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Joe West retires as umpire after record 5,460 games; Roberto Ortiz becomes first Puerto Rican to be full-time ump

Joe West has made it official, retiring from Major League Baseball after umpiring a record 5,460 regular-season games.

The 69-year-old West worked his first big league game on Sept. 14, 1976, at third base in Atlanta when the Braves hosted the Houston Astros. His finale was on Oct. 6, when he worked home plate at Dodger Stadium for the National League wild-card game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and St. Louis Cardinals.

Known as Country Joe, West set the record for regular-season games May 25, when he worked the plate for a game between the Chicago White Sox and Cardinals. National League umpire Bill Klem had held the record following a career that lasted from 1905 to 1941.

West's departure came as part of a series of retirements and promotions announced Friday by MLB, including Roberto Ortiz becoming the first umpire born in Puerto Rico to join the big league staff.

«I am honored and blessed to have the privilege of becoming the first Puerto Rican umpire to be hired by MLB,» said Ortiz, 37. «It fills me with pride to be able to represent my family and my island of Puerto Rico in what I consider the best league in the world.»

Ortiz had worked 411 major league games since 2016 as a call-up ump. He had been a minor league umpire since 2009 and was assigned to Triple-A last year.

Longtime umpires Gerry Davis, Kerwin Danley, Brian Gorman and Fieldin Culbreth also retired, while Ben May, Ryan Additon, Sean Barber and John Libka joined Ortiz in being promoted to the full-time MLB staff.

Laz Diaz, Greg Gibson, Marvin Hudson, Ron Kulpa and Bill Welke were elevated to crew chiefs.

May, 40, has called 650 MLB games as a call-up since 2014. He started in the minors in 2007 and was in Triple-A last season.

Additon, 36, worked the

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