Pedro's Treasures: Suns Owner Hopes Momentos Become Museum
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82° 91° 89° eEdition Activate | Subscribe Now Tomorrow Wednesday HOME NEWS SPORTS MONEY LIFE REASON OPINION OBITS PHOTOS VIDEOS CLASSIFIEDS CARS JOBS HOMES DEALS HOME/SPORTS Pedro's Treasures: Suns owner hopes momentos become museum pieces after he retires Pedro Bragan has seen a lot in his 31 years with his family's business ties to minor- league baseball in Jacksonville By Frances Hanold Sun, Aug 9, 2015 @ 10:57 pm | updated Mon, Aug 10, 2015 @ 6:41 am BACK PHOTO: 1 OF 3 NEXT Pedro Bragan has seen a lot in his Slideshow: Pedro Bragan's Top 9 31 years with his family’s treasures business ties to minor-league baseball in Jacksonville. His family has presided over 2,300 RECOMMENDATIONS FOR YOU wins and 2,063 losses in Jacksonville — and he has plenty Person shot at multiple times in of memories and treasures to Northwest Bruce Lipsky Jacksonville Photos by [email protected] The nameplate and other items will be removed at the end of the season prove it. when Peter Bragan turns the Suns over to Ken Babby. Bragan’s office resembles something of a baseball museum. It is filled to the brim — and beyond — with antique jerseys, autographed Golden Years: Wedding Anniversaries (August baseballs, vintage pennants and other relics and souvenirs. This business refuge has been 9) home to reminders of his most precious associations and memories related to his family’s long-time connection to Jacksonville and the national pastime. Slideshow: Pedro Bragan's Top 9 treasures Sunday Business Atop his cluttered desk is a simple nameplate that bears the name and a title he soon will Notebook: Bass Pro Shops still plans North relinquish — Peter D. Bragan, President. St. Johns location Centered on the front of his sturdy wooden desk is a still-vibrant metal sign that long served as baseball’s standard admonishment to players. The red-and-white “NO PEPPER” display Pedro Bragan’s Top 9 once proudly graced Wolfson Park, the Suns’ original home field. Wolfson was Jacksonville’s treasures primary ballpark before it was demolished in 2002 in favor of the Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville. “That’s a unique thing, that Pepper sign,” he said. “People will say ‘What the hell does that mean? No Pepper.’ They don’t understand it,” the ever-demonstrative Bragan said. Such mid-20th-century signage served as a not-so-subtle reminder to players taking part in a then-popular pregame ritual — a hand-eye coordination batting and fielding game known as pepper. Playing the game, which required a batter to try to return soft-toss pitches in the form of a one-hop ground ball, often chewed up the carefully manicured sod near home plate. This became a continuous source of irritation for groundskeepers. Bragan said stadiums began retiring the signs as the game faded into obscurity. And, as his thoughts drifted to a different era, he lamented that pepper has become something of a lost art. Gators stunned at All-First Coast abrupt end to baseball Baseball: Mike Cassala “The guys would get out there and start playing Pepper, and they’d chew the grass up in no season helped Bartram Trail take winning step time, so all the ballparks had ‘No Pepper’ signs. Now, you never see ’em. Nobody has ‘No Pepper’ signs anymore because the guys don’t play pepper. They have their organized MEMORIES OF Florida Gators THE GAME: advance to batting practice,” the 64-year-old owner of the Suns said. Pedro Looks NCAA regional Back baseball finals To the right of his desk is a cabinet designed to display more than 100 autographed Aug 07, 2015 May 31, 2015 baseballs. Atop the cabinet is a corked bat that has been split in half to reveal a hollowed footlong core and its illegal fillings. “I think there was a period there in the late ’80s, early ’90s where you could probably say 15 percent [of players] were trying to use corked bats,” Bragan said. “It’s illegal. By replacing the center wood with cork, you don’t hurt the integrity of the bat, but you lighten it up by two or three ounces, so now you get more bat speed. You can get to that big-league fastball.” The bat came into Bragan’s possession nearly 20 years ago, when a visiting Chattanooga Lookouts player whose name has long since been forgotten, swung and connected with a pitch at Wolfson Park. His bat shattered and exposed several pieces of cork that had been jammed into the core. Mom & Child jewelry for only $10 ORIG: DISCOUNT: VALUE: The player was tossed and given a suspension, and he was fined several hundred dollars. $20 50% $10 View Deal And Bragan had himself a souvenir and a story worth retelling for generations. JUST IN Bragan’s uncle, Jim Bragan, happened to be president of the Southern League at the time and let his nephew keep the bat to add to his collection. Road program hits a snag with bids “It’s a unique collectible, because you always hear about corked bats, but you never see running higher than planned ’em,” Bragan said during a recent exclusive interview with The Florida Times-Union. “And 10:57pm there this one is exposed and ripped open. It’s always been a neat oddity.” Pedro's Treasures: Suns owner hopes But these and other personal artifacts won’t be in the office at the Baseball Grounds for much momentos become museum pieces after he retires longer. 6:41am For Bragan, these items have an increased meaning as the 2015 season runs its course. He Retrorama gives many reason to dress is selling the team in September to Ken Babby, who already owns the Akron RubberDucks, a up and nerd out in Jacksonville minor league team in Ohio. 10:57pm “Babby wanted it bad,” Bragan explained. “He has a plan to own several teams. He just Volunteer Braille-transcription group happened to come through Jacksonville. He had his little boy with him and happened to seeks new members: 'So rewarding' come to a game. It was a Friday or Saturday night when we had a good crowd of enthusiastic 5:59am people, and he loved everything he saw. He liked the market, the crowd, the ballpark and Woman stabbed Sunday in Jacksonville everything about it. That’s what he told me later.” in critical condition 6:21pm Bragan said he has received many offers throughout the years, but he never expected to Putnam County teen shot, killed in reach his bottom of the ninth this soon. He and his accountants had valued the Double-A apparent accident Southern League affiliate of the Miami Marlins at roughly $16 million. Babby’s offer was 5:28pm significantly more and immediately piqued Bragan’s interest. “I wasn’t even thinking about selling when Babby came, but then he said ‘Twenty something,’ PAID PRESS RELEASES and I said ‘Are you kidding me? Let me talk to my wife.’ ” The Suddath Companies recognized as Still, there has been a struggle coming to grips with the reality that awaits as he approaches one of 2015's best and healthiest places to work his second-to-last homestand. VIEW ALL ITEMS | POST A RELEASE Has he had second thoughts? “I have. I really have, but it’s time for me to move on. Daddy [Peter Bragan Sr.] had to die as the owner of the Suns. There was no way he was going to sell it. But I don’t have to, and I don’t have a son or daughter, so it’s my time. And at the number this man offered, Daddy would be saying ‘Sign them papers, boy.’ ” Bragan’s voice softened as he reflected on his father, who died in 2012 at age 89. The elder Bragan bought the Suns in 1984 after selling his automobile dealership in Birmingham, Ala. His family has a rich history in the game, distinguishing themselves not only in minor-league towns, but in major-league cities as well. His dream was to own a team, and he and his son had a memorable and successful ownership run for the next 28 years. “That first year after he died, I’d get up and go down the hall [at the office] to ask him something,” he said, his trademark Southern drawl trailing off. Carrying on without his lifetime business partner just hasn’t been the same. “Daddy. I miss him all the time, you know? We were not only father and son, but we were partners. It’s lost some of its great appeal to me. And I’ve lost some of my enthusiasm for the job.” A vintage baseball glove that belonged to his father easily is one of Bragan’s most-treasured items. “There’s a video of me and him throwing on Father’s Day out there,” he said, motioning to what is now known as Bragan Field inside the Baseball Grounds. “He’s actually just bare- handed, and I have this glove. It just has a special meaning because it’s his. I like putting it on. It has a great feel to it,” he said as he repeatedly pounded his fist into the heart of the mitt. The thick leather glove, which has no laces on the fingers, has been without its original Nokona label for many years. It’s been in the Bragan family since the early 1940s. “That glove was probably from a left-handed pitcher or an outfielder on the Phillies that my Jax Featured uncle [infielder Bobby Bragan] said, ‘Hey, could I get one of those extra left-handed gloves LockerDome and give it to my younger brother?’ And that’s how he got the glove.” Jax Featured 1of6 But it was a small metal pin that surprisingly evoked the most excitement from the man 1of6 known around these parts as Pedro.