, 2018 •.CBSSports.com

TEAM / PLAYER / TRANSACTION
Milwaukee Brewers / Ji-Man Choi / Signed to a Minor League Contract