Renteria's dream fostered by relationship with father
By: GREG BALL - Staff Writer | ∞
TEMECULA ---- Anthony Renteria remembers the exact moment he knew he wanted to be a major-league baseball player. He was 10 years old, and spent the summer tagging along with his dad, Rick Renteria, in Maine, where Rick was a minor-league manager with the Portland Sea Dogs of the Double-A Eastern League.
The younger Renteria spent his days shagging fly balls with future Florida Marlins players, occasionally taking batting practice, and staying up past his bedtime to watch games from the dugout bench every night.
"I had gone from playing Little League and practicing a couple times a week to being there and seeing them play every day," Anthony said. "It was like, 'Man, this is the greatest thing ever. Every day, this is what they get paid to do ---- have fun and play baseball.' Right then, that's what made me want to play."
It was an opportunity very few aspiring ballplayers ever get, and his father's connection to baseball has continued to help him develop his game. Now a sophomore at Great Oak High School, Anthony makes his summer ballpark visits just up the road in Lake Elsinore, as Rick now manages the Single-A Storm.
He's in his second season managing the Padres affiliate, following one season during which he was the team's hitting coach.
Anthony, the Wolfpack's center fielder and leadoff man ---- who is third on the team with a .309 batting average and leads the club in home runs (three), RBIs (17) and slugging percentage (.636) ---- said growing up around the game has given him a significant advantage.
"I try to get advice from everybody I can, and I try to work out with (the minor-league players) whenever I can," Anthony said, adding that California League All-Star Paul McAnulty became one of his mentors last summer. "They show me a lot. I'll get a lot of advice from them, and my dad."
What he also gets from his dad is the genes of a former major-league player. Rick was a first-round draft pick of the Pittsburgh Pirates in 1980 and played parts of five major-league seasons as a middle infielder with the Pirates, Mariners and Marlins.
Because of his upbringing, Anthony is different than his peers, though most of the pressure he feels to perform is self imposed.
"I think people think he's supposed to be this 'thing' that functions without a glitch," Rick said. "I think it's natural for coaches to have expectations like that.
"Sometimes he puts pressure on himself to live up to certain things. He has a strong desire to succeed."
Great Oak coach Eric Morton said he didn't know Anthony's background before the team started practice this spring, but quickly saw the outfielder would be something special.
"As soon as we had a couple workouts, you could tell he was a player," Morton said. "The good thing about Tony is that he knows baseball. Having been around it with his dad and with the Storm, he knows some of the things most kids his age don't realize ---- like how to read a pitcher's move to the plate and the importance of hitting to all fields."
Morton said he doesn't treat Anthony different than any other player. Morton has been impressed with the sophomore's maturity and work ethic, which he said is something that sets Anthony apart from his high school teammates.
The younger Renteria knows that his name alone won't get him drafted or earn him a college scholarship. Instead, it has made him determined to become a better, more complete player. And he isn't shy about making public where he wants that extra effort to take him ---- it all goes back to his summers on the rocky Maine coast.
"My goal is to play in the big leagues," Anthony said. "Ever since I can remember, that's all I've wanted to do."
Greg Ball can be reached at (951) 676-4315, Ext. 2629 or gball@californian.com.
More Stories
Advertisement
- HOUSING: Local median price up for third straight month (45)
- ESCONDIDO: Man shot dead at Fourth of July party (44)
- FALLBROOK: Peruvian chocolatier living sweet American dream (29)
- ESCONDIDO: Border Patrol employee in custody after hatchet attack (28)
- ESCONDIDO: Victim's roommate recalls July 4 shooting, friends gather for vigil (27)
- ESCONDIDO: Man shot dead at Fourth of July party (10463)
- TEMECULA: Protesters line intersection (6482)
- ESCONDIDO: 3 DUI arrests, 46 impounds at checkpoint (5254)
- ESCONDIDO: Border Patrol employee in custody after hatchet attack (5003)
- ESCONDIDO: City's dreams of an 'upscale' downtown may be dying (4895)
Advertisement
Videos
Calendar of Events
- San Diego’s Largest Business Clothing Drive Benefits Local Men and Women in Job Training Programs : Mission Federal Credit Union Locations
- Ice Cream Social 4 : Imagination Workshop
- Friday Night Knitting : Daily Fiber Yarn Company
- Lamb's Fellowship Lake Elsinore Vacation Bible School : Lamb's Fellowship Lake Elsinore
- Music Friday with Deek and Long : Tesoro Winery
- View all events. | Submit Event
- Submarina Hosts Darren Sproles Powered Up Youth Football Camp : Del Norte High School
- Julian Wine Tour : Menghini Winery
- Community Health and Fitness Expo : Westfield Plaza Camino Real
- Compassion Community 5K Walk : Greater Works Church
- Ziggy Marley to perform at Barnes & Noble : Barnes & Noble Mira Mesa
- View all events. | Submit Event
- Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat : Welk Resort Theatre
- 'Christmas in July' Artisan Fair : Mission San Luis Rey Parish
- CORVETTE DINER & GAMERS GARAGE SUMMER BASH : Corvette Diner
- San Diego’s Largest Business Clothing Drive Benefits Local Men and Women in Job Training Programs : Mission Federal Credit Union Locations
- Carlsbad Library Summer Concert featuring 'BAYOU BROTHERS' : Georgina Cole Library
- View all events. | Submit Event
- Class on 'Ten Ways to Prevent Dementia' : Gloria McClellan Senior Center
- Business Owners Network : Rossi's Pizza
- Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat : Welk Resort Theatre
- Summer Basketball Camp Starts July 13 : Rancho Minerva Middle School
- Weekly Baseball/Softball Summer Camps : Prime Time Expos
- View all events. | Submit Event
- Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat : Welk Resort Theatre
- Songfest and BBQ at Mission San Luis Rey : Mission San Luis Rey
- Summer Basketball Camp Starts July 13 : Rancho Minerva Middle School
- Bereavement Support Group- Poway : Poway Senior Center
- Italian Conversation and Culture Classes : THEATRX
- View all events. | Submit Event
- The 5 Most Dangerous Threats to Your Brain's Health : Mt. San Jacinto College - Menifee
- Forensic Anthropology : Western Center Museum
- Joseph & The Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat : Welk Resort Theatre
- Sports Camp - The Great Comeback : North Coast Presbyterian Church
- Business Leaders Weekly Breakfast : Denny's
- View all events. | Submit Event
Extras
The Agnes Diggs Road to College Scholarships
Two $500 scholarships will be awarded to continuing college students. Applications are due August 7.
A Tale of Two Hospitals
Special Report: Why does Palomar thrive while Tri-City struggles to survive?




Anthony Renteria
