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Chinese Baseball Team Takes Over Minor League Club Texas AirHogs

The starting lineups are announced in English and Spanish at home games for the independent Texas AirHogs, and then the Chinese national anthem is played.

For about 30 members of the Chinese national baseball team, the suburban ballpark adjacent to a horse track and only a few miles west of downtown Dallas has become their summer home and training ground in an unprecedented setup.

They are a revolving part of the roster for a professional team in the United States, playing more games and against tougher competition while working to improve their team for future international events such as the upcoming Asian Games and 2020 Olympics.

"The system that they've created here, where we work out in the morning, we've got weight training, the pitchers have a system where we throw on, the coaches have kind of set up a system that's really helped them to be able to make the adjustment to play more games," Sun Jianzeng, a 26-year-old right-hander, said through a translator.

Chinese players, who professionally back home would play only 20-30 games a season, make up about two-thirds of the expanded roster for the American Association team now formally known as the AirHogs powered by Beijing Shougang Eagles.

The players ranging in age from 18 to 29 rotate on and off the active roster to play 6-7 games a week in one of the low-minor leagues not affiliated with Major League Baseball.

"It makes it workable, because we don't want to wear these guys down," said AirHogs manager John McLaren, a big league coach for three decades who has worked with Chinese teams since 2011.

Players not on the active roster for games go through early workouts at AirHogs Stadium, 10 minutes from the home ballpark of the Texas Rangers. There are conditioning and weight training drills that are new to the Chinese players.

"They're trying to do something they've never done before, which is play this many games on a daily basis, and you throw into the fact that with the exception of maybe three or four pitchers, they're physically and experienced-wise overmatched," said Larry Hardy, a former Rangers pitching coach filling the same role for the AirHogs. "But they're getting better."

McLaren, who had a short stint managing Seattle in 2007-08 and was Washington's interim manager for three games in 2011, was on the Philadelphia Phillies staff the past two seasons.

He also managed China at the World Baseball Classic in 2013 and 2017. Over that time, there would be gaps of six or seven months when he wouldn't even see the team, and players would barely play baseball. China has a 2-10 record in its four WBC appearances, getting outscored 102-18 in those games.

"These guys, I don't think they'd ever played twice in a week," McLaren said.

That changed when the Chinese Baseball Association made arrangement with the AirHogs, allowing them to focus on daily development.

They are now together all of the time in a 12-team league that stretches more than 1,300 miles south to north through the middle of the United States — and into Canada with the Winnipeg Goldeyes. The closest stop is Cleburne, Texas, where 53-year-old former big league slugger Rafael Palmeiro is starring for the Railroaders.

China's only Olympic berth was in 2008, going 1-6 in group play after an automatic berth as the host nation. That was the last time baseball was part of the Summer Games until its 2020 return in Tokyo.

The AirHogs are a league-worst 17-44 this season, but player-coach Na Chuang said the team has progressed faster than expected, increasing the confidence of the Chinese players who will leave with McLaren and some of their national coaches for the Asian Games in Indonesia before the end of the 100-game AirHogs season.

Kevin Joseph, who pitched in the majors briefly with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2002, is part of McLaren's staff as an assistant pitching coach and invaluable translator. He learned Mandarin Chinese while spending more than eight years teaching baseball to young people after a friend with connections to baseball officials in China invited him there.

"The big need I think for China is they don't play a lot of games. So for them to be able to come, and to learn the rhythm of a baseball lifestyle, play against better competition, has been a great experience," Joseph said. "The players have really meshed well with the Chinese guys, they love them."

There are the inevitable hiccups because of communication issues and culture differences, including the style of play the Chinese players were used to, but Joseph said things have gone great overall.

"It's fun just to watch them interact with everybody, and themselves, and show up every day, kidding and joking," said McLaren, sitting in the coaches office next to a narrow room cramped with lockers. "It's a clubhouse. They're a different culture, speak a different language, but the laugh in the clubhouse is the same."

Joseph said hitters have changed the way they swing the bat, being more aggressive and ready to hit against velocity beyond what they'd ever faced.

For the pitchers, the emphasis has been on throwing more fastballs and fewer breaking balls. Hardy said the catchers have started to understand what the coaches are looking for from pitchers.

"The level of play is a lot higher," Jianzeng said. "You can make smallest mistakes, can be hurt here as a pitcher. ... Because you're playing so many games, you're learning about yourself as a pitcher, and you're getting a lot more experience."