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・ José Carrillo de Albornoz, 1st Duke of Montemar
・ José Carvallo
・ José Casado
・ José Casado del Alisal
・ José Casanova
・ José Cassandra
・ José Castañeda
・ José Castel
・ José Castelblanco
・ José Castellanos Contreras
・ José Castillo
・ José Castillo (athlete)
・ José Castillo (baseball)
・ José Castillo (police officer)
・ José Castro
José Castro (baseball)
・ José Castro (disambiguation)
・ José Castro (fencer)
・ José Castro (sport shooter)
・ José Castulo Zeledón
・ José Castán Tobeñas
・ José Catalá
・ José Catieau
・ José Catire Carpio
・ José Cazorla
・ José Cazorla (sports shooter)
・ José Cazorla Maure
・ José Cañas
・ José Cecena
・ José Cecilio del Valle


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José Castro (baseball) : ウィキペディア英語版
José Castro (baseball)

José Castro (born May 5, 1958, at Havana, Cuba) is a coach in Major League Baseball who will spend as assisting hitting coach of the Atlanta Braves. He was previously the hitting coach of the Seattle Mariners for part of the 2008 season and the quality assurance coach of the Chicago Cubs. A former minor league infielder who played for 14 seasons (1977–1990) without reaching the Majors, Castro also spent part of the 2010 season as the manager of the Tacoma Rainiers, the Mariners' Triple-A affiliate.
Castro also has served as the hitting coach with the San Diego Padres Triple-A affiliate Portland Beavers from 2005–2006, and the Montreal Expos now-defunct Triple-A affiliate Edmonton Trappers in 2003. He was announced as the roving minor league hitting instructor for the entire Seattle Mariners organization in December 2007.〔(Mariners announce 2008 Minor League Coaching and Player Development staff | Mariners.com: Official Info )〕 Following Seattle Mariners manager John McLaren's firing on June 19, 2008, bench coach Jim Riggleman was promoted to the top spot, Lee Elia was moved from hitting coach to bench coach, and Castro became the new hitting coach for the team. On January 13, 2009, he was named the Mariners' minor league hitting coordinator.
Castro went to Miami Jackson Senior High school where they retired his number, "9". He signed out of high school in 1977, Castro played minor league ball for 14 years, with 10 of these being at the Triple-A level. However, he never played in the majors, and instead went right into coaching, which he's done ever since.
Castro defected from Cuba with his family at a young age in 1965.
On August 9, 2010, Castro was promoted from hitting coach to interim manager of the Tacoma Rainiers, replacing Daren Brown. The Mariners had named Brown their manager after firing Don Wakamatsu earlier that day.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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