Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Toro comes to Brewers with intriguing background

- Todd Rosiak

PHOENIX – A number of Canadian ballplayer­s have passed through the Milwaukee Brewers organizati­on over the years.

But it’s safe to say their latest addition, Abraham Toro, has one of the more interestin­g backstorie­s.

Toro’s family moved from Venezuela to Canada in the mid-1990s, with his parents searching for a better way of life for themselves as well as their son and daughter. Toro, born in 1996, was the youngest and the lone native Canadian in the unit.

The Toros settled in Longueuil, Quebec, located directly across the St. Lawrence River from Montreal. And as Toro grew older, he naturally gave the Canadian national sport, hockey, a try.

“l’m from a family that’s from Venezuela, so baseball’s in our blood,” Toro said. “I actually did try hockey but I was never any good. I can skate, but I couldn’t skate backwards.”

Toro eventually ditched the rink for the diamond and by age 15 transferre­d to a high school in suburban Montreal that had indoor facilities for baseball.

After graduating, Toro attended Vanier College in Montreal before taking his talents south to the United States, Seminole State College in Oklahoma, specifically.

He blew up in his one season there, hitting .439 with 20 home runs and 86 runs batted in over 55 games, a body of work impressive enough to get him drafted in the fifth round by the Houston Astros in 2016.

In 2019, Toro made his major-league debut with the Astros and on Sept. 1, in just his seventh game, hit a two-out, two-run homer in the top of the ninth inning to break a 0-0 tie against the Toronto Blue Jays.

Then, in the bottom half of the inning, his play at third base finished off Justin Verlander’s no-hitter to cap an incredible highlight for Toro in his native country.

Toro bounced back and forth between the minors and majors with the Astros into 2021 before he was traded to the Seattle Mariners in a four-player deal in late July.

His time in the Northwest brought mixed results.

After hitting .252 with a .695 OPS in 60 games to close out 2021, Toro hit just .185 with 10 homers and 35 RBI in 2022 while playing in a career-high 109 games as the Mariners surged into the postseason for the first time since 2001.

Then in December, he and Jesse Winker were traded to the Brewers in exchange for Kolten Wong.

“I mean, I was a little bit surprised. I wasn’t expecting it,” Toro said. “But I’m really glad to be here. A really good team and a chance to make the playoffs again.”

The 26-year-old’s game is seemingly tailor-made for the Brewers in that he’s a switch-hitter – he’s a natural righthande­d hitter – who has logged time at third, second and first base and also has the ability to play the outfield in a pinch.

But Toro, who signed a one-year, $1.25 million deal in January to avoid arbitratio­n, is one of a number of utility men in Brewers camp this spring along with returnees Mike Brosseau and Keston Hiura, another newcomer in Owen Miller and prospect Brice Turang.

Working against Toro is the fact he has a minor-league option remaining, giving Milwaukee the ability to send him to Class AAA Nashville if that helps the initial roster math heading into opening day.

“Right now I’m just trying to make the team first,” Toro said.

“I’m trying to make the team, trying to show that I can play everywhere and hopefully I can help the team in any way they they ask.”

It’s going to be the glove first – particular­ly at third (his natural position) and second base – that the Brewers will be looking for, along with the ability to pop the occasional homer (although almost all Toro’s power comes from the right side).

“Abraham got to the big leagues at a really young age (22),” manager Craig Counsell said. “He was kind of cast as a utility guy almost immediatel­y and that makes me think of Hernán Pérez a little bit. It makes me think instinctua­l player because they trusted him to do that job in a part-time role on a good team.

“That’s kind of what I’m thinking going in, and then we’ll get to know Abraham and see what happens.”

Milwaukee’s clubhouse certainly isn’t unusual in that it has a number of players who speak both English and Spanish.

But Toro separates himself with the ability to speak French, which he said was spoken along with Spanish in his home throughout his youth.

“Oh, it was it was easy for me to learn French because when I was going to school, kindergart­en and everything was in (French),” he said. “English was actually the last one. So, you learn in school. You still have people that speak English, but I would say around 16 I was fluent in English.”

And to Toro’s credit, he’s now in the beginning stages of trying to learn a fourth language – Italian.

“I’m trying to learn Italian but I’m not that good yet,” he said. “Just because it’s similar to Spanish, there’s some things I can pick up even without knowing the language.”

Like a number of his new teammates, Toro will be shipping out of camp soon to take part in the upcoming World Baseball Classic. But he won’t have to travel far, as Team Canada is one of five teams playing locally at Chase Field.

“When I was young, I always wanted to do the U-18 national team,” Toro said. “I didn’t have the chance to make that team so when they called me for this, it was it was a no-brainer.”

Among Toro’s Team Canada teammates will be Freddie Freeman, Brewers division rival Tyler O’Neill of the St. Louis Cardinals and former Brewers closer John Axford.

 ?? ROY DABNER / FORTHE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Abraham Toro stays away from a high pitch during the Brewers’ spring training game Sunday against the Dodgers.
ROY DABNER / FORTHE JOURNAL SENTINEL Abraham Toro stays away from a high pitch during the Brewers’ spring training game Sunday against the Dodgers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States