Catching Up With ... Tim DeCinces
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Richard Dunn
Deep in the land of Hank Aaron and Southern hospitality is Tim
DeCinces, who grew up in Newport Beach as the son of a major leaguer and
has adapted so well to his calling in Mobile, Ala., some can make it
sound like he’s welcome forever.
Take Tom Nichols, the radio play-by-play broadcaster for the Mobile
BayBears of the Southern League:
“Tim was a tremendous member of our club last year,” Nichols said. “He
played the game the way it’s supposed to be played; he played hard, he’s
a smart player and a team leader, and a guy we were happy to have with
us.
“As things turned out, he didn’t see a lot of playing time in the
early part of last year, but, by the end of the year, he may have been
our most productive hitter.”
DeCinces finished as the BayBears’ second-leading hitter at .271
(comparing players with over 200 at-bats), along with 11 home runs and 44
RBIs.
But, as DeCinces prepares for his sixth season in the minor leagues,
the left-handed hitting catcher, a former Corona del Mar High and UCLA
standout, has reached a perplexing crossroads in his professional
baseball career.
DeCinces enjoyed a monster second half last year at Mobile, the
double-A affiliate of the San Diego Padres, but he will turn 27 on April
26 and the parent club has younger catchers ahead of him, specifically
Wiki Gonzalez and the highly touted Ben Davis.
“I got my chance (to play every day at double A) and put up good
numbers,” DeCinces said. “The good news is that (the Padres) know that.
The bad news is that they’re still really loaded at catcher.”
Like anywhere, baseball is about job openings, supply and demand, and
timing.
“I don’t know where I’ll be this year. You never know going into
spring training,” said DeCinces, who will report to minor league camp
next month in Peoria, Ariz. “It will either be a return trip to Mobile or
a move to Portland (Ore.), the team’s new triple-A affiliate. We’ll see
how things shake down in spring training, but I wouldn’t mind going back
to Mobile if there was an opportunity to play every day.”
Before last season, DeCinces was acquired by the Padres in the
double-A phase of the Rule V Draft, after playing five seasons in the
Baltimore organization. The Orioles drafted DeCinces out of UCLA in June
1996 and sent him to Bluefield, W.Va., of the Appalachian Rookie League,
where he batted .297 with seven homers and 32 RBIs.
Since then, DeCinces has made stops at single-A Delmarva, Md., and
Frederick, Md., triple-A Rochester, N.Y., and double-A Bowie, Md., as
well as Mobile, while displaying good power numbers in four different
campaigns (12 or more home runs).
“As long as I feel like I’m having success and still getting an
opportunity (to play and try to fulfill a dream of playing in the
majors), there’s no reason to not keep going,” DeCinces said. “For me,
there have always been hurdles for me to overcome. I’ve never been the
No. 1 prospect, so (success) makes it that much more rewarding.”
DeCinces, who became a father for the first time when his daughter,
Delaney, was born April 22, has endured a busy offseason, working in the
business development end for Money Line Technologies, a company that
installs software with a niche in the banking industry, and finding time
to stay in shape, while he and his wife, Melissa, raise their toddler.
“The offseason experience can sure be interesting for someone in the
minor leagues,” said DeCinces, who was given three days off so his wife
could have their baby at Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach, rather than
unfamiliar Mobile.
Last season with the BayBears, who play at Hank Aaron Stadium,
DeCinces started slowly, mainly because he was still recovering from knee
surgery by the time spring training arrived and wasn’t fully able to show
his new employers what he could do.
“I didn’t have a good spring training,” said DeCinces, who went from a
starter at triple A in the Orioles’ organization to third-string catcher
at double A in his first year in the Padres’ system.
DeCinces, however, hasn’t given up hope of reaching the big leagues,
despite the odds against him.
“Each year you play as a professional, you mature that much more, and
the amount of adversity you face in the minor leagues makes you grow as a
player,” he said. “I’ve got that experience under my belt. And every step
up the ladder, from high school to college to pro ball to triple A, I’ve
gone farther than anyone thought. But there’s still one more step.”
DeCinces, an All-Sea View League catcher and Orange County All-Star
for the Sea Kings in 1992, grew up around major leaguers: His father,
Doug, played third base for 15 years with the Orioles, Angels and
Cardinals.
The elder DeCinces played in the 1979 World Series for Baltimore and
hit a career-high 30 home runs in his first season with the Angels in
1982.
Tim DeCinces, who batted .443 his senior year at Corona del Mar under
Coach Scott Magers, ended a three-year career at UCLA (after redshirting
his freshman year) in 1996 with 37 home runs, 166 RBIs and a .321
average. He was selected by the Orioles in the 16th round of the
free-agent draft.
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