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Shortstop Dave Concepcion No. 13 has been retired…
CINCINNATI -- Shortstop Dave Concepcion had his No.
13 retired Saturday by the Cincinnati Reds, joining
three Hall of Fame teammates and his Big Red Machine
manager in the franchise's ultimate tribute.
Concepcion was honored on the field and his number
was unveiled on an upper-deck facade --
appropriately, toward the left side of the infield
-- before a game against the Florida Marlins.
Hall of Famers Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan and Tony
Perez were on the field for the tribute, along with
manager Sparky Anderson. Their numbers already had
been retired by the ballclub.

Dave Concepcion, right, hugs former Reds manager
Sparky Anderson during a pregame ceremony to retire
Concepcion's No. 13 jersey.
Former teammates Ken Griffey Sr. and George Foster
also were part of the ceremony.
The crowd chanted, "Davey! Davey!" as the 59-year-old
Concepcion walked to a microphone on the field,
prompting him to turn away and dab his eyes with a
towel. He sniffled and repeatedly stopped in mid-sentence
-- choked with emotion -- as he thanked his family
and former teammates.
"Coming to the microphone -- this is the hardest
part of baseball for me," he said.
He got a standing ovation after telling the crowd:
"I love Cincinnati. I love you all." Concepcion, who
once pitched in relief against the Dodgers, then
went in front of the mound and made a ceremonial
toss to Bench.
The ball made it there on the fly, unlike the skip
throw to first base that he perfected on Riverfront
Stadium's artificial turf during his 19-year career
with the Reds.
Although No. 13 is considered unlucky by most
athletes, the Venezuelan chose it to honor his
mother, Ernestina, who was born in 1913. He won five
Gold Gloves, was a nine-time All-Star, was chosen
MVP of the 1982 All-Star Game and was honored as
team captain in 1983.
Concepcion's number was the eighth retired by the
Reds, joining those of manager Fred Hutchinson (1),
Bench (5), Morgan (8), Anderson (10), Ted Kluszewski
(18), Frank Robinson (20) and Perez (24). Jackie
Robinson's No. 42 has been retired by Major League
Baseball.
One of the hallmarks of the Big Red Machine was the
constant clubhouse teasing. Concepcion was reminded
at a luncheon and news conference Saturday how much
his teammates loved to have fun at his expense.
"You guys got on me for 19 years when I was playing,
and I've been retired for 19 years and you're still
getting on me," he told his former teammates at a
group news conference.
Morgan, the other half of the Big Red Machine's
double-play combination, was delighted to see
Concepcion get his due.
"Unfortunately, I think we've overshadowed his
accomplishments," Morgan said. "Sparky and Johnny
and I, we're in the Hall of Fame, and I think we
tend to overlook what he did on a daily basis. Guys
like Davey and Foster and [Lee] May and Griffey
don't get their just due."
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