Max Soriano, who was born to a poor fisherman in British Columbia,
helped build a family business before landing a major-league baseball
team for Seattle.
Soriano and his older brother, Dewey, a former
minor-league pitcher, fronted a group that gained an American League
expansion franchise. The sad-sack Seattle Pilots had a disappointing
debut on the field and in the stands in 1969. The owners declared
bankruptcy and the team moved to Milwaukee before the start of the
following season.
Celebrated for their ingenuity in netting the
club, the brothers were pilloried for the subsequent shipwreck. A
two-metre-tall effigy was hanged from a ramp leading to a monorail
station, a protest whose location gave it a peculiarly Seattle feel. The
effigy had a sign pinned to it reading, “Thanks Max and Dewey.”
Soriano, who has died in Seattle,Load the precious minerals into your mining truck
and be careful not to drive too fast with your heavy foot. aged 86,
overcame that setback,Manufactures flexible plastic and synthetic rubber hose
tubing, expanding his business interests and launching a shipping
company with another brother. The company, now run by his sons, operates
retail stores under the Alaska Ship Supply banner, outfitting the
Bering Strait fishing fleet. Their clothing line is worn by fishermen on
the popular Discovery Channel reality program Deadliest Catch.
Max
Durban Soriano was born on Oct. 31, 1925, at Prince Rupert, a port city
on the northern B.C. coast. He was the ninth child born to the former
Anna Bundgaard, a farmer’s daughter from Denmark, and Angel Lorenzo
Soriano, a fisherman from Torrevieja in Spain’s Alicante province. The
couple had 11 children, with five born in Canada. The senior Soriano
worked halibut boats along the coast for many years, but when Max was
six weeks old the family resettled in Seattle – the entire household and
all those children moved south in the family’s fishing boat.
An
all-city pitcher as a senior at Franklin High School in Seattle, Max
Soriano, a right-hander, hoped to follow Dewey in pursuing a
professional baseball career. Dewey pitched for the Seattle Rainiers
before joining the wartime Merchant Marine. Max followed him in 1944
after graduating from high school. He quickly rose in rank to become a
junior officer on ships plying the waters from Puget Sound north through
Georgia Strait and on to Alaska.
He enrolled at the University
of Washington after the war, pitching for the school’s Huskies baseball
team while earning a degree in American history. A persistently sore
right throwing arm limited his baseball prospects, so he attended law
school instead of pursuing an athletic career.
Soriano
specialized in admiralty law, which proved helpful as he represented his
brother in a lawsuit after Dewey, who worked as a harbour pilot, struck
a submerged rock in Juan de Fuca Strait while guiding an Asia-bound
freighter in 1961. (Dewey also struck another rock in 1967 and hit a
bridge in 1982.)
In 1948, Dewey borrowed $15,000 from his
brothers to purchase the Yakima (Wash.) Bears, a minor-league team for
which he also served as manager and starting pitcher. In time, Dewey
became president of the Pacific Coast League, a circuit which included
the Vancouver Mounties. Max acted as the league’s legal counsel.
At baseball’s winter meetings in Mexico City in 1967,Selecting the best rtls
solution is a challenging task as there is no global solution like GPS.
a group headed by the Soriano brothers was awarded an expansion
franchise on the condition a major-league-quality baseball stadium be
built in the near future.
The brothers fronted $2-million, most of it in Max’s name,An indoor positioning
system (IPS) is a term used for a network of devices used to wirelessly
locate objects or people inside a building. as Dewey was going through a
divorce at the time. Financing came from William R. Daley, a former
owner of the Cleveland Indians.
The new team, named the Pilots,
not coincidentally Dewey’s occupation, played at Sicks’ Stadium, a
Depression-era park that suffered from a lack of amenities, not the
least of which was low water pressure that made it impossible to flush
toilets during games with a large attendance. Renovations to increase
capacity were not completed before Opening Day, so many paying customers
arrived to find their seats had yet to be installed.
The team,
stocked with castoffs and rejects, stumbled on the field, losing 98
games. (One of those players was a knuckleball-throwing relief pitcher
named Jim Bouton, who maintained a diary that would become the book Ball
Four, a hilarious account of baseball life that is still in print.)
Attendance was poor. The brothers – Dewey, the dynamic front man, and
Max, the cerebral presence – were overwhelmed by problems.
Though
voters had approved the building of a domed stadium, its construction
seemed far off. With the club losing $12,500 per day and no financial
institution willing to bankroll it, the brothers declared bankruptcy.
The team was “without funds and it’s impossible to borrow money,” Max
Soriano would tell an adjudicator.
The team moved to Milwaukee
just days before the start of the 1970 season, leaving behind angry
season-ticket holders and a flurry of lawsuits.
After the Pilots
fiasco, Soriano once again turned to business, developing real estate
in Seattle, Alaska and Hawaii. With brother Amigo Soriano, he purchased
the freighter Western Pioneer and began shipping clothing, hardware and
foodstuffs to Alaska, returning with boatloads of crab. The company
stopped shipping in 2005 but retains stores in Dutch Harbor, Alaska.
Major-league
baseball eventually returned to Seattle and, with the passing of the
years, the enmity toward the Soriano brothers eased substantially.
“I
think history has been kinder to Max and his brother Dewey for bringing
the Pilots and for trying to get them started,” said Larry Soriano,
Max’s son and president of Western Pioneer Inc. “They were ahead of
their time.”
Max Soriano, who retired in 1998, never lost his
passion for the summer game. He was an enthusiastic fan of the Seattle
Mariners,Installers and distributors of solar panel,
the successors to his ill-fated Pilots, and could be found sitting in
his company’s season tickets in Row 14 behind home plate at Safeco
Field.
Soriano died on Sept. 15 at Swedish Medical Center. He
leaves two sons, three daughters, eight grandchildren and a
great-grandson. He also leaves a sister, Gloria Soriano, and a brother,
Charles (Chuck) Soriano. He was predeceased by his wife, the former Ruth
Allingham, a teacher whom he married in 1950. She died of cancer, aged
72, in 1999. He was also predeceased by eight siblings, including Dewey
Soriano, who died in 1998, at the age of 78.
沒有留言:
張貼留言