Waguespack brings camaraderie -- and crawfish -- to Rays camp
SARASOTA, Fla. -- Looking for a little team bonding roughly midway through Spring Training, the Rays brought some Southern tradition to Charlotte Sports Park on Friday night.
Following their 9-9 tie against the Twins on Friday afternoon, and their 14-11 victory in the annual Rays Families vs. Twins Families Charity Softball Game immediately afterward, the Rays hosted a crawfish boil in a standing-room section of their spring ballpark. Players, coaches, staff and their families all gathered for a delicious meal, courtesy of pitcher Jacob Waguespack, and a cornhole tournament that carried on for a few hours.
¡°Just guys hanging out, playing cornhole, eating crawfish and watching the children run around. It was a great night,¡± second baseman Brandon Lowe said. ¡°People were like, 'This is awesome. We should probably do this again.' And talking with guys today, just like, 'That was a lot of fun. Let's do this next time.'¡±
The Rays have been looking for ways to build unity and cohesion in the clubhouse, believing that can only help them on the field. This particular team-building idea came from Waguespack, a Louisiana native who engineered a similar event early in 2020 in Blue Jays camp. And the timing -- with all the players¡¯ families already at Charlotte Sports Park for the softball game -- was perfect.
¡°It was awesome. It was one of the best team events, so thanks to Wags, certainly,¡± manager Kevin Cash said. ¡°Wags, his wife and all of the people behind the scenes ¡ that supported it. The guys had a blast. It was really cool.¡±
With help from senior director of player development Blake Butera, team dietician Courtney Ellison and the Rays¡¯ clubhouse chefs, among others, Waguespack made the meal. He bought Louisiana spices online and flew in 200 pounds of crawfish from a company in Natchitoches, La.
From there, it was just a matter of getting everything in a massive seafood boiling pot -- or four, in this case -- and Waguespack finding the right ingredients.
¡°I have my own little concoction, which is just from being home and going to so many boils -- onions, lemons, garlic, potatoes, sausage, corn, shrimp,¡± he said, smiling.
When it was done, they dumped it all over a table and let the players and staff gather around to enjoy the feast. Some had to learn proper crawfish-peeling technique, but they all raved about Waguespack¡¯s work.
¡°Very good. A-plus,¡± infielder Curtis Mead said. ¡°First time. I was pleased.¡±
Even with all they ordered and prepared, Waguespack said they only left with ¡°like three handfuls¡± of leftovers.
¡°Guys loved it,¡± he said. ¡°It was awesome, man. That's what it's all about. It's all about the experience and just kind of seeing a little bit of that Cajun flair and cuisine, but it was more so just about camaraderie and talking to people, meeting families and stuff like that.¡±
There was also a little competition amid the camaraderie, as a cornhole tournament broke out. Outfielder Kameron Misner and catcher Logan Driscoll took home the championship, beating Lowe and Ryan Pepiot in a lengthy final matchup.
¡°It was really cool to get the whole group together and not be on a baseball field,¡± Lowe said. ¡°We spend so much time together, but it's always in the confines of a locker room or we're out on the baseball field. So it's nice to get everybody together and have fun, shoot the breeze, just be friends.
¡°You're friends here and you're brothers in here, but you introduce the friendly competition of cornhole, and all of a sudden I'm trash-talking somebody that doesn't speak very good English, and he's yelling at me in Spanish, and it's just having fun.
¡°This game, it's tough, and the season's long and it drags on sometimes, so when we can break it up with stuff like this, it definitely makes it a lot better.¡±