| Former
Kettleer Ron Darling Named NY Mets Announcer
March
30, 2006
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
NEW
YORK, NY -- On Opening Day 2006, New York Mets fans will be introduced
to a new broadcasting team comprised of two members of the 1986
Mets' World Championship team.
Former
teammates Keith Hernandez and Cape Cod Baseball League Hall of Famer
Ron Darling join longtime Mets play-by-play radio announcer Gary
Cohen to provide in-depth analysis, as well as contribute to pre-
and post-game programs.
“As
we approach the 20-year anniversary of the Mets' 1986 World Championship,
it is such a great gift for me to start with a new network that
covers the Mets in a city where I literally grew up,” Darling noted
upon acceptance of the position. Before he “grew up”
in New York playing for the “Amazins,” he spent the summer before
the 1981 MLB Draft pitching for the Cotuit Kettleers.
In
1980, the right-handed Darling was voted CCBL MVP, selected to the
All-Star Game, and received the Outstanding Pro Prospect Award.
Darling batted an impressive .366 with six home runs and 26 RBIs
while going 4-3 as a pitcher.
His performance during the Kettleers' 1980 season left him
revered as one of the best all-around players in Cape League history
. According to an early scouting report from 1979, “Ron never played
in one position long enough to tell which he was best at, but he
excelled at all of them.”
“Ron
was an outstanding and versatile player,” said CCBL President and
long-time Ron Darling fan Judy Walden Scarafile. “He had a nickname
when he played in the league. We called him AW, which stood for
All-World because he could do absolutely everything and play everywhere."
After
a summer on the Cape, Darling returned to Yale and secured his place
in college baseball history. In the 1981 NCAA playoffs, Darling
faced St. John's and future major league standout pitcher Frank
Viola. Before Yale lost in the 12 th inning, Darling pitched an
impressive 11 no-hit innings. His performance remains the longest
no-hitter in NCAA history.
The
Honolulu, Hawaii, native has also taken a turn at acting in several
movies including “Clubhouse,” “The Day After Tomorrow,” “Mr. 3000,”
“The Last Great Infomercial” and the popular “Shallow Hal,” where
he played the role of “Handsome Li'l Boy.”
Darling
was selected in the first round (ninth overall) of the 1981 MLB
draft by the Texas Rangers, but his career exploded in 1982 when
he was traded to the New York Mets.
His
most outstanding season was during the Mets' 1986 championship run.
That year, his ERA dropped to 2.81, which ranked third best in the
National League.
Darling
stayed with the Mets until 1989, when he was traded to the Montreal
Expos for Tim Burke and sent packing later that year to the Oakland
Athletics, where he remained until the end of his career in 1995.
During
his 13-year career he amassed a 136-116 won-loss record, including
1,590 strikeouts and a 3.87 ERA.
His
standout season on the Cape opened a world of opportunities for
Ron Darling. In his role as an analyst for the New York Mets, he
will be able not only to provide unique commentary
from a former player's perspective, but also to convey his passion
for the Mets organization.
But
for fans of the 1980 Cotuit Kettleers, Darling will remain a college
standout whom they were lucky enough to see in person before he
began his long road to fame. In 2002 he was recognized for his outstanding
summer with the Kettleers by being inducted into the CCBL Hall of
Fame.
Information
from www.newyorkmets.com
and www.kettleers.org
was used in this article.
By
Courtney Reilly, CCBL Intern -- reilly@capecodbaseball.org
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