Gayo predicted Marte would be an All-Star
SAN DIEGO — Starling Marte had sufficiently impressed the Pirates’ scouts on that January day in the Dominican Republic in 2007.
When the workout was over in his hometown of Santo Domingo, the Pirates offered him a professional contract. Marte, who like so many grew impoverished like so many other in the nationĢƵ capital city, quickly signed.
Marte distinctly remembers what Pirates director of Latin American scouting Rene Gayo told him after he had put pen to paper.
“He said I was going to play in the All-Star Game someday,” Marte recalled with a smile. “He said he was the type of five-tool player that would become an All-Star player.”
Gayo turned out to be correct.
Marte, in his sixth season as the Pirates’ left fielder, was selected to his first All-Star Game last Saturday as an injury replacement for New York Mets outfielder Yoenis Cespedes and was a reserve for the National League team on Tuesday night at Petco Park.
Marte, 27, is having a typically fine year, hitting .316 with six home runs, 30 stolen bases and a .823 OPS in 82 games while playing Gold Glove-caliber defense.
It seems the rest of the baseball world is finally to catching on to what followers of the Pirates have known for a few years now — Marte is one of the top all-around talents in the game — thought it took him a while to get recognized.
“It is good to be here because you want to be to be with all the best players in the baseball,” Marte said prior to the game. “You want people to think you are a good player. It is fun to be here with all the best players and get a chance to talk to some of them. I’m very happy to have this opportunity.”
The opportunity almost didn’t present itself as Marte did not win either the fan or player voting. He was also bypassed as a selection by NL manager Terry Colllns of the New York Mets, then finished second to San Francisco Giants first baseman Brandon Belt in the Final Vote promotion.
Yet Marte looks at getting added to the games as a case of better late than never. Thanks to the work of Pirates traveling secretary Greg Johnson, Marte was able to have his entire family make it to San Diego in time for all the festivities despite the short notice.
“ItĢƵ exciting,” Marte said. “It means a lot to my family to see me be at the All-Star Game. They are all very happy.”
MarteĢƵ selection to the All-Star Game also made the rest of the Pirates happy. Though quiet by nature, his smiling presence in the clubhouse makes him a favorite among his teammates, who also feel that his contributions to the Pirates’ success have often been overlooked.
“There really isn’t anything he can’t do,” said closer Mark Melancon, the Pirates’ other representative in Tuesday nightĢƵ game. “ItĢƵ kind of surprising that this is his first All-Star Game. I’m happy for him that he is getting the chance to experience this and get recognized. He deserves it.”