The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Angry ump: Garcia says he kept quiet to protect son-in-law

- AP Baseball Writer

By RONALD BLUM

NEW YORK (AP) » Richie Garcia was among baseball’s best-rated and most popular umpires, and like many umps was known for the ones he missed: the Jeffrey Maier call in the playoffs, the pitch to Tino Martinez in the World Series.

He lost his job in the failed labor strategy of mass resignatio­ns in 1999 and was welcomed back to Major League Baseball two years later as a supervisor. Then, out of nowhere it seemed, he was fired on the eve of the 2010 season.

Garcia stayed quiet for a decade, not wanting to cause any problems for son-in-law Vic Carapazza, among the top umps of the current group.

Now, at 77, Garcia is fed up. He’s feeling impugned by a former colleague in a lawsuit Garcia has nothing to do with.

“I worked too hard to keep a good reputation in baseball for these people to just come out and say whatever the hell they want, to just say things just out of the clear blue sky,” Garcia said during a series of interviews in the past month with The Associated Press.

“I’ve kept my mouth shut all these years because of my son-in-law. I kept my mouth shut because I’m protecting him and my daughter. And I’m just sick of it,” he said.

A big league umpire from 1975-99 and a supervisor for nine years, Garcia was abruptly dismissed. The commission­er’s office announced his departure two days before opening day. No reason was given.

Garcia never tried to explain. Then last month, a May 2019 deposition by umpire supervisor Randy Marsh was publicly filed by lawyers for umpire Ángel Hernández, who sued MLB for race discrimina­tion.

Marsh alleged Garcia was fired because he attended minor league games involving Carapazza, who worked his first big league game seven days after Garcia’s departure was announced.

“His son-in-law was umpiring in the minor leagues, was in strong considerat­ion for promotion to the major leagues, and he was told not to go watch him work, because of being related to him,” Marsh testified. “He continued to do so. He had been told not to do it, and he continued to do it.”

Marsh told the AP in a telephone interview Monday that he spoke incorrectl­y during his deposition and he wanted to set the public record straight.

“I had no idea what reasoning they gave him for being fired and had heard from working with Rich Rieker — who was a supervisor during all those times — was that at one point he was told not to go watch his son-in-law umpire,” Marsh said. “I probably mis-worded it when I was deposed. It shouldn’t come out like that.”

Garcia attributed his firing to Rob Manfred, then MLB’s executive vice president for labor relations and now commission­er, and Jimmie Lee Solomon, then executive vice president of baseball operations. Garcia was let go along with fellow supervisor­s Marty Springstea­d and Jim McKean, and they were replaced by Marsh and Charlie Reliford.

MLB declined comment on behalf of Rieker and Manfred, who succeeded Bud Selig as commission­er in 2015.

“Nobody had it in for anybody,” said Solomon, who left MLB in 2010. “But there was a desire, a general desire, to upgrade our situation a little bit. The oldschool ways we felt were going to end up biting us and we needed to get some new blood in.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Oct. 11, 1986, file photo, California Angels’ Gary Pettis, left, is caught stealing second base by Boston Red Sox shortstop Spike Owen (5) as umpire Richie Garcia, center, looks on during the third inning of a baseball game in Anaheim, Calif. Ten years after Garcia was fired by Major League Baseball, he wants to set the record straight: He did not get fired for trying to evaluate his son-in-law, then a minor league umpire. Garcia thinks baseball’s top executives just wanted him out.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Oct. 11, 1986, file photo, California Angels’ Gary Pettis, left, is caught stealing second base by Boston Red Sox shortstop Spike Owen (5) as umpire Richie Garcia, center, looks on during the third inning of a baseball game in Anaheim, Calif. Ten years after Garcia was fired by Major League Baseball, he wants to set the record straight: He did not get fired for trying to evaluate his son-in-law, then a minor league umpire. Garcia thinks baseball’s top executives just wanted him out.

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