Welcome to the Cespedes Family BBQ: An Introduction
We are Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman, and we are the Cespedes Family BBQ. You may know us from Baseball Twitter or from some of the stuff we've done here on Cut4 over the past year. If you don't know who we are, let us provide a brief introduction.
To start, what's the deal with the name? In January 2012, current New York Mets outfielder/horserider/dinger-knocker
Even Vin Scully has seen it!
Some teenagers are inspired by music, some by art, some by literature. We were inspired by a large baseball man from Cuba roasting a large pig on a rotisserie with his family in the background. To each their own.
Then we, two high school seniors, started a website and Twitter account, and the BBQ was born; a spontaneous baseball-blogging journey had begun. Nearly four years later, here we are -- joining MLB.com.
We've already done some pretty cool stuff over the past few years. Our cross-country summer road trip last summer was documented here on Cut4, and featured a ridiculous variety of activities with some of the top prospects in the game. For example, Jake competed in a July 4th apple pie eating contest:
We watched a Red Sox prospect throw a bat over the Mini Green Monster:
Our road trip's final destination was All-Star Week in San Diego, where we asked relief pitchers about the Home Run Derby (naturally):
And of course, we had to talk to
We even made it to the World Series, where we sought out the most eclectic Cubs fans around Wrigley Field:
While we don't have the expertise of former All-Stars, Jake did play Division III baseball at Washington University in St. Louis. A sidearm reliever with below-average control, above-average movement and buckets of irrational confidence, Jake was only ejected once in his four-year career. After being beyond dreadful his first three years (11.94 ERA), he was -- much to the surprise of his friends and family -- actually really good his senior year (0.81 ERA in 31 innings).
Jordan on the other hand is significantly less athletic, but means really well. His baseball career ended in 10th grade after he made the difficult and painstaking decision to do other things with his free time.
We thrive at the intersection of millennial distraction, baseball, and tomfoolery. We think baseball is fun and weird, and we want to share that with all you other people who also think baseball is fun and weird -- in writing, on camera or in your earholes (podcasts are also our thing).
Welcome to the Cespedes Family BBQ. We hope you like the food, and we know you'll love the banter.