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Fielder reportedly in hiding over debts
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FOXSports.com
Posted: 3 hours ago
Cecil Fielder retired with more than $47 million in career earnings and lived in an elegant mansion with his family in Central Florida. Now, it is gone and the former major-league slugger is in hiding having accrued gambling debts that have process servers stalking him, according to the Detroit News.
"Gambling caused Cecil Fielder's empire to collapse," said Al Arostegui, the realtor who sold the Fielders their 50-room palace in Melbourne, Fla., in 1995 for $3.7 million.
Cecil "Big Daddy" Fielder has fallen on hard times after a solid major-league career, which spanned 13 seasons with five different teams. (Brian Bahr / GettyImages)
"This isn't a story of a hero who went bad, but a hero who got sick. For Cecil, gambling is a disease; it's like a cancer of some sort that ate away his wealth."
Arostegui told The News he is owed more than $70,000 by the Fielders in unpaid advertising expenses from his attempts to sell their house for them.
Stacey Fielder says she still loves her husband. However, the two are reportedly mired in bitter divorce proceedings.
"But this isn't the same Cecil," she told the newspaper. "I never saw any of this coming. I never even knew he gambled."
She says that by the time he made his first halting admissions to her about a gambling problem, their house had been foreclosed on by a bank, and a string of lawsuits — collectively worth millions — had already been filed by creditors.
Fielder reportedly "never showed that side around me or any of his friends," said Tigers third-base coach Juan Samuel, who has been close to Fielder for 20 years.
"A lot of times it starts small, a little bet here and there, maybe even in the clubhouse — before you know, things get out of hand."
On a February day in 1999, Fielder reportedly walked into the Trump Plaza casino in Atlantic City just before noon, and filled out an application for credit.
Cecil Fielder at a glance
Drafted in 1982 by the Kansas City Royals, Cecil Fielder's rise in baseball took him to Toronto and Japan before he made history with the Detroit Tigers.
In 1990, Fielder hit 51 home runs and drove in 132 runs. He was the first player to reach 50 homers in the American League since Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris in 1961.
A three-time All Star, Fielder finished with 319 home runs in 13 seasons. He won a World Series ring as a DH with the Yankees in 1996. Nicknamed "Big Daddy", Fielder retired in 1998 after splitting the season with the Angels and Indians.
Fielder was reportedly given a credit line worth $25,000. That money and whatever cash he started with was thought to have lasted a day and a half.
He paid off small amounts of that debt to hold off Trump's collectors on the bulk of the money until September 2000, when at least 10 bank drafts, authorized by Fielder, bounced due to insufficient funds.
"I never knew anything about any of this until I started noticing things when I was doing the finances," Stacey Fielder said. "I'd be going over the bills with the accountant, and I'd be like, 'Hey, there's $35,000 gone from this account. What happened to it?' Then these gambling people just descended on the house one day, and started just taking things out of it. They took my truck.
"We talked about it (Cecil's gambling) only a few times. I was under the impression he was going to get some help."
One day Fielder's son Prince, then an 18-year-old minor leaguer, walked off the field in August 2002 and was approached not by a fan or reporter, but a process server who had been searching for his dad. The man reportedly shoved papers in Prince Fielder's hands naming his father as a defendant in a $387,744 lawsuit.
"Oh, my God, this is the first time I'm hearing that story," Stacey Fielder told the newspaper. "That's just another thing I was kept in the dark about."
Story Tools: Print Email
FOXSports.com
Posted: 3 hours ago
Cecil Fielder retired with more than $47 million in career earnings and lived in an elegant mansion with his family in Central Florida. Now, it is gone and the former major-league slugger is in hiding having accrued gambling debts that have process servers stalking him, according to the Detroit News.
"Gambling caused Cecil Fielder's empire to collapse," said Al Arostegui, the realtor who sold the Fielders their 50-room palace in Melbourne, Fla., in 1995 for $3.7 million.
Cecil "Big Daddy" Fielder has fallen on hard times after a solid major-league career, which spanned 13 seasons with five different teams. (Brian Bahr / GettyImages)
"This isn't a story of a hero who went bad, but a hero who got sick. For Cecil, gambling is a disease; it's like a cancer of some sort that ate away his wealth."
Arostegui told The News he is owed more than $70,000 by the Fielders in unpaid advertising expenses from his attempts to sell their house for them.
Stacey Fielder says she still loves her husband. However, the two are reportedly mired in bitter divorce proceedings.
"But this isn't the same Cecil," she told the newspaper. "I never saw any of this coming. I never even knew he gambled."
She says that by the time he made his first halting admissions to her about a gambling problem, their house had been foreclosed on by a bank, and a string of lawsuits — collectively worth millions — had already been filed by creditors.
Fielder reportedly "never showed that side around me or any of his friends," said Tigers third-base coach Juan Samuel, who has been close to Fielder for 20 years.
"A lot of times it starts small, a little bet here and there, maybe even in the clubhouse — before you know, things get out of hand."
On a February day in 1999, Fielder reportedly walked into the Trump Plaza casino in Atlantic City just before noon, and filled out an application for credit.
Cecil Fielder at a glance
Drafted in 1982 by the Kansas City Royals, Cecil Fielder's rise in baseball took him to Toronto and Japan before he made history with the Detroit Tigers.
In 1990, Fielder hit 51 home runs and drove in 132 runs. He was the first player to reach 50 homers in the American League since Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris in 1961.
A three-time All Star, Fielder finished with 319 home runs in 13 seasons. He won a World Series ring as a DH with the Yankees in 1996. Nicknamed "Big Daddy", Fielder retired in 1998 after splitting the season with the Angels and Indians.
Fielder was reportedly given a credit line worth $25,000. That money and whatever cash he started with was thought to have lasted a day and a half.
He paid off small amounts of that debt to hold off Trump's collectors on the bulk of the money until September 2000, when at least 10 bank drafts, authorized by Fielder, bounced due to insufficient funds.
"I never knew anything about any of this until I started noticing things when I was doing the finances," Stacey Fielder said. "I'd be going over the bills with the accountant, and I'd be like, 'Hey, there's $35,000 gone from this account. What happened to it?' Then these gambling people just descended on the house one day, and started just taking things out of it. They took my truck.
"We talked about it (Cecil's gambling) only a few times. I was under the impression he was going to get some help."
One day Fielder's son Prince, then an 18-year-old minor leaguer, walked off the field in August 2002 and was approached not by a fan or reporter, but a process server who had been searching for his dad. The man reportedly shoved papers in Prince Fielder's hands naming his father as a defendant in a $387,744 lawsuit.
"Oh, my God, this is the first time I'm hearing that story," Stacey Fielder told the newspaper. "That's just another thing I was kept in the dark about."