Connect with us

Published

on

Kansas City Royals catcher Salvador Perez won the Roberto Clemente Award, Major League Baseball’s prestigious honor awarded annually to the player whose humanitarian efforts exemplify off-the-field service.

The 34-year-old, who has spent all 13 years of his major league career with Kansas City, is the first Royals player to win the award and was lauded for his generosity not only in his adopted hometown but in Valencia, Venezuela, where Perez grew up, and Colombia, where his contributions honor a minor league pitcher who died of cancer.

“When we do something, we do because it’s coming from my heart,” Perez said. “I don’t like to do things because somebody ask me to do it. When I sit with my mom and want to do something, we just do. We don’t have to post anything on social media. I don’t like that. If I do, I do it for my heart. I want to make people happy.”

Perez, the Royals’ captain who is one of the most beloved athletes in Kansas City sports history, played on Roberto Clemente Day this year in Pittsburgh, where the Hall of Fame outfielder spent each of his 18 seasons. Perez later donated his catcher’s gear from that day to the Clemente Museum. Clemente, the Hall of Fame outfielder for the Pirates, died in a plane crash trying to deliver aid to Nicaragua after a devastating 1972 earthquake. Clemente, esteemed for his philanthropy across Latin America — including his native Puerto Rico — was 38.

“I’ve read a lot [about] Roberto Clemente. I know he was an amazing player, but he was even better outside the field,” Perez said. “So that made him super special and made this award super special.”

Perez said he is proudest of his work in Venezuela, a country ravaged by political instability and food insecurity. Along with his mother, Yilda Diaz, who raised him alone, Perez distributes food and kitchen supplies to nearly 2,000 houses near Valencia every year and has provided aid to more than 10,000 families in the area. In recent years, a youth league Perez owns has provided baseball for 220 children, offering free gear and clinics that promote education and safety.

“Everything starts where you’re coming from,” Perez said, “so you make it to this level, you have opportunity to help people.

“Venezuela is part of my heart, too,” he continued. “That’s the country that give me opportunity. And I started playing baseball when I was 4 years old, so it means a lot to me. But political and all that, it’s kind of hard to talk about that. Things happen for a reason. I believe in God, and I think one day everything’s going to change for the good way.”

Venezuela’s neighbor to the west, Colombia, has been helped by Perez as well through the Carlos Fortuna Foundation. Fortuna, a pitcher from the Dominican Republic in the Royals organization, died in 2013 of liver cancer at the age of 22. Monica Ramirez, the Royals’ education/ESL & Latin American initiatives coordinator, helped create the foundation to foster parental education, particularly in low-income Latin American countries. She met Perez when he was 16, shortly after he signed with the Royals. Perez calls Ramirez “my second mom” and when she asked him to assist in the foundation’s efforts, he said he jumped at the opportunity.

Across Kansas City — where Perez is known for his postgame watercooler showers of teammates affectionately referred to as the Salvy Splash — he is a consistent figure in the community. From his $1 million donation to the city’s Urban Youth Academy, to his work with local ALS and childhood cancer organizations, payment for surgeries to repair cleft lips in children and donations to local police, Perez hopes his wide swath of service can inspire other players to be charitable.

“Sometimes you want to rest,” he said. “Even if you think one day every month, just one day every month. That’s it. One day every month try to make some kid happy. Do something. Even get your social media, make people happy. Have a picture with somebody. Just one day every month. I think that’s going to change the world.”

A nine-time All-Star, Perez has won five Gold Gloves and was MVP of the 2015 World Series.

He posted typically strong numbers this year, leading the Royals to the playoffs for the first time in nine seasons and hitting .271/.330/.456 with 27 home runs and 104 RBIs. Over his career, Perez is batting .267/.303/.459 with 273 home runs and 916 RBIs in 1,552 games.

Continue Reading

Sports

Prosecutors: Witness in Miami murder case found

Published

on

By

Prosecutors: Witness in Miami murder case found

Florida prosecutors confirmed in a hearing Friday that their key witness in the murder case of a former University of Miami football player is alive and was contacted Thursday by officers where he lives in Kentucky.

ESPN reported Thursday that, despite prosecutors stating July 17 that they tried every effort to locate 81-year-old Paul Conner and had a report from a commercial database he was dead, journalists found Conner alive at his apartment in Louisville.

Conner is the only eyewitness in the case against former Miami football player Rashaun Jones, who is facing second-degree murder charges in the 2006 shooting of teammate Bryan Pata. Jones, who was arrested in 2021, has pleaded not guilty.

Miami assistant state attorney Cristina Diamond told Florida 11th Circuit Court Judge Cristina Miranda that, after the ESPN story was published, her lead detective reached out to police in Louisville and asked them to go to Conner’s last-known address — where ESPN reporters had found him.

“They were able to make contact with Paul Conner. So at this time, what I can tell the court is that Paul Conner is alive,” Diamond said, adding that she had reviewed the officer’s body camera footage. “I think the state needs to do a little bit of further investigation. It appears that he was very confused and is not certain what the case is about.”

When ESPN reporters interviewed Conner on Aug. 25, he said he did not remember details about the case. Miranda had ruled in July that, assuming Conner was dead, the state could present jurors a videotape of prior testimony he gave in 2022 in a bond hearing in the case in lieu of having him testify in person.

If a determination is made that Conner is not competent to testify, she said, “we may still be in the same situation.”

Conner first spoke to police shortly after the Nov. 7, 2006, shooting, and he picked Jones out of a police lineup. Police reinterviewed him in 2020. Conner also recounted what he saw at the 2022 bond hearing and in a 2023 deposition with attorneys.

At the time of the shooting, Conner lived in the same apartment complex as Pata. He said during his 2022 testimony that he heard a “pop” and saw someone “jogging” away from the parking lot entrance near where Pata, a likely high pick in the 2007 NFL draft, was shot once in the head.

How the confirmation of Conner’s status affects the case, which is scheduled for trial Oct. 6, is to be determined after attorneys argued in court Friday about what steps to take next regarding questioning Conner and going over the evidence of the state’s prior efforts to find him.

Jones’ attorney Sara Alvarez told Miranda that she wanted to request a hearing to determine if prosecutors violated the rules of evidence, saying she thought the false conclusion of Conner’s death “may have been intentional.”

Diamond rebutted that accusation, saying Miami-Dade officers made multiple attempts to reach Conner.

“This is our key witness in the case. This is somebody we want,” Diamond told the judge. “The defense is accusing me of making misrepresentations to the court. Every representation made to the court was based upon a conversation with an officer who I was prepared to have testify.”

Diamond was referring to officers from the Louisville Police Department who she said went to Conner’s address over the summer and “spoke to someone but believed it was not the witness.” She said she had a copy of the body camera footage as well. She said those officers told her they also spoke to someone with the apartment’s leasing office who did not find Conner in their records.

She said they did not locate a death certificate in Kentucky but relied on the third-party commercial database that stated Conner was deceased. Jones’ counsel asked for a copy of that report along with other records that would verify the state’s efforts.

The Louisville officers did not testify Friday, as the judge decided to give the attorneys some time to correspond with each other and decide how they wanted to proceed.

ESPN had asked for records or information from the Louisville Police Department regarding efforts to locate Conner, and a department spokesman said there were no records of any officer going to Conner’s address this summer prior to a July 22 request from a former colleague who had called for a welfare check on Conner after being contacted by ESPN reporters.

ESPN made multiple requests to police and the Miami-Dade State Attorney for records of their efforts to find Conner. After initially saying they had no documents, they eventually provided an email exchange in which lead detective Juan Segovia wrote that he left 15 voicemail messages with Conner since May. Segovia added that he also sent emails to an address that officers had used with him previously. They also provided a copy of a June 6 letter addressed to Conner at his Louisville address that asked him to contact their office.

They provided an email exchange with a Louisville police officer, but it had no information about Conner or efforts to find him, and they provided a copy of a subpoena for the officer to testify. ESPN reached back out to Louisville police with the name of the officer and a request for further information and is waiting on a response.

Continue Reading

Sports

Sources: MSU set to have top WR, RB vs. USC

Published

on

By

Sources: MSU set to have top WR, RB vs. USC

Michigan State wide receiver Nick Marsh and leading rusher Makhi Frazier are expected to play at USC on Saturday night, sources told ESPN’s Pete Thamel on Friday.

Marsh had a leg injury in last week’s win against Youngstown State, and Frazier suffered a lower-body injury. Both are cleared and in line to play in the Spartans’ Big Ten opener, sources said.

Through three games, Marsh has caught 16 passes for 194 yards and three touchdowns, which is tied for second among Big Ten wide receivers.

Frazier began his sophomore season by rushing for 103 yards and a touchdown on 14 carries in Michigan State’s win over Western Michigan. Through three games, he has totaled 206 rushing yards and two touchdowns.

Both Frazier and Marsh will face off against a USC team that is also 3-0 and boasts a defense that has forced seven turnovers this season.

Continue Reading

Sports

Source: Ole Miss QB Simmons unlikely to play

Published

on

By

Source: Ole Miss QB Simmons unlikely to play

Ole Miss quarterback Austin Simmons has been limited all week in practice and is unlikely to contribute significantly against Tulane on Saturday, a source told ESPN’s Pete Thamel.

Simmons might be available in an emergency role, the same as last week against Arkansas when he came off the bench and threw a touchdown pass in a 41-35 win. In the process, he aggravated his ankle injury, which has kept him limited this week.

This paves the way for Trinidad Chambliss to start for the second consecutive game. On3 reported that Chambliss is the expected starter against the Green Wave.

Ole Miss head coach Lane Kiffin had been optimistic Simmons would start for the No. 13 Rebels.

“I would anticipate Austin being fine to play and being our starting quarterback [against Tulane],” Kiffin said earlier this week about Simmons.

Simmons has completed 34 of 56 passes for 580 yards with 4 touchdowns and 4 interceptions this season.

Continue Reading

Trending