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Kino Stadium will host a pair of Mexican Pacific League teams for a three-game baseball series starting Nov. 11.

The International Series between the Yaquis de Obregon and Aguilas de Mexicali will mark the first time in the history of the Mexican Pacific League that two teams will play a regular-season series stateside.

The event will be put on by Vamos a Tucson Mexican Baseball Fiesta, the same group that puts on the series of Mexican Pacific League exhibitions at Kino Stadium every October. First pitch is scheduled for 7 p.m. on Nov. 11, a Friday; Saturday and Sunday’s game will start at 5:10 p.m. Tickets go on sale Tuesday at MexicanBaseballFiesta.com.; prices start at $15, with discounts available for children, seniors and the military. All three games will be televised in Mexico via pay-per-view.

Mike Feder and his Mexican Baseball Fiesta partner, former Mexican Pacific League pitcher Francisco Gamez, had been working to get a regular-season series in Tucson for a number of years. The Yaquis club always seemed like a possible partner, Feder said. Their owner, Rene Rodriguez, attends the Mexican Baseball Fiesta at Kino Stadium every October. When Gamez and Rodriguez talked recently, the Yaquis owner indicated he was open to moving a home series from Ciudad Obregon to the United States. Organizers discussed holding the event in either Tucson or Mesa before choosing Kino Stadium.

β€œRene really believes in the future of the league, with the possibility that expansion could occur in the United States,” Feder said. Which is why β€œthere’s a lot of eyeballs on this,” Feder said.

Including those of Gamez. His son, Luis, a Cienega High School graduate, is a starting pitcher for the Yaquis. Obregon’s roster also includes former Arizona Wildcat Jared Oliva, who spent part of the 2020 and 2021 seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates, and former big-leaguers Arturo Lopez and Allen Cordoba. The Aguilas’ roster includes ex-big-leaguers Scott Schebler and Chris Roberson as well as Seth Blair, a former first-round pick out of Arizona State.

β€œPeople (in the United States) don’t understand: The Mexican Winter League’s got good talent,” Feder said.

The series is already being promoted heavily in Mexico, Feder said, with a push to fill the stands coming to Tucson soon. The Mexican Baseball Fiesta drew 5,000 and 7,000 fans to Kino Stadium on back-to-back nights earlier this month. A similar showing could put Tucson in the running for an expansion franchise, should the league ever push north of the border.

β€œWe just want this to work,” Feder said.


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