
(The Chief, circa 2006. Photo by @misschatter.)
For as long as he can remember, Chad Cordero would wake up on a late January morning like this and start thinking about throwing a baseball. But the winter of 2012 has been like nothing Chad Cordero has ever experienced in his life. “Very weird” is how Cordero described it in a phone call on Monday. “This time of year I’d be thinking about getting ready for Spring Training, throwing bullpens, playing catch, trying to get in shape. It’s very different.”
Instead, the greatest closer in the (albeit brief) history of the Washington Nationals is enjoying life at home in California with his family and coaching high school baseball. And that’s exactly where he wants to be at the moment. Words can’t properly do justice to describe the hell Cordero has been through over the past year; he retired from professional baseball in June after attempting another comeback from shoulder surgery (don’t underestimate the impact of those 224 appearances with the Nationals from 2005-2008), mere months after the tragic loss of his infant daughter Tehya to SIDS. On his decision to retire last June, Cordero explains: “I needed time to clear my head after everything that happened with my daughter. I needed to step back and reassess. Once I found out my wife was pregnant again, I wanted to be there with her, with my family. I didn’t want to miss a day. I didn’t want to miss a minute.”
And who could blame him? Cordero and his wife Jamie welcomed a son, Cooper, into the world on January 3.
To Washington DC baseball fans, the man known best as “The Chief” remains one of the most beloved of the original 2005 Nats; and he’ll be returning to the Washington DC area this summer, participating in Bethesda Big Train’s Celebrity Baseball camp from July 16 to July 20 at Cabin John Park in Bethesda, Maryland. More information about the camp is available on the Big Train website.
We had a chance to speak with Cordero by phone on Monday about his involvement in the camp, and what he’s been doing these days.