SAN DIEGO (AP) - Theo Epstein remembered when he first met Kevin Towers, as a 21-year-old intern working in the San Diego Padres public relations department. Towers was the new general manager.
“I was just out of college,” said Epstein, the Chicago Cubs president of baseball operations. “I was just a nobody, a faceless kid trying to be invisible and not get in the way. But there was never such a thing as a nobody to Kevin Towers - he just wasn’t wired that way.”
Baseball executives and managers left spring training to gather at San Diego’s Petco Park on Sunday and celebrate the life of Towers, who died from complications of a rare form of thyroid cancer on Jan. 30 at the age of 56.
Hall of Famers Trevor Hoffman and Tony La Russa were in the audience along with Colorado Rockies manager Bud Black and San Francisco Giants skipper Bruce Bochy, both Padres managers under Towers. New York Yankees general manager Brian Cashman and New York Mets general manager Sandy Alderson also were on hand.
Kirk Gibson, who managed Arizona to the 2011 NL West title when Towers was the Diamondbacks’ GM, was among the speakers.
“He looked at players differently,” Gibson said. “When we won, we won with scrappy players. I’m just grateful I got to spend time with Kevin Towers. He meant so much to me and my family.”
A Padres draft pick in 1982, Towers was San Diego’s general manager from 1995-2009 and Arizona’s GM from September 2010 until September 2014.
“There are few people that can have a moment like this,” said Cubs general manager Jed Hoyer, who replaced Towers as the Padres’ GM. “People came from far and wide to be here.”
Towers led the Padres to four NL West titles and the 1998 NL pennant.
“I took over for him and he always treated me so well,” Hoyer said. “We would meet for beers or talk on the phone and it was always with KT wanting to help me do a better job. That doesn’t always happen and with me being a first-time GM I just always appreciated that he treated me the way he did.”
Former St. Louis and Cincinnati GM Walt Jocketty hired Towers as a special assistant in 2015, what turned out to be Towers’ final baseball job.
“The first time I met Kevin was in 1995 at the GM meetings and I’m sure it was at the bar,” Jocketty said. “And from that time on our relationship and friendship grew. He was one of the guys that always brought all the GMs together. Kevin loved life and lived it to the fullest. He suffered a lot in the last two years but he always stayed positive and fought a brave fight. There will never be another KT.”
Epstein went on to become the GM who in 2004 helped Boston win its first World Series title since 1918 and in 2016 directed the Cubs to their first championship since 1908.
“He was my friend, my boss and my mentor,” Epstein said. “He didn’t care if you were the president of the team, an intern, or a backup beat writer for a newspaper. He treated you like you want to be treated. That was KT. It didn’t matter who you were or who you weren’t. He treated you with love and respect. And if he liked you, you were lucky enough to be dragged into his orbit, and then you were in for the ride of your life.”
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