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J.D. Arteaga, the relentless ace turned loyal coach remains the heart of Canes baseball

J.D. Arteaga, the relentless ace turned loyal coach remains the heart of Canes baseball

Miami Herald3 hours ago

March 2003. J.D. Arteaga was still chasing the dream.
He stood on a mound in Arizona, working toward a potential shot at the big leagues with the Texas Rangers' Major League spring training. After five years of grinding through the minors with the Mets and Astros organizations, this was the opportunity he had been waiting for.
His wife, Ysha, and their young son, Ari, were scheduled to fly out to visit him. It was supposed to be a rare moment away from baseball.
Then his phone rang.
Jim Morris was calling.
Arteaga had spent four years pitching for Morris at Miami, leading the Hurricanes to four straight College World Series appearances and leaving his name all over the program's record books. Months earlier, he had casually told Morris that coaching was something he might consider one day.
Morris wasn't calling for a casual chat. He needed a pitching coach—immediately. Not at the end of the season. Not after interviews. Right now.
It was March. Miami's season was already underway. The Hurricanes were flying out to Tennessee that week.
Arteaga hesitated. Was he ready to give up playing? To walk away from the only dream he had ever known?
'It was a very tough decision to give up a dream, for a dream job,' Arteaga said.
At 2 a.m., he called Morris back and took the job.
Instead of waiting for his family in Arizona, he went to them and got on the first available flight to Miami. Two days later, he was in Tennessee, calling pitches for a team he had barely met.
Miami swept the series.
And just like that, J.D. Arteaga's coaching career had begun.
Fast forward over two decades and Arteaga is in his second season as the Hurricanes' head coach, who just led them to their first Super Regional appearance since 2016 and came one victory short of leading them back to Omaha and the College World Series.
THE OVERLOOKED PITCHER
Arteaga wasn't supposed to be the best pitcher in Miami history. He wasn't supposed to leave the program as its all-time wins leader (43) and starts leader (72).
He wasn't the hardest thrower. He wasn't a projected star. But he worked harder than everyone else.
Arteaga arrived at Miami in 1994 from Westminster Christian, a high school powerhouse that produced elite talent. He was never the most gifted pitcher on the roster, but by his sophomore season, he was the most reliable.
'He wasn't supposed to be the best pitcher Miami ever had,' Jim Morris said. 'But he was.'
Arteaga knew his limitations, but he also knew how to overcome them.
'I was never the hardest thrower, never had the best stuff, but I knew how to pitch,' he said.
By the time he left Miami in 1997, Arteaga had pitched more innings than almost anyone in program history. He had started in five College World Series games and delivered when Miami needed him most.
He was drafted in the 26th round by the Mets—a long shot to make the big leagues. He spent five years battling in the minors, refusing to let the dream die.
Then Jim Morris called, and Arteaga made the decision that would define his legacy.
FROM THE MOUND TO MENTOR
Most coaches ease into the job. Arteaga was thrown into the fire.
Morris didn't care that Arteaga had never coached before. He saw something in him. The same qualities that had made Arteaga Miami's most reliable pitcher—calm, intelligence, leadership, and an ability to elevate those around him—would make him an exceptional coach.
For the next 20 years, Arteaga became the architect of Miami's pitching success.
He developed multiple MLB Draft picks, including first-rounders Chris Perez (2006) and César Carrillo (2005). His 2006 rotation—composed almost entirely of first-time starters—recorded five shutouts, the most by a Miami staff since 1998.
But Arteaga wasn't just a coach. He was a mentor first.
Andrew Walters, who made his Major League debut last season for the Cleveland Guardians, attributes much of his development as a college pitcher to Arteaga. He remembers the moment that stuck with him.
'Don't call me Coach,' Arteaga told him. 'You want me to call you Player?'
That moment landed with Walters—not because of what was said, but because of what it meant.
Arteaga didn't believe in hierarchy. He believed in respect. He wanted his players to see him as someone in the fight with them, not standing above them.
That philosophy resonated with Walters, who went from a raw college pitcher to one of the most dominant closers in the nation under Arteaga's guidance.
'I don't want them to just follow orders—I want them to understand why we do things. That's how they grow,' Arteaga explained.
LIKE HE NEVER LEFT
When Miami needed a new head coach before the 2024 season, Arteaga was the obvious choice.
However, obvious choices don't always get hired.
He had spent two decades as Miami's pitching coach, but never as a head coach. Some voices inside and outside the program wanted a bigger name, a national profile.
Morris wasn't having it.
'If the university has any loyalty, J.D. should be the next head coach,' Morris said to the University's administrators.
Arteaga got the job.
He inherited a roster in transition—seven of Miami's nine starting position players this season are new. It's a challenge unlike anything he faced as a player or pitching coach.
Arteaga felt that immediately.
'It's a different seat. I knew what Miami baseball meant as a player and a pitching coach, but this? This is different.'
But he didn't flinch.
'I was one of the guys pushing as hard as I could for J.D. to be the head coach,' Morris said. 'Because I knew he deserved that opportunity.'
BEYOND BASEBALL
Arteaga's influence extends far beyond the dugout.
He's a die-hard Buffalo Bills fan, something his players love to tease him about when football season rolls around. He unwinds by fishing and occasionally golfing with Morris, keeping the same mentor-student bond they've had for decades.
Then there's the Be The Light Foundation, named in honor of his late son, Ari, who was killed in a car accident. Arteaga doesn't bring it up often, but it's there in the work he does—a quiet but powerful reminder that baseball is just a game, and life is bigger than wins and losses.
Every year, Miami hosts the 'Be The Light' game, a tribute to Ari's legacy that has grown into something bigger than Arteaga ever imagined.
'Just in ticket sales, we sold a little over $31,000. It was our biggest day in six years,' Arteaga said. 'This whole community has been so great to me, my wife, and her family. They just continue to show up for us every year.'
Maybe that's why his players trust him so deeply.
Jake Ogden, one of Arteaga's current players, has felt that impact firsthand.
'If you want to not only improve as a baseball player but improve as a person, JD is going to bring that out of you,' Ogden said. 'He compares the game to life a lot... how baseball is like a metaphor for life, and how to deal with the ups and downs.'
He doesn't have to raise his voice. He doesn't need theatrics.
'He cares about the person more than the player,' Ogden added.
Even Morris, the legendary coach who shaped Miami baseball, knows that Arteaga's legacy is already secured.
'When the time comes for my son to play college baseball, I'll tell him, 'You're going to Miami, and you're playing for J.D.''
Arteaga has never needed the spotlight.
He's still the same man who took the ball for Miami 72 times. The same man who stood on the mound in Omaha and outdueled future MLB stars. The same man who answered his phone in Arizona and got on a plane before he had time to second-guess his decision.
His career has been built on loyalty, work ethic, and an unwavering commitment to those around him.
'My family is here. My roots are here. I grew up here. Miami is home,' Arteaga said.
His name is in the record books. His fingerprints are on the pitching staff. His legacy is in the players he sends out into the world.
His heart never left Miami.
And he never will.

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