CDO wins the Oscar Romero Memorial

February 1, 2026 by Andy Morales, AZPreps365


CDO. (Andy Morales/AZPreps365)

VICTORY SPORTS FOUNDATION OSCAR ROMERO MEMORIAL

 

The Victory Sports Foundation held the Oscar Romero Memorial this past week at both Reid Park and Cherry Field with Canyon del Oro beating the Badgers 1-0 Sunday afternoon to capture the championship of the Memorial.

The Dorados scored the run in the fourth inning after Peyton Carson doubled to start the inning. He moved to third base after Regen Mazora singled one out later and Brayden Hoyler scored Carson on a groundout to the right side and that was the game. The Badgers picked up three hits and the Dorados had five. Jacob Garrison picked up the win for the Dorados.

 

FRIDAY, JANUARY 30 AT REID PARK

Tucson 2, Mica Mountain 1

Ironwood Ridge 4, Sunnyside 2

Canyon del Oro 2, Desert View 1

Catalina Foothills 10, Marana 1

Cienega 9, Casa Grande 2

Nogales 4, Vista Grande 3

Walden Grove 9, Rio Rico 3

Sahuarita 2, Buena 1

 

SATURDAY, JANUARY 31 AT REID PARK

Tucson 14, Cienega 2

Sunnyside 5, Vista Grande 0

Canyon del Oro 9, Walden Grove 6

Catalina Foothills 3, Sahuarita 3

Mica Mountain 12, Cienega 2

Ironwood Ridge 7, Vista Grande 5

Walden Grove 7, Desert View 7

Sahuarita 11, Marana 7

Mica Mountain 15, Casa Grande 1

Nogales 6, Ironwood Ridge 5

Desert View 9, Rio Rico 3

Buena 6, Marana 3

Tucson 7, Casa Grande 6

Sunnyside 5, Nogales 0

Canyon del Oro 13, Rio Rico 0

Buena 5, Marana 3

 

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1 AT REID PARK

Ironwood Ridge 8, Mica Mountain 6

Buena 7, Desert View 6

Walden Grove 20, Cienega 5

Catalina Foothills 12, Nogales 5

Casa Grande 16, Marana 3

Vista Grande 6, Rio Rico 5

 

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1 AT CHERRY FIELD

 

SEMIFINALS

Tucson 13, Sunnyside 1

Canyon del Oro 5, Sahuarita 4

 

CHAMPIONSHIP

Canyon del Oro 1, Tucson 0

OSCAR REYES ROMERO

Oscar Romero Family (L-R)  Alanna-Rose, Leanndra, Casanndra (with Orelia) and Daniel Sainz, Orlando and his wife  Jo Ann. (Andy Morales/AZPreps365)

 

Everything that could possibly be written or said about legendary Tucson High baseball coach Oscar Romero has already been put forth. Simply, Oscar was all that we know and more. Born in 1960 in Barrio Centro, Oscar passed away last September after a lifetime of being a Badger – literally. Oscar lived long enough to see the birth of his granddaughter Orelia, and I know that she was the answer to his wildest dreams, his greatest accomplishment and, possibly, his biggest heartbreak and truest love at the same time.

We will never see an Oscar with grey hair and we will never see Oscar sitting in the stands at Cherry Field in a decade or two as an honored figure. Cancer took all that away from us. But we take comfort knowing that Oscar lives on through his four children and Orelia. He will live through Orelia’s grandchildren.

Oscar will also live on through the many, many players who ran the bases for him. 488 victories in the scorebook fail to compare the their life victories. If you respected the game, you honored him. Oscar is there.

When Oscar stepped away from Tucson High in In 2018, I asked him to put in his own words what it meant to lead Tucson High:

“It has been my honor to have coached at my alma mater. To have coached at the most storied Baseball High School in America was quite a challenge. Growing up as a kid I used to always dream about putting the red and white on. I watched past players before me like Ron Hassey, Pete Otero, Mike Odom and Al Lopez, who I idolized.

I grew up with parents who loved baseball but always trusted my coaches and never questioned their intent. My father gave me the work ethic from a young age to work hard and to pursue perfection and your best effort was the key. My patience and perseverance came from my mother, she was a rock but always had a sensible quiet demeanor in handling situations.

I think I had a successful playing career at Tucson High and had many accolades at Tucson High. I also had great coaches like Ray Adkins and Tom Lundy who guided me and believed in me. Coaching had its bumps along the road but, all in all, it taught me how to treat and push young men to perform at their best. That is all I have ever striven for, having players to reach higher than they thought possible.

My father challenged me. He would say don’t be like me be better than me. I have given every ounce of my 35 years to making the program the best it could be. I wish the next candidate the best, but the torch will be passed on with keeping up the tradition of success at THS. My advice to them is treat all of them like your own sons, ask for their best but, at the end of the day, love them with a new-day approach.

I am done coaching high school but have always had aspirations of coaching college baseball. My second dream job would have been to coach at my other alma mater Pima, but they hired a legend and my coach who I have always had a high admiration for, coach Richard Alday.

The real last stop for me was to spend time and watch my son Orlando play college baseball at Adams State University, a D-II college in Alamosa, Colorado.

Funny how timing is a factor in our destiny, Adams State is losing some of their coaching staff and I inquired about helping out and was hired instantly. I will be taking over infield play, hitting instruction and defensive and offensive situations and, of course, help recruit Arizona players to the RMAC for Adams State.

The dream continues, watching my son play and continuing my last dream of coaching college baseball. I have been truly blessed. A quick thank you to all past players, assistant coaches, parents and administrators who always trusted me with our special Tucson High baseball players.”