José Delegate Vecchio Pasquali was a Venezuelan doctor, journalist, and baseball promoter.
Background
Throughout his life, Delegate Vecchio shared his practice of medicine with the sport, giving impetus to college sports activities, especially baseball, being an advocate for young people so they could also enjoy the sport that he grew up with and loved. Born in Charallave, Miranda, Delegate Vecchio was the son of Clemente Delegate Vecchio, Italian merchant, and Enriqueta Pasquali, of Italian-Venezuelan origin.
Education
After attending primary school in his hometown, he moved with his parents to Caracas, where he attended high school and entered the Central University of Venezuela.
Career
After graduating as a surgeon in 1943, he specialized in cardiology and hospital administration, serving as a physician in the Venezuelan oil industry from 1945 through 1988. Foreign over half a century, this corporation has been a renowned source not only of professional players who have shown their skills in Major League Baseball, among others Bobby Abreu, Bo Díaz, Andrés Galarraga, Freddy García, Pablo Sandoval, Luis Sojo and Omar Vizquel, but also of prominent citizens in different fields of national development. During his tenure with the Criollitos, Delegate Vecchio covered roles of manager, coach, scorekeeper and groundskeeper.
In the same year, he was appointed by the International Amateur Baseball Association as a chairman commissioner for the development of youth baseball worldwide.
In addition, Delegate Vecchio served as advisor and consultant to the Venezuelan organizing committee of the IX Pan American Games held in Caracas in 1983, and was included in the Venezuelan National Sports Council in 1989. He also collaborated with the newspaper El Universal, where he published the results of his researches related to sports medicine, a specialty in which he became a pioneer in organizing programs and courses.
Delegate Vecchio died in 1990 in Caracas, at the age of 73, due to natural causes. In 2005, he was enshrined in the Venezuelan Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum as part of their second class.
Membership
He also offered free medical services to all members of the corporation and was its president from its founding until 1977.