Being bilingual an advantage for Fredi Gonzalez

According to cubanball.com, there have been seven Cuban-born managers throughout the long history of major league baseball. The Braves now employ two of them.

Fredi Gonzalez, of course, was hired last week to take over for the retiring Bobby Cox. He will bring with him as bench coach Carlos Tosca, who managed Gonzalez in the minors before a brief stint (2002-04) leading the Toronto Blue Jays.

Rather than consider his background as any sort of hindrance to climbing baseball's corporate ladder, Gonzalez seized on it as an advantage. For it gives him a tool that not even one of his mentors -- Cox -- possessed: The ability to hablar espanol.

“I never really thought about that,” Gonzalez said when asked if thought he had to overcome any prejudice on his journey through the ranks. In fact, his ascension was rapid. At 34, he was the youngest manager in the Triple-A International League -- Charlotte. And “by 35, I already was a third-base coach in the majors [Florida].

“Being born in Cuba and having the ability to speak Spanish I think has really helped me. You can communicate with players through an interpreter, but sometimes the message doesn’t really get across. It helps to be able to speak directly with [the Latin] players.”

Being bilingual, and holding onto the heritage left behind in Cuba when his parents brought him here as a small child, are priorities to Gonzalez. He tries to impress that upon his two children, who are another generation into the Americanization process.

When his daughter, Gabrielle, came home from Georgia Southern to celebrate her father’s new job with the Braves, Gonzalez took that opportunity to review her course load. He noticed she had no languages included. He gently reminded her of the plan for her to minor in Spanish.

Older sis is more fluent in Spanish than 17-year-old Alex. “I’ll force him to take it in college,” his dad said.

“It’s big in life to be able to speak Spanish or any second language,” he said.

In 1966, Gonzalez’s parents flew to the United States aboard one of the many “Freedom Flights” from Cuba. Ten years later, as part of a huge Bicentennial ceremony at the Orange Bowl, they became U.S. citizens, which conferred citizenship upon their children. They blended into the American culture, but Spanish remained the dominant language in their home.

And baseball was big there, too. It was, and remains, an important part of the island nation’s culture.

And the other five Cuban-born major league managers through history?

Mike Gonzalez (1938, 1940 St. Louis), Preston Gomez (1969-72 San Diego, 1974-75 Houston, 1980 Cubs), former Braves infielder Marty Martinez (1986 Seattle), Cookie Rojas (1988 Angels, 1996 Miami) and Tony Perez (1993 Cincinnati, 2001 Florida).