By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif.—Baseball agent Marc Kligman's cellphone rang last
month while he was walking his dog. The voice on the other end shouted:
"We got it! Finally!"
Triple-A catcher Carlos Ruiz had been called up to the major leagues by the
Philadelphia Phillies. He would face the San Francisco Giants on May 6—a
Saturday.
Kligman
could not attend that first game because he is Shomer Shabbos (one who
does not work on the Sabbath). "I
said I couldn't be there for the debut, but Carlos knows about Shabbos, and
kosher, he's a good kid," the San Diego-based sports agent recalled.
"I flew out the following Monday, and I saw his second game in
Philly." Ruiz singled to right in the second inning against New
York Mets pitcher Pedro Martinez—his first hit in baseball's major
leagues. It was hard to tell who was more pleased; the ballplayer or his
agent. "That was a nice thrill," enthused Kligman. "I was
like a kid in the candy store."
Like his sports clients who go from college to the minor
leagues and finally onto the big leagues, Kligman has been going through his own step-by-step process. A ba'al
tshuvah, he has been transforming himself into a highly observant Orthodox Jew. One could debate whether in his observance, he
is now in a Triple-A category or a major leaguer. Judging by his
self-critique, he still has not reached what we might call the "starting
lineup" of Orthodoxy.
Besides being a sports agent, Kligman has a private criminal defense
practice. In this role, he does not wear his kippah during court appearances, nor
typically when meeting clients. Although he has a beard, he keeps it trimmed,
rather than letting it grow, Chabadnik style. He explains that he
worries that defendants may feel
"funny" about having someone with a Jewish head covering and full
beard representing them.
Previously Kligman had worked in the San Diego public
defender's office, so his employer was the government, not a defendant. He
could wear a kippah without fear of financial consequences. Now,
however, he worries whether his ability to earn a living and thereby
support his wife and three children is in conflict with his desire
to be strictly observant.
The beard and the kippah are about the only conflicts left for Kligman to resolve in a process that
saw him come from being a little leaguer, then a high school and college
baseball player, who routinely played on Shabbos, to an occasional attendee of
Friday night dinners at the Chabad house near his law school at Tulane
University in New Orleans, to a person who kept kosher at home, but ate
out, to one who eventually made a decision to maintain kosher at all
times...
The process of becoming more observant continues to unfold, with Kligman and his wife, Leah, often
looking for guidance from Rabbi and Rebbetzin Moishe and Sura Leider of Chabad of
University City.
Interviewed in his law office in the Golden Hill section of San Diego, close
to downtown, Kligman explained that working as a local criminal defense
lawyer pays his bills as he builds his reputation and client base as a
national sports agent.
As an agent,
he negotiates contracts and endorsements for ballplayers who are on minor and
major league teams throughout North America. He also refers his
clients to
financial advisors, trust attorneys and, if needed, to other defense lawyers, and
counsels them whenever they might call—except on Shabbos, when he has his
phone turned off.
He said the ballplayers generally are very accepting of his
religious beliefs. In fact, he added, some may have gravitated to him because they
themselves are strong Christians and feel comfortable with a man of religious
values.
Although Kligman has one ballplayer who is Jewish among his clients—minor
league pitcher Jason Olson— it is less awkward for him to work with Christian clients because
he never feels at cross purposes. He explained that there is a temptation as an Orthodox
Jew—particularly as one who is ba'al tshuvah and who wants to share
his spiritual journey —to urge other Jews to become more Shabbos-observant, to keep
kosher, and generally to change their lifestyles.
If a ballplayer were to
follow such advice, that would be tantamount to giving up his career.
Maybe Sandy Koufax can decline to pitch in the World Series on Yom Kippur, but
how could professional baseball utilize the talents of someone who won't play
any Friday night or Saturday day game, nor even travel with the team on those days?
Kligman knows of one other Orthodox Jewish agent handling athletes—Paul
Cohen, who is based in Los Angeles. He said Cohen telephoned him one
day, saying he had heard about him from the proprietor of a kosher restaurant
in Phoenix, Ariz. Although they are competitors, the longer-established
Cohen called to say hello to a fellow Orthodox Jew. Since then, Kligman said, Cohen has
been something of a professional mentor to him.
Being a sports agent has moments of depression and elation, Kligman
said. The downers? When one of your players decides to sign with
another agent, he responded. That's what happened with Seattle Mariners
pitcher Rafael Soriano. Kligman said he didn't even know Soriano had
switched agents until one day he was faxing some material to Upper Deck and
was told by the baseball card company that they had just received a notice
from another agency that it had just signed Soriano.
But such lows are compensated by special highs, like that day in 2002 when
pitcher Brandon Puffer became Kligman's first minor league client to advance
to the big leagues— to the Houston Astros. Kligman flew to Cincinnati to
attend the first game, sitting at the ballpark with Puffer's wife, children,
and parents.
With the Astros leading the Cincinnati Reds by a score of 7-2, Puffer was
brought to the mound in relief. He got out the first batter he faced,
but then two opposing batters got on base, one of them because a nervous
Puffer threw too far inside, hitting him. Before Barry Larkin could bat
for the Reds, Jimy Williams, manager of the Houston Astros, headed for
the mound. "Oh, no," thought Puffer's family and Kligman. "He's
going to replace him". But after manager and pitcher chatted for a while,
Williams returned to the dugout. Next, Puffer got Larkin to bounce out
to third, and "then, I think, he struck out the next guy," Kligman
recalled. His client's first outing was a success!
Celebrating after the game, the family and Kligman gathered around Puffer, who
confessed that he also thought that Williams was going to yank
him—especially because in spring training the pitchers were told that if
pitching coach Vern Ruhle walked to the mound, they'd get to stay in; but if
Williams came, they'd be out.
On this occasion, however, when Williams got to Puffer, he asked if the rookie
hurler had anyone special at the park watching his debut. Puffer said
his family and his agent were there. Next Williams asked if Puffer
planned to eat the dinner buffet that was being spread for the team, or
whether he planned to go out for dinner.
The pitcher said he had planned to go out with his guests.
"Okay," said Williams, "get these last couple of outs so you
can go out and have a good time."
Kligman laughed, remembering how Puffer told the story. "Williams
did a great job," said the agent. "He totally disarmed him and
got him to relax."
There was a transformation in Kligman's face. No longer worrying about
his kippah, for a moment it was as if he were a kid again on the baseball
diamond.