Jerry Dipoto cheers on son Jonah ... against his own team!
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PEORIA, Ariz. -- Jerry Dipoto had to halt the interview. He couldn¡¯t hold back the waterworks.
Moments prior, sitting in a booth atop the Peoria Sports Complex for a Royals-Mariners matinee, Seattle¡¯s president of baseball operations watched his son, Jonah, pitch a perfect eighth inning for Kansas City. With his wife, Tamie, seated to his left, Jerry stood with his trademark ¡°scout¡± look -- right hand under left elbow, chin down, glasses on and biting his thumb -- but he looked far more anxious, and for good reason.
Jonah had battled through a broken olecranon bone in his pitching elbow, had worked tirelessly to recover and had leaped back onto the Royals¡¯ radar during Minor League Spring Training. And here he was, finally, a 35th-round Draft pick, getting a taste of his dream and pitching in a big league spring game for the first time -- all with his parents and his wife, Lauren, on hand.
¡°I can¡¯t even describe the emotions, honestly. It¡¯s hard for me to put it into words right now,¡± Jonah said postgame, hardly able to contain a huge smile. ¡°[It's] something that I¡¯ve been thinking about for years and years, just being on the mound pitching for a Major League team. And then to be able to do it here, in front of my family -- and especially my dad, while he¡¯s in the stands and against his team -- that¡¯s just awesome. Like I said, I can¡¯t even describe it. It¡¯s so exciting to be out here.¡±
Said Jerry, pausing to gather his emotions: ¡°All day, we're watching down there to see if he¡¯s getting up, to see if he¡¯s stretching. Thrill of a lifetime, thrill of a lifetime. And I think he was pretty good. ... I'm really proud of him. It¡¯s hard to imagine remaining composed in that situation when you¡¯re pitching against your dad's team.¡±
Jonah traveled with the Royals to Mesa on Sunday and thought his spring debut would come then. The Dipotos drove down from Peoria, but Jonah didn¡¯t get in the game. So, when Jonah found out he¡¯d be on the roster Tuesday vs. the Mariners, he hoped his time would come. Jerry had a strong hunch, which prompted Lauren¡¯s father to make the five-and-a-half hour drive from San Diego, arriving 15 minutes before Jonah took the mound.
¡°Last night, I went to bed dreaming about coming out here and actually getting to throw,¡± Jonah said. ¡°I¡¯m glad it worked out and being here especially. I¡¯m going to sleep really good tonight.¡±
Jonah entered for what was mostly mop-up duty in Kansas City¡¯s 11-4 win, but he flashed a 94 mph fastball and a solid breaking ball. He induced a groundout to Chance Sisco and a flyout to Zach DeLoach, with a strikeout to Riley Unroe in between. That evoked a hearty applause from his dad, which had a sort of quirky, humorous irony given that the batter in the box played for the team he runs.
¡°No offense to Riley Unroe, but I was pretty fired up,¡± Jerry said.
¡°It¡¯s hard to make him do that,¡± Jonah said about his dad cheering against his own team. ¡°The clean inning was maybe the best part."
When Jonah walked off the field, Royals manager Mike Matheny greeted him on the top step of the dugout with a firm handshake and a smile. Matheny motioned up to the booth where Jonah¡¯s parents stood and told Jonah to wave, so Jonah took off his cap, tipped it toward the booth and grinned.
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Matheny recognized the moment because he knew what it was like.
¡°Without question, one of the most special moments of my baseball career is when I was sitting over here watching my kid,¡± Matheny said. ¡°My heart never pumped so hard, just watching my own kid on a Major League field. Even though it¡¯s Spring Training, I just know how special that is. The first thing [Jonah] needed to know when he came off the field was that he deserved the right to be here. He¡¯s doing everything right, going about it the right way. And as you can see, he¡¯s got good stuff.¡±
Beyond the same name on the back of his jersey, Jonah looked like his father on the mound. With a setup from the stretch on the right side of the rubber, and a windup in which he turns his back more dramatically toward the hitter, Jonah¡¯s delivery mirrors what Jerry¡¯s looked like when he was pitching in the Majors in the 1990s.
Mariners manager Scott Servais was Jerry¡¯s catcher for the Rockies¡¯ Triple-A affiliate during Jerry¡¯s final pro season in 2000 -- Jonah was three years old at the time -- and was taken aback by the resemblance.
¡°Having played against and with Jerry, you see the mannerisms of their kids when they're out there -- it looks just like Jerry,¡± Servais said. ¡°It¡¯s unbelievable.¡±
Jonah was one of the many whose development stalled due to the cancellation of the Minors season in 2020, but he came back strong in ¡®21 and racked up a 3.19 ERA and 39 strikeouts in 31 innings for High-A Quad Cities. He suffered that elbow injury -- from falling and bracing for impact in an off-field incident, not pitching -- yet he¡¯s bounced back and has turned heads in Minor League camp.
¡°I think he has good stuff,¡± Jerry said. ¡°He's got a good breaking ball. He can get it up into the mid-90s. And if he throws strikes, he's got a chance, and that's about all you can ask.¡±