Catching Up With ... Rich Amaral
Richard Dunn
HUNTINGTON BEACH - Along with all the mothers dropping off and
picking up their kids from school is former major leaguer Rich Amaral,
the first batter in the history of Jacobs Field in Cleveland.
Amaral, the oldest rookie in the major leagues at age 31 for the
Seattle Mariners in 1993, retired from baseball last month after almost
nine years in the big leagues and 18 professional seasons.
âIâm trying to be Dad of the Year,â said the former Estancia High and
Orange Coast College standout, who, these days, drives his four children
to school and even sits in their classrooms.
âEvery now and then I see another dad,â said Amaral, who has enjoyed
the transition of on-the-go major leaguer to full-time husband and
father.
âIâm just trying to do all these things I havenât done in 18 years.
Iâve been gone every summer the last 18 years, but now Iâm going to enjoy
the summer at home,â added Amaral, whose immediate plans with his wife,
Michele, and kids include ski and camping trips this summer. âIâm just
doing as much as I can with the kids. Three of them are playing baseball
and Iâm helping out in coaching for all three teams.
âAlso, Iâm just kind of looking at different things I want to do. Iâm
trying to figure out something, (but) I do not know what I want to do.
Iâm just taking my time in trying to figure that out.â
Amaralâs children (Beau, 10, Jessica, 7, Joseph, 6, and Daniel, 4)
fill the three-car garage at their Huntington Beach home with baseball
gloves, bats and balls, while the inside is touched with detail and
exquisite furniture.
Upstairs is an office and baseball shine, which stores most of
Amaralâs memorabilia, and three beautiful bedrooms, including a master
bedroom with a view of Palos Verdes and bathroom seemingly as large as a
major league clubhouse.
âI canât believe this is my house. Itâs just unreal,â Amaral said as
he walked downstairs, humbled by the riches a major league career can
bring.
Perhaps the most eye-catching baseball-related item in the house --
aside from a broken pinball machine from the Seattle clubhouse -- is a
color photograph with a wide-angle lens of the first pitch at brand new
Jacobs Field, with Clevelandâs Dennis Martinez on the mound and Sandy
Alomar Jr. behind the plate.
âThe first pitch was a foot outside, but they called it a strike,â
Amaral said. âI followed the ball all the way into Alomarâs glove. He
caught it, then quickly underhanded it back to the dugout (for keepsake).
I thought, âHey, am I a part of this (game)?ââ
Amaral later played with Martinez in Seattle, and the veteran
right-hander would always wigwag his finger at Amaral in the clubhouse
and say with a big smile, âYou and me, we go down in history as the first
pitcher and hitter at Jacobs Field.â
There was no retirement âannouncementâ for Amaral and there will be no
election into the Baseball Hall of Fame, but good friend Jeff Gardner
(Estancia, OCC), also a former major leaguer and now a minor league
manager, orchestrated a retirement party recently for âclosureâ on
Amaralâs long career.
âWe talked about all the fun times we had. It was neat to do that,â
said Amaral, whose big league highlight was playing on the 1995 Mariners,
who won the American League West Division title after a one-game playoff
with the Angels, then beat the New York Yankees in a thrilling five-game
divisional series, coming from an 0-2 deficit to win three straight games
at the Kingdome.
âThat was an unbelievable year for the Mariners and the city of
Seattle,â said Amaral, who still follows the game closely, looking each
morning at the box scores and seeing how his buddies did the previous
night.
Amaral, 39, signed a two-year free-agent contract with the Orioles in
December 1998 after eight years with the Mariners. In 2000, injuries took
a toll on Amaral, who was released by Baltimore, then signed to a minor
league contract by the Atlanta Braves in August.
He played his last game with the Class AAA Richmond Braves on Sept. 4,
2000, against Norfolk in the International League before 4,719 fans, a
far cry from the 57,000-plus fans the Mariners would draw in September
1995 during their improbable stretch drive to the AL Championship Series
against the Indians.
This year, Amaral stayed in shape for a possible job opening, but the
phone didnât ring and the veteran utility player, who came up to the big
leagues as a second baseman, called it a career. He finished with a .267
lifetime batting average with 11 home runs and 159 RBIs in 727 games. He
also had 106 stolen bases with a season-high of 25 in 1996.
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