海角大神

鈥楲ong Shot鈥: 8 observations shared in Mike Piazza鈥檚 autobiography

Check out some of Piazza's thoughts on baseball from his autobiography 'Long Shot.'

8. At odds with some Hispanics

Kevork Djansezian/AP

Despite playing with many Latin American players and speaking a modicum of Spanish, Piazza felt there was a 鈥渨eird kind of Hispanic conspiracy鈥 against him by some players. He admits that this sounds paranoid, but he cites negative comments made against him and the times he was hit by Latino pitchers as evidence of a clash of cultures leading to bad vibes on both sides.

Piazza says some Latin players seem to hold the view that their lower socio-economic backgrounds exempts them from having to adopt American culture. He strongly believes that it鈥檚 up to the Latin players to learn English and not on the American players to learn Spanish. The difference with Asian players, who sometimes have translators in tow, is that there are so few of them relatively speaking that without interpreters, they would be virtually isolated. The Latin players, on the other hand, are surrounded by many other Spanish speakers. Plus, Piazza argues, no other players are more catered to than the Latin Americans. Major League Baseball, he argues, goes to 鈥済reat lengths鈥 to prepare them for successful careers in the US.

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