Tito Fuentes
{{short description|Cuban baseball player (born 1944)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2024}}
{{family name hatnote|Fuentes|Peat|lang=Spanish}}
{{Infobox baseball biography
|name=Tito Fuentes
|image=Tito Fuentes Giants.jpg
|caption=
|position=Second baseman
|bats=Switch
|throws=Right
|birth_date={{Birth date and age|1944|1|4}}
|birth_place=Havana, Cuba
|debutleague = MLB
|debutdate=August 18
|debutyear=1965
|debutteam=San Francisco Giants
|finalleague = MLB
|finaldate=July 9
|finalyear=1978
|finalteam=Oakland Athletics
|statleague = MLB
|stat1label=Batting average
|stat1value=.268
|stat2label=Home runs
|stat2value=45
|stat3label=Runs batted in
|stat3value=438
|teams=
- San Francisco Giants ({{mlby|1965}}–{{mlby|1967}}, {{mlby|1969}}–{{mlby|1974}})
- San Diego Padres ({{mlby|1975}}–{{mlby|1976}})
- Detroit Tigers ({{mlby|1977}})
- Oakland Athletics ({{mlby|1978}})
|highlights=
|medaltemplates =
{{MedalCountry | {{bb|CUB}} }}
{{MedalCompetition | Amateur World Series }}
{{MedalGold | 1961 San José | Team }}
}}
Rigoberto "Tito" Fuentes Peat (born January 4, 1944) is a retired professional baseball player. He played for 13 seasons in the major leagues between 1965 and 1978, primarily as a second baseman. Fuentes played for most of his career with the San Francisco Giants.
Professional career
The Giants initially signed Fuentes as an 18-year-old amateur before the start of the 1962 season. Fuentes, along with Bert Campaneris, was playing with the Cuba national baseball team at the 1961 Amateur World Series.{{cite web |title=Historia de la Copa Mundial/World Cup History XI–XX (1950–1972) |url=http://www.baseballdecuba.com/WCup2011/History1950-1972.html |website=Baseball de Cuba |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111122013419/http://www.baseballdecuba.com/WCup2011/History1950-1972.html |archive-date=22 November 2011 |language=es}} He was one of the last baseball players signed directly out of Cuba in the immediate aftermath of the Cuban Revolution.
Fuentes made his major league debut on August 18, 1965. Four days later, he was involved in one of the most famous baseball fights in history, a 14-minute brawl between the Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers in which Juan Marichal bloodied John Roseboro with a bat; Fuentes, the on-deck hitter when the fight broke out, brandished his own bat as he rushed to join the fray, though he did not hit anyone with it.Hirsch, p. 437{{cite news|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCI/is_10_59/ai_65131125/pg_6 |title=Letting Off Steam – confrontations between players, fans and umpires |first=George |last=Vass |year=2000 |work=Baseball Digest |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081014021253/http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0FCI/is_10_59/ai_65131125/pg_6 |archive-date=October 14, 2008 |access-date=August 16, 2020}} Fuentes split time between second base and shortstop as a rookie in 1966. He batted .261 in his maiden year while playing solid defense at both positions.{{cite web|url=https://www.baseball-reference.com/awards/awards_1966.shtml#NLroy|title=Awards Voting for 1966|accessdate=2007-05-22|publisher=Baseball-Reference.com}} He slumped to batting .209 the following year, and subsequently, he spent all of 1968 in the minor leagues.
Fuentes returned to the Giants in 1969 and spent the next two seasons as a utility infielder before re-gaining his starting spot at second base in 1971. He appeared in the postseason during the 1971 season as his Giants won the NL West title; his two-run home run in Game 1 of the 1971 NLCS helped San Francisco take an early series lead against the Pittsburgh Pirates,{{cite web|url=http://sanfrancisco.giants.mlb.com/sf/history/sf_history_timeline_article.jsp?article=29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080617060504/http://sanfrancisco.giants.mlb.com/sf/history/sf_history_timeline_article.jsp?article=29|url-status=dead|archive-date=June 17, 2008|title=The Official Site of The San Francisco Giants: History: Timeline - 1971|accessdate=2007-05-22|publisher=San Francisco Giants}} but that would turn out to be the Giants' only win of the best-of-five series. Fuentes continued to be the Giants' second baseman for three more seasons. In 1973, he set a National League record by recording a .993 fielding percentage, the highest for any regular second baseman in league history.{{cite web|url=https://baseballbiography.com/tito-fuentes-1944|title=Tito Fuentes|accessdate=2007-05-22|publisher=baseballbiography.com}} Ironically, Fuentes had led all National League second basemen in errors during the previous two seasons before setting the new record for excellence. His record stood for 13 seasons before Ryne Sandberg recorded a .994 percentage at second in 1986.
He was dealt along with Butch Metzger from the Giants to the Padres for Derrel Thomas at the Winter Meetings on December 6, 1974.[https://www.nytimes.com/1974/12/07/archives/baseball-meetings-end-amid-detente-meetings-end-amid-detente.html Koppett, Leonard. "Baseball Meetings End Amid Detente," The New York Times, Saturday, December 7, 1974.] Retrieved January 20, 2023. Fuentes played for two seasons in San Diego before leaving as a free agent. In 1977, Fuentes played with the Detroit Tigers and had a career-best .309 batting average. Despite having his best season, he was not brought back in 1978 (since the Tigers had a young Lou Whitaker waiting in the wings). The Montreal Expos then purchased his contract. Before the start of the season, however, Fuentes was released. During the year, he signed with the Oakland Athletics, but he was released again after batting just .140 in only 13 games. He played for the Santo Domingo Azucareros in the short-lived Inter-American League in 1979 before retiring.
In Willie Mays's May 14, 1972 debut game at Shea Stadium with the New York Mets, Fuentes of the visiting Giants had a single, two doubles, a home run, and a base on balls in five plate appearances.
Fuentes played baseball with elan, style and flair.{{cite web |url=https://bleacherreport.com/articles/547357-san-francisco-giants-all-time-hot-dog-team#slide1 |title=San Francisco Giants: All Time 'Hot Dog' Team |website=bleacherreport.com |access-date=March 6, 2019}} He pioneered the use of headbands, sometimes applying them on the outside of his baseball cap.{{cite web |url=https://www.gaslampball.com/2015/1/4/7482703/tito-fuentes-topps-padres-headband-sweatband-infielder-birthday |title=Tito Fuentes had style to spare |website=www.gaslampball.com |date= 4 January 2015|access-date=March 6, 2019}} He would approach the plate holding his bat by the barrel, tap it handle-first off the plate, flip it into the air and catch it by the handle, ready to hit. He was called "one of the most renowned hot dogs in baseball history" in Sparky Lyle's 1979 book The Bronx Zoo.The Bronx Zoo, Sparky Lyle and Peter Golenbock, Hardcover: 248 pages, Publisher: Outlet (March 1, 1979)Language: English, {{ISBN|978-0517537268}} Elan and flair was not always accepted by staid ballplayers. Pitchers would knock him down with inside pitches for no apparent reason. After one such event, he was quoted as saying, "They shouldn't throw at me. I'm the father of five or six kids."{{cite web |url=https://www.blessyouboys.com/2014/5/22/5736898/tito-fuentes-the-tigers-first-free-agent-was-also-the-teams-first-hot |title=Tito Fuentes: Tigers' first free agent & hot dog |website=www.blessyouboys.com |date= 22 May 2014|access-date=March 6, 2019}}
Broadcasting career
Fuentes returned to the Giants as a radio announcer in 1981, the team's first year of Spanish language radio broadcasts, initially serving in this role until 1992. In 2004, Fuentes was brought back as an analyst, and he remains with the team in this role today.{{cite web|url=http://sanfrancisco.giants.mlb.com/team/broadcasters.jsp?c_id=sf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070807183425/http://sanfrancisco.giants.mlb.com/team/broadcasters.jsp?c_id=sf|url-status=dead|archive-date=August 7, 2007|title=The Official Site of The San Francisco Giants: Team: Broadcasters|accessdate=2007-05-22|publisher=San Francisco Giants}} Tito Fuentes was inducted into the Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame on February 23, 2002 in San Francisco, California.
References
{{reflist}}
- {{cite book|title=Willie Mays: The Life, the Legend|last=Hirsch|first=James S.|publisher=Scribner|location=New York|isbn=978-1-4165-4790-7|year=2010|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781416547907/page/11}}
External links
{{baseballstats |br=f/fuentti01 |brm=fuente001rig}}, or [https://www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/F/Pfuent101.htm Retrosheet]
{{Cuban Baseball Hall of Fame}}
{{San Francisco Giants Wall of Fame}}
{{authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Fuentes, Tito}}
Category:Decatur Commodores players
Category:Detroit Tigers players
Category:El Paso Sun Kings players
Category:Lakeland Giants players
Category:Major League Baseball players from Cuba
Category:20th-century Cuban sportsmen
Category:Cuban expatriate baseball players in the United States
Category:Major League Baseball second basemen
Category:Navegantes del Magallanes players
Category:Cuban expatriate baseball players in Venezuela
Category:Oakland Athletics players
Category:Phoenix Giants players
Category:Salem Rebels (baseball) players
Category:San Diego Padres players
Category:San Francisco Giants announcers
Category:San Francisco Giants players
Category:Santo Domingo Azucareros players