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Pedro Gomez dies at 58; ESPN baseball reporter, former A’s writer

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Pedro Gomez, a longtime baseball correspondent for ESPN who covered more than 25 World Series, has died. He was 58.

Feb. 16, 2008: Chicago White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen, right, jokes with ESPN’s Pedro Gomez after a news conference. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green, File) 

Gomez died unexpectedly at home Sunday, his family said in a statement. No cause of death was given.

Gomez had covered the Oakland A’s for the Mercury News and then the Sacramento Bee in the 1990s, before moving on to the Arizona Republic as its national baseball writer.

“Pedro was far more than a media personality. He was a Dad, loving husband, loyal friend, coach and mentor,” the Gomez family said. “He was our everything and his kids’ biggest believer.”

He is survived by his wife, Sandra, as well as sons Rio and Dante and daughter Sierra, according to ESPN.

Gomez joined ESPN as a Phoenix-based reporter in 2003. He was best known at the network for his coverage of Barry Bonds and his pursuit of the home-run record during the steroid controversy.

He was a correspondent on ESPN’s “SportsCenter,” “Baseball Tonight” and additional shows, including the network’s “Wednesday Night Baseball” package.

Gomez grew up in Miami, and said the greatest game he remembered from his childhood was the San Diego Chargers’ win over the Miami Dolphins in the 1981 AFC divisional playoff game. He attended the University of Miami and majored in journalism.

His parents had fled Cuba for the United States in 1962. Gomez was part of ESPN’s coverage in 2016 when the Tampa Bay Rays faced the Cuban national team, and shared the story of taking his father and brother’s ashes to Cuba.

While the visit to Cuba was one of his more emotional assignments, he once said in a network bio that his favorite event he covered was Game 6 of the 2003 National League Championship Series between the Florida Marlins and Chicago Cubs.

Said Gomez: “After Steve Bartman’s attempt to catch the foul ball over Cubs left fielder Moises Alou, producer Jim Witalka and I were whisked from behind the Cubs dugout, where we were getting ready to do on-field interviews with the NL Champs for the first time since 1908, to virtually the same spot behind the Marlins dugout, where we saw Josh Beckett racing back and forth from the clubhouse to the dugout while chugging beers and saying, ‘Rally beers, Pedro.’ It was a memorable night at Chicago’s venerable Wrigley Field.”

The Marlins went on to score eight runs in the eighth inning, sending the series to a seventh game, which they also won.

Gomez also worked for the the Miami Herald, San Diego Union and the Miami News. He was a member of the Baseball Writers Association of America and was a Baseball Hall of Fame voter.

His death brought a lot of reaction throughout social media.

“More than an elite journalist, Pedro Gomez was a good and decent man, so proud of his family, and his heritage,” said former “SportsCenter” anchor Bob Ley. “His loss is a hammer blow to all who knew this life force.”

Said ESPN’s Jorge Sedano: “I’m forever grateful for his friendship. He was a trailblazing journalist. He opened the door for Latinos in sports TV. I can’t even explain how sad I am right now.”___More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports


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