The questions came quickly for the Tigers on Thursday, and for good reason. After a powerful series of earthquakes hit Venezuela’s northern coast on Wednesday, Detroit found itself checking on the safety of players, staffers and their families across the baseball world.
Keider Montero, who was born in Santa Teresa del Tuy, was among the first to address it. He said his family was safe after the quakes, which included a 7.7 magnitude temblor - the strongest recorded in Venezuela since 1900.
Montero’s hometown sits about 125 miles from the initial earthquake’s epicenter near San Felipe, and most of his family lives there. His mother lives in Maracay, roughly a 90-minute drive west of Caracas.
“I've talked to them, they're all fine, thank God,” Montero said Thursday afternoon. “The support here has been great, everyone here is asking me if my family is okay.”
Montero is one of three Venezuelan-born players on Detroit’s active 26-man roster. Relief pitcher Enmanuel De Jesus, who was born in Valencia just west of Maracay, and second baseman Gleyber Torres, born in Caracas, are the other two. A team official said both of their families were safe, though Torres was not available for comment while he continues rehabbing an oblique injury.
The concern stretched beyond the roster. Tigers communications manager and Spanish-language broadcaster Carlos Guillén said his family in Caracas was safe, but he also said the capital - home to 2.2 million people - took extensive damage. On Thursday, Guillén posted a thread on X outlining ways people can help, including donations of clothing and toiletries.
The impact reached deep into the broader baseball community, too. The coastal state of La Guaira, where Ronald Acuña Jr. and Maikel Garcia were born, was hit especially hard.
Garcia said on X that he spent more than three hours trying to reach his daughter and her mother before finally making contact at 1:09 a.m. ET on Thursday.
Not everyone got that kind of relief. Venezuelan media members reported Wednesday that a La Guaira hotel collapsed during the quakes, killing family members of former MLB players Gorkys Hernández and Eliézer Alfonzo.
The earthquakes began around 6 p.m., less than an hour before first pitch of the Tigers’ final game against the New York Yankees. A.J. Hinch said the news moved through the clubhouse fast, with players and staff trying to figure out whether loved ones were safe.
Hinch said the baseball world has a responsibility to show up for those affected.
“I've spent a lot [of time] this morning checking in with different people around the game, just because I don't know where everybody is,” he said. “When you see the footage, it's almost unthinkable. Us as a community, a baseball community at that, all we can do is love on them and support them, and if there's something that's needed or a cause to join, we need to do it.”
As of Thursday afternoon, the official death toll stood at 164, though Venezuelan acting president Delcy Rodríguez said it was expected to rise. The U.S. Geological Survey estimated the number of deaths could climb into the “tens of thousands.”
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