Oscar Escobar

From BR Bullpen

Santiago Oscar Escobar

  • Bats Right, Throws Right
  • Height 5' 11", Weight 145 lb.

BR minors page

Biographical Information[edit]

Oscar Escobar was a minor league infielder for six seasons who later coached and managed for the Venezuelan national team.

Escobar debuted in 1983 with the GCL Blue Jays at age 16; he hit .197/.267/.213 in 51 games but showed superb speed (35 steals in 38 tries) and defense. He led Gulf Coast League second basemen with a .963 fielding percentage, 117 putouts and 28 double plays, beating out the likes of Jose Lind and Mark Lemke. He also led the GCL in swipes. Despite his wretched OPS, he was named team MVP.

In 1984, Oscar batted .195/.236/.207 in 59 games for the Florence Blue Jays and only had 9 steal attempts (8 successful). His fielding percentage fell to .928 and his 17 errors were 6th-most among South Atlantic League second sackers despite ranking tied for 12th in games at the position.

Escobar returned to Florence in 1985 and hit .269/~.329/.359, significant progress at the plate. He stole 14 bases. In 1986, he batted .313/~.357/.438 for the St. Catharines Blue Jays and .245/~.273/.340 for the Ventura County Gulls. His 100 hits led the New York-Penn League and he was 4th in average behind Tommy Hinzo, Ced Landrum and Gary Cooper and right ahead of Trent Hubbard. He was named to the NYPL All-Star team at second base. Baseball America rated him the #5 prospect in the circuit; the #1 prospect was Luis Alicea, who lost All-Star honors at 2B to Escobar.

For the 1987 Myrtle Beach Blue Jays, the 20-year-old hit .267/~.307/.346 and stole 20 bases; his backup was future major leaguer Luis Sojo and his double play mate was future big leaguer Eric Yelding. Escobar's 20 swipes were only 6th on a fleet-footed squad led by Yelding (73 SB), Junior Felix (64 SB) and Mark Whiten (49 SB). The club stole 295 bases en route to taking the South Atlantic League pennant.

Escobar moved to the Pittsburgh Pirates chain in 1988 and hit .226/.268/.373 with 8 steals in 12 tries in 50 games for the Salem Buccaneers. That ended his career in the minors, still just 21 years old.

After his playing career ended, Escobar worked as a coach in multiple countries. Escobar coached for Venezuela in both the 2006 World Baseball Classic and 2009 World Baseball Classic, then managed the national team in the 2009 Baseball World Cup. He coached for them in the 2011 Pan American Games and 2011 Baseball World Cup as well. In addition to his work on the national level, Escobar coached the Cardenales de Lara in the Venezuelan League for multiple years. He may have been the bench coach for the team in 2007/2008 and 2009/2010. Escobar was the bench coach for the team in 2010/2011 and first base coach in 2012/2013. He moved to the Mexican Pacific League in 2016/2017 as a Cañeros de Los Mochis bench coach, a role he repeated in 2017/2018. After several years away from coaching in Venezuela, Escobar worked as an assistant hitting coach for the Leones del Caracas in 2025/2026.

Escobar got a later start to coaching professionally in the United States. According to a 2020 Pinstriped Prospects article, Escobar was the manager of the DSL Parallel program for the New York Yankees in 2018-2019. Newly signed Latin players (typically at age 16) played in the Parallel League their first summer before moving to a Dominican Summer League team the following season. Escobar was scheduled to serve as a defensive coach for the DSL Yankees in 2020 before the season was cancelled due to COVID-19.

The Miami Marlins hired Escobar to manage their DSL Miami club in 2022 and remained in that position through the 2025 season.

Escobar's brother, Angel Escobar, played in the major leagues.

Year-By-Year Managerial Record[edit]

Year Team League Record Finish Organization Playoffs
2022 DSL Miami Dominican Summer League 20-39 46th Miami Marlins
2023 DSL Miami Dominican Summer League 18-35 43rd Miami Marlins
2024 DSL Miami Dominican Summer League 26-30 32nd Miami Marlins
2025 DSL Miami Dominican Summer League 37-19 4th Miami Marlins
2026 DSL Miami Dominican Summer League Miami Marlins

Primary Sources[edit]