Agustín Marquetti

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Batting average.288
Hits1,935
Home runs207
Agustín Marquetti
Marquetti at the 1972 Haarlem Baseball Week
First baseman / outfielder
Born: (1946-08-28) August 28, 1946 (age 79)
Alquízar, Artemisa, Cuba
Bats: Left
Throws: Left
SNB statistics
Batting average.288
Hits1,935
Home runs207
Career highlights and awards

Agustín Marquetti Moinelo (born August 28, 1946) is a Cuban former baseball player. He spent his 22-year career as a first baseman in the Cuban National Series (SNB) playing in Havana, mainly with Industriales.[1]

Marquetti twice led the National Series in both home runs and runs batted in (1969 and 1972).[1] Historian Peter C. Bjarkman described Marquetti as "the first great Cuban slugger of the modern-day era," adding that Marquetti made up half, along with his contemporary Antonio Muñoz, of Cuba's version of the M&M Boys (Roger Maris and Mickey Mantle).[2]

As a boy, Marquetti was a fan of Almendares in the Cuban Winter League.[3][4] At just 15 years old, Marquetti was drafted into a militia raised against the anti-Castro invasion force at the Bay of Pigs; his military service gave him the nickname "El Miliciano."[5] in 1964, he debuted with Havana at the 1964 national youth championship, earning a spot on the Cuban national youth team that played a series in Canada in August of that year.[6][7] He was reportedly offered a contract with the Cincinnati Reds, but declined.[4]

Playing career

Debuting with Industriales in the 1965–66 Cuban National Series, Marquetti won a championship with the team in his first year.[4] Over the course of his 22 seasons in the National Series, he posted a .288 career batting average, with 207 home runs and 1,935 hits.[1]

Marquetti debuted with the senior Cuban national squad at the 1969 Amateur World Series in the Dominican Republic.[3] Over the course of his international career, he hit .346 with 189 runs batted in and 31 home runs.[1] He hit a walkoff home run against the United States in the 1972 Amateur World Series in Managua, to deliver Cuba the championship.[3][8][4] He remained a consistent member of the national team until 1980, when he was supplanted at first base by Antonio Muñoz.[4]

On January 19, 1986, the forty-year-old Marquetti hit a memorable walk-off home run off of Rogelio Garcia to deliver Industriales the championship over Pinar del Río in the final series of the 1985–86 Cuban National Series.[9] As Marquetti later recounted, he had been chatting with Garcia just days earlier when the pitcher asserted his forkball was unhittable. Marquetti only managed to round second before fans mobbed the infield in celebration, an iconic image in Cuban baseball history.[10]

Personal life

References

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