Why is sergio romo playing for mexico




















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That sporting success allowed him, for the first time, to be called to the Mexican National Team. He fulfilled a longed-for dream: to be considered Mexican, just like any other, and represent the country where his parents and grandparents were born before moving to California to work in lettuce fields in the s. There he married Francisca, who was from Ameca, from the Valles region. Evaristo was born with the stamp of a player. He was a natural pitcher who threw a poisonous sinker in the dirt fields.

The Mexico City Diablos Rojos discovered his talent and wanted to sign him. But his father refused. The warning was simple: In baseball there is nothing safe, get to work.

Evaristo traded the baseballs for lettuce. When the money from the crops was insufficient, Evaristo and Francisca gathered their six children and crossed the border through Mexicali.

They settled in a mere 25 miles north in Brawley, California and the Imperial Valley, a region of hope for Mexicans. Among the splendid green fields crowned with lettuce, the six kids were helping their parents. Francisco, Sergio's father, was barely 12 years old but he was already picking and chopping onions and alfalfa.

In the summers, the Romos spent the school holidays in Salinas, California, very close to San Francisco, harvesting watermelons. There Francisco learned that there was a team dressed in black and orange called the Giants who played in an almost-new stadium, Candlestick Park. If the lettuce helped him fill the belly, baseball fed the soul to Romo. The payoff of curling his spine six days a week was playing baseball on Sundays.

It took him 20 minutes by car to cross that border. The fields in Mexicali were waiting for them, Dad and Mom, boys and girls, all with bats and balls in a dusty diamond. There nested the dreams of Francisco Romo of being a professional player.

He imagined going to college, then being selected in a draft and making his major league debut. My grandfather did not let him go. He was taught that you have to choose safety, not to 'hope that a team gives me a chance. My dad went to the Navy, and was there about five years; It taught him to work and he returned to Brawley," says the player.

Evaristo and Francisca "my nana Pancha," Sergio says were his baptism godparents. Sergito learned to walk. He explained the game. He taught him to throw, as he said, the opposite. He raised his arm to learn the sinker. He attended all his games. Sergio Romo's life was baseball.

On his bike, he rode the streets of Brawley to school with his backpack on his back, a bag for baseball equipment. Balls, gloves and spikes were mixed among notebooks and pencils. No one was betting on him. Romo says he always knew he could play baseball at a great level. At age 11, he promised his dad that he would go to college and get to the big leagues. He assured him that he would materialize his dreams.

That promise was the engine that carried him. Sergio Romo left the Imperial Valley with the desire to succeed, wearing a medal of the Sacred Heart that his nana Pancha removed from her neck after 30 years. In his head resounded the voices of those who told him that he would fail and return soon, as had all those who had gone before. Brawley is a wild neighborhood and most of Romo's friends are no longer alive.

The drugs killed them. By the third year, his skills guaranteed him a scholarship at the University of North Alabama. That great lift helped him to resist the loneliness and the distance from his family.

The Romos who did everything and took care of him were far away. Sergio learned to take care of himself.



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