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Pablo Morales Pérez

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Venezuelan baseball executive and promoter In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Morales and the second or maternal family name is Pérez.
Pablo Morales Pérez
President of FIBA
In office
18 December 1945 – 20 December 1947
Preceded byJorge Reyes
Succeeded byChale Pereira
In office
14 December 1950 – 26 September 1952
Preceded byChale Pereira
Succeeded byCarlos Manuel Zecca
Personal details
BornPablo Antonio Morales Pérez
17 August 1906
La Guaira, Vargas, Venezuela
Died24 November 1969(1969-11-24) (aged 63)
Caracas, Venezuela
OccupationBaseball executive and promoter
Baseball player
Baseball career
Member of the Venezuelan
Baseball Hall of Fame
Induction2015

Pablo Antonio Morales Pérez (17 August 1906 – 24 November 1969) was a Venezuelan baseball executive and promoter. He served as president of the International Baseball Federation (FIBA) in two periods (1946–1947; 1951–1952), and also took the reins of the organizing committee of the 1944 Amateur World Series held in Caracas.

Along with business partner Oscar Prieto Ortiz, Morales helped found the Caribbean Series, an international club championship for the Latin American winter leagues. He was also the owner of the Leones del Caracas club, which would become the most successful baseball team in the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League.

Biography

Born in La Guaira, Vargas, Morales was a widely known figure in Venezuelan baseball from the 1930s to the 1960s. Publicist and avid sport commentator, Morales worked in La Guaira and then in Caracas. His total dedication to baseball came in 1936, when he founded the Deportivo Caracas the same year and the Cardenales de La Guaira in 1940, clubs that participated in the Liga Nacional de Béisbol, which had stabilized the first national championship of first division in Venezuela since its inauguration in 1930.

Likewise, the first ever Caribbean Series tournament was the brainchild of Morales and Oscar Prieto Ortiz, his business partner since 1936, who devised the idea during Morales' IBF tenure and after seeing the success of the Serie Interamericana in 1946, which featured the clubs Brooklyn Bushwicks from the United States, Cervecería Caracas from Venezuela, Sultanes de Monterrey from Mexico, and an All-Star team from Cuba. The US team won each year from 1946 to 1949, while the Venezuelan club won the final tournament in 1950. Morales and Prieto then presented their idea to baseball representatives of Cuba, Panama and Puerto Rico during a meeting held in Havana on August 21, 1948. The representatives then agreed to stage a four-country, round-robin tournament 12-game to be known as the Serie del Caribe, to be launched in Cuba from February 20–25 of 1949.

Morales bought the Cervecería Caracas franchise in 1952 and renamed it as a new franchise as Leones del Caracas, to run one of the most popular and culturally significant clubs of the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League. Morales would remain the sole owner of the team until shortly before his death in 1969, when he included Prieto as legal partner.

In August 2015, Pablo Morales was enshrined into the Venezuelan Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum.

References

  1. New York, Passenger Lists, 1820-1957 for Pablo Antonio Morales Perez, born 17 August 1906 in La Guaira
  2. ^ Salón de la Fama y Museo del Béisbol de Venezuela – Noticias Archived 2015-09-17 at archive.today (Spanish). MuseodeBeisbol.com.ve.
  3. "IBAF - International Baseball Federation (defunct)". Sport-record.de. Retrieved 25 February 2024.
  4. ^ Gutiérrez, Daniel; Álvarez, Efraim; Gutiérrez (h), Daniel (2006). La Enciclopedia del Béisbol en Venezuela. LVBP, Caracas. ISBN 980-6996-02-X.
  5. Salón de la Fama y Museo del Béisbol de Venezuela Exaltados 2008 – Oscar Prieto Ortiz Archived 2013-12-31 at the Wayback Machine (Spanish).
  6. Bjarkman, Peter (1994). Baseball with a Latin Beat: A History of the Latin American Game. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-89950-973-0.
  7. Un día como hoy debutan los Leones (Spanish). Diario de Los Andes. Retrieved on August 10, 2015.
Members of the Venezuelan Baseball Hall of Fame
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