The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

1st black umpire crew chief appointed

- By Ben Walker AP Baseball Writer

Kerwin Danley became the first African American umpire crew chief in Major League Baseball when a series of promotions, additions and retirement­s were announced Thursday.

“I think it’s a significan­t moment in the history of baseball,” Danley told The Associated Press from Arizona, where he’s working spring training games.

“I’m very honored, very excited to be the first,” he said. “But it’s not just about me. It’s much more than that. It shows African American kids there is something else they can make it in, besides playing.”

The timing of the promotion was extra special to Danley because it came during Black History Month.

“I’ve gotten a lot of phone calls and texts on that. People have noticed,” he said.

Other moves included Alfonso Marquez being elevated to the first Hispanic crew chief born outside the United States, and second overall in MLB history.

Another meaningful move for diversity, Danley said. “Of course it is,” he said. Crew chiefs Jeff Kellogg, Dana DeMuth, Gary Cederstrom and Mike Everitt have retired. Kellogg and Everitt will move into jobs as MLB umpire supervisor­s.

Dan Iassogna and Jim Reynolds were promoted to crew chiefs.

Ramon De Jesus, who worked his first big league game in 2016 as a minor league fill-in, moved up and became the first Dominicanb­orn umpire on the MLB staff. Also getting full-time jobs in the majors were Ryan Blakney, Chris Segal and Jansen Visconti.

Nic Lentz also joined the MLB umpire roster, replacing the late Eric Cooper.

A chief oversees each fourman crew. Among other things, they often have the last word on disputes with players, make the call for an umpire replay review or decide when to bring out the tarp for a rain delay.

The 58-year-old Danley has worked two World Series and 10 other postseason rounds, along with two All-Star Games. He called his first game in the majors in 1992 and was hired to the MLB staff in 1998.

Danley played college ball at San Diego State and was a first-team All-America outfielder in 1983 when he batted .399. His teammates with the Aztecs included future Hall of Fame outfielder Tony Gwynn— Danley’s roommate —and current Colorado manager Bud Black. Inane at co incidence, Dan ley was the first base umpire when Gwynn got his 3,000th hit during a 1999 game in Montreal and gave his former teammate a hug by the bag.

Danley began his umpiring career in 1985 in the Northwest League, and kept working his way up through the minors. He is known for having an even temperamen­t, always an attractive quality when MLB picks its crew chiefs. Hehas totaled just four ejections in the past five seasons, according to retrosheet. org.

He also was an instructor at the first umpire camp at MLB’s Urban Youth Academy in Compton, California.

“When kids see me out there, they know it can be done,” Danley said. “That’s the proof in the pudding. If you can’t see it or touch it, you don’t know it.”

There have been about 10 full-time African American umpires in the majors since Emmett Ashford ascended to become the first in 1966. There have been several blacks in MLB umpire leadership positions, including Peter Woodfork, senior vice president of baseball operations, supervisor Cris Jones and the late Chuck Meriwether, a longtime big league umpire who became a supervisor.

 ??  ?? Rick Scuteri ADDS THE INFORMATIO­N IS FROM ANONYMOUS SOURCE - FILE - In this June 2, 2018, file photo, Major League baseball umpire Kerwin Danley (44) is shown during the first inning of a baseball game between the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and the Miami Marlins in Phoenix. Major League Baseball has appointed its first African American umpire crew chief, promoting Kerwin Danley to the position this week, The Associated Press has learned. A person familiar with the move spoke to the AP on Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2020on condition of anonymity because the announceme­nt had not yet been made.
Rick Scuteri ADDS THE INFORMATIO­N IS FROM ANONYMOUS SOURCE - FILE - In this June 2, 2018, file photo, Major League baseball umpire Kerwin Danley (44) is shown during the first inning of a baseball game between the Arizona Diamondbac­ks and the Miami Marlins in Phoenix. Major League Baseball has appointed its first African American umpire crew chief, promoting Kerwin Danley to the position this week, The Associated Press has learned. A person familiar with the move spoke to the AP on Wednesday, Feb. 26, 2020on condition of anonymity because the announceme­nt had not yet been made.

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