A's prospect leaving baseball for priesthood
Rob Fai isn’t surprised that Oakland A’s prospect Grant
Desme is ending his baseball career to enter the priesthood.
The timing? To him, that’s the shocking thing.
Desme is leaving the game at a time when his fortunes seemed
to be rising fast. He batted .288 with 31 home runs and 89 RBIs in
131 games last year. Then he starred in the Arizona Fall League,
where some of the game’s top prospects compete. He likely
would have started this season at Class AA.
“Here’s a kid that’s on the brink,”
Fai said over the phone from Vancouver, B.C., where he works as the
assistant general manager for the Oakland affiliate there.
“This would probably be an easier decision for someone who
was maybe going through the motions in the minors.
“But if you know Grant, the spiritual side of his life
has always been a priority. I don’t know if there was a
tipping factor that made him wake up and say, ‘Today’s
the day.’”
Regardless, today is the day: As first reported by
FOXSports.com, the 23-year-old star prospect has informed the
A’s that he will retire and become a priest.
“I’m doing well in baseball,” Desme told
reporters on Friday, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
“But I had to get down to the bottom of things, to what was
good in my life, what I wanted to do with my life. Baseball is a
good thing, but that felt selfish of me when I felt that God was
calling me more. ... I love the game, but I’m going to aspire
to higher things.”
Fai and others said Friday that religion has been very
important to Desme for years. He began his professional career with
an injury-shortened stay in Vancouver in 2007, and Fai said,
“You could see back then that he was extraordinarily polite
and articulate about his religion. You knew it was a big part of
his life, and that he would like to be a pastor.”
“There was a spiritual side to him, but he never forced
it on you,” Fai continued. “He wouldn’t miss a
baseball chapel. I don’t think he had a timeline for
(becoming a priest), but it’s something he wanted to
do.”
Desme, a Bakersfield, Calif., native, was the 2007 Big West
Player of the Year at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Baseball America
ranked him as the organization’s No. 8 prospect after last
season.
Fai broadcasts games for the Class A Canadians in addition to
his administrative duties. Desme hit one home run in his 12-game
tenure with the team, but Fai remembers it as “probably the
longest home run in franchise history.”
“All I hope is that, at the end of the day, he never
regrets (making the decision now),” Fai said. “So few
players get to the point where he’s at. In my perspective,
the guy could be a priest when he’s 35 or 60. …
Here’s a guy who’s so unbelievably close to making it.
The timing is the one factor I can’t figure out.”
Fai wondered if current events — the earthquake in
Haiti, perhaps? — compelled Desme to make the decision now,
reasoning that “wearing a different uniform” would
enable him to address more pressing issues in the world. If that is
indeed one of the reasons, it would fit with Desme’s
thoughtful nature.
“He might have been the quietest high-end draft pick
I’ve ever seen,” Fai said. “He is probably the
one guy I’d let my daughter date.”
Fai laughed, not realizing the irony in his remark until
after he said it. Desme may never play in the major leagues, but he
certainly knows what it feels like to get The Call.