Cecil Fielder son , Prince Fielder playing for Milwaukee, walkoff homer last night.

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Those real familiar with the Yankees may recall about a decade ago the Yanks had a real large batboy, that was the son of slugger Cecil Fielder...

You couldn't help but notice the kid and think, he had to be a chip off the old block, he was the spitting image of his father Cecil.

Cecil Fielder most will recall, lost his 47 million dollar career earnings in recent years do to gambling addiction.


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The house of Cecil Fielder, with wife Stacey, son Prince, daughter Ceclynn and nephew Kenneth Greene, was the subject of an Ebony magazine spread. The Florida mansion cost $3.7 million.<!--/CA-->


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Prince Fielder, 6-1 250 lbs, bats lefthanded and was called up to the Brewers on the 18th of August.


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In 1990 for Detroit, Cecil was the first man to club 50 or more homers (51) in a season since George Foster, (52) way back in 1977.

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Milwaukee Brewers pinch-hitter Prince Fielder is congratulated by Rickie Weeks after hitting a walk-off two-run home run in the ninth inning off Pittsburgh Pirates' Jose Mesa, Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2005, in Milwaukee. The Brewers won 6-5.
 
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former wife is a world class babe..

that mansion is about 15 miles from my mansion.. awesome place.
 

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Gambling shatters ex-Tiger's dream life

Detroit just loved Cecil Fielder, the burly Tigers slugger who ushered in the Decade of the Home Run in the early 1990s.

By Fred Girard / The Detroit News

And Detroiters loved Fielder the family man, who doted on his son, Prince, and daughter, Ceclynn. They applauded when wife Stacey was named Mrs. Michigan, posing for pictures in her elegant Grosse Pointe Farms home.

Their storybook life seemed headed for the happiest of endings — Fielder was traded to the Yankees, eventually retired with career earnings of $47 million in salary alone, and moved his family to the largest, richest mansion in central Florida.


Now, it’s all gone.
All the money, the mansion — even the loving family unit.
Fielder is in hiding, with process servers stalking him. He is not in contact with his family, and many attempts by The Detroit News to reach him failed.

Why?
“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.
“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 said he is owed more than $70,000 by the Fielders in unpaid advertising expenses from his attempts to sell their house for them. Still, he says, “The biggest losers are the Fielders themselves. They had a great dream home, a wonderful life, and now it’s all gone.”

Stacey Fielder said she still loves her husband, the only man in her life since her early teens, even though the two are mired in a bitter divorce dispute.

“But this isn’t the same Cecil,” she said. “I never saw any of this coming. I never even knew he gambled.”

Sickness starts small

By the time Cecil made his first halting admissions to her that he had a problem, she says, their home had been foreclosed on by a bank, and a string of lawsuits and liens worth millions had been filed by creditors.

She is hard up financially and looking for work, she says, and she and Ceclynn, now 12, receive no money from Fielder and don’t even have medical insurance.

No one interviewed by The News had an inkling that Fielder may have become a heavy gambler.

Fielder “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.”

The origins of the Fall of the House of Fielder are spelled out in a file in New Jersey Superior Court, titled Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino versus Cecil G. Fielder. It’s about one 40-hour period in which Fielder’s gambling compulsion apparently broke all bounds, with a casino extending him credit every step of the way.

On a February day in 1999, Cecil Fielder walked into the Trump Plaza casino in Atlantic City just before noon, and filled out an application for credit.

Under “Income/Assets,” he included: “Salary — $5 million.”

Under “Other Casinos,” he listed a $100,000 line of credit at the Desert Inn in Las Vegas.
Trump extended Fielder a $25,000 line of credit. That money, plus whatever cash he had started with, lasted a day and a half.

Fielder requested, and was given, another $25,000 line of credit.

That was gone in two hours and 40 minutes.
The casino lent him $27,500 more.
That lasted less than 20 minutes.
The casino extended Fielder’s credit by another $50,000.

The minute-by-minute records stop there, but the file contains a total. By the time the binge was over, Fielder owed the Trump casino $580,000.



Fielder repaid some small amounts, but held off Trump’s collectors on the bulk of the money until September 2000. On the 9th, he wrote a personal check to Trump Plaza for $300,000, and authorized his bank to pay a half-dozen more drafts for $25,000 each.

The next day, Fielder authorized four more drafts from his bank, totaling $130,000.
Fielder stopped payment on his personal $300,000 check. The 10 bank drafts all bounced for insufficient funds.
A spokesman for the New Jersey State Police Gaming Enforcement Division said they investigated the transactions, but determined no criminal conduct had occurred.

Trump Plaza Associates sued and won, but has yet to collect. With interest and attorney’s fees, the bill stands at $563,359.
Trump officials, including Ford Palmer, vice president of casino operations, and Fred Cunningham, vice president for legal affairs, said they could not discuss the case — or a casino’s obligation, if any, when a patron may be out of control.

“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.”

Sins of the father
Life became a swirl of lawsuits, process servers, bounced checks, lien after lien filed against their property — and not even the children were spared.

As Prince Fielder, then a husky, 18-year-old first-baseman for the Class A Beloit (Wis.) Snappers, trotted off the field after a home game one day in August 2002, a man stepped out from behind the bleachers to intercept him.

It wasn’t a reporter or fan. It was a process server, who for months had been searching for his dad, who was living with his son at the time. The man shoved some papers into Prince Fielder’s hands, naming his father as defendant in a $387,744 lawsuit.

Although Prince Fielder wasn’t a defendant in the suit, the sins of the father — poor business decisions and an unstoppable gambling compulsion — had been visited upon the son, in the form of an extremely embarrassing incident.

“Oh, my God, this is the first time I’m hearing that story,” tacey Fielder said “That’s just another thing I was kept in the dark about.”

Prince Fielder declined to be interviewed.

In addition to the Trump judgment, the bills, all annotated in the Fielders’ still-pending divorce case and other public records, eventually included:

$716,000 to Union Bank for a warehouse mortgage, plus another $300,000 for a loan.

$660,000 to a company listed simply as “GHF, LLC.” The News reached the company’s registered agent, but he declined to be interviewed or reveal the type of business involved.

$387,744 from the lawsuit served on his son — because Cecil was living with him at the time — resulting from a trailer-rental business gone bad in Wisconsin.

$300,000 for a loan from Colonial Bank.
$300,000 to Paris Las Vegas casino.
$150,000 in credit-card debt.
$1 million from a mortgage the Fielders took out on their Melbourne mansion from Standard Federal Bank.
$1,065,864 in back taxes and a second mortgage to Comerica Bank, which won a foreclosure judgment on the estate in June, paid off Standard Federal, and now hopes to sell the property.


The liens filed by Trump Plaza and all others against the property are now worthless.
There was a welter of smaller liens as well — by unpaid attorneys, an Atlanta businessman, a Tennessee stable, and a Melbourne moving and storage company. One creditor who did get paid by the Fielders is Ed Frommelt of Melbourne, who ran the mansion’s cleaning crew.

“They owed us $2,500 for our regular twice-a-week stuff, plus an all-day cleanup we did for a Super Bowl party,” Frommelt said. “It was Mrs. Fielder — she just refused to pay us. We had to go to court three times, and they never showed once. We won the judgment, but then we still had to get the money ourselves. I filed a contractor’s lien against the property, and they paid up right away.”


Divorce papers
The pending divorce is anything but amicable.

In sworn documents filed with the court, Fielder claims his wife was “physically and mentally abusive” to him, hitting him with a broomstick, stabbing him in the side with a fork, threatening to get a gun and shoot him, and telling him she had stood over him with a knife as he slept, thinking about whether to stab him.



Fielder also claimed his wife lost $500,000 in a failed venture to open a bank, and redecorated their mansion four times in seven years, at a cost of $4 million.



In her filings, Stacey Fielder alleged her husband had engaged in “an avalanche of misconduct” that caused her angry outbursts, and asked the court to enjoin her husband “from dissipating any more assets.”



Cecil Fielder also listed $19.4 million in assets in his divorce papers — although that included $9 million for the house he no longer owns; $2 million in furnishings, most of which are no longer there; and more than $6 million from a variety of businesses — Big Daddy Classic Cars, CJ Fielder Transportation, Fielder Realty, etc. — none of which is reachable by telephone.



Fielder isn’t reachable either, several lawyers interviewed by The News said.



“Needless to say, it’s been a challenge to track Mr. Fielder down. He’s been very elusive,” said Madison, Wis., attorney Robert Fleischacker — the man who took the extraordinary step of having Fielder’s son served after several other attempts had failed.



Fleischacker said he also dispatched a process server to find Fielder at the baseball All-Star Game in Houston this year, but, “We weren’t quick enough on the draw.”



The Fielders’ divorce case is dragging on as well, because lawyers representing Cecil Fielder don’t get paid, then withdraw from the case, according to Stacey Fielder’s attorney, Lawrence Banigan of Mineola, N.Y.



“It’s like wrestling in a fog,” he said.



Dream house decays



Now, the Fielders’ home, sprawled across a half-dozen lots in a luxury subdivision in Florida, sits empty and decaying — although it came through the recent hurricanes with little damage.



The only memories now are the two theaters — with leather recliners in the one for the parents, a ticket booth and popcorn stand in the kids’, and $100,000 in A/V equipment in both rooms; the 100,000-gallon pool with its own mountain and waterfall; the 4,500-square-foot guest house; the 8,000-bottle wine cellar; the game room; the disco; the playgrounds with their tennis and basketball courts.



“It’s a beautiful home, and at one point in time it was worth a lot of money,” said Jack Mahon, president of the Suntree development’s homeowners association. “But if you wanted to buy it now, you’d find it needed a lot of work. The pool is in bad shape; all the landscaping is deteriorating because the irrigation isn’t on. The lights aren’t even on, that I’m aware of.”



Another Realtor trying to sell the property, Karen Nierenberg, has a special interest — she built it, with her husband, Bruce, who was co-owner of the now-defunct Premier Cruise Lines in Port Canaveral. He built the largest mansion in central Florida inland in order to protect his classic car collection from corrosive sea salt.



Nierenberg admits she was saddened when she viewed the property after the Fielders left.



“But I quickly went from viewing it with those eyes to viewing it with a Realtor’s eyes,” she said. “All I want to do now is sell it to someone who will give it the love it needs.”

:monsters-
 

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Hopefully his son does well so he can help pay is DADS gambling debts.
 

For G-Baby
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Prince is gonna make all that $ back, though...the guy's gonna be a stud. Him and Weeks should make the Brew Crew relevant again. If Hardy ever learns to hit, they'll have a sick infield for years to come. Oh, and Carlos Lee ain't so bad, either.
 

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I wonder what kind of relationship he has with the 'Big daddy' these days?

very sad story , Cecil was a monster RBI man in his prime.
 

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casinos just sat back at took everything he had.. nice


i would take stacy in right now.. because thats the kind of guy i am...
 

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http://www.jsonline.mobi/sports/bre...-market-132025953.html?ua=iphone&dc=smart&c=y

Fielder ready to test the open market

Rick Wood
Brewers fans give Prince Fielder a warm ovation after he grounded out in what is likely the slugger’s last at-bat with the team.

By Tom Haudricourt of the Journal Sentinel
Oct. 17, 2011 | (10) Comments
In what was almost certainly the last media session for Prince Fielder while playing for the Milwaukee Brewers, he did use the past tense when describing his time with the club late Sunday night.

"It was awesome," he said. "Playing here was awesome."

Fielder later said he didn't mean anything by it, but it probably was appropriate because there is little chance the Brewers will be able to win a bidding war - or even try to - once Fielder hits the free-agent market in November.

And make no mistake about it. Agent Scott Boras didn't take his client this close to free agency to not wait and see what comes their way on the open market.

"I'm not even thinking about that right now," Fielder said when asked about his thoughts on free agency after the Brewers were eliminated from the National League Championship Series in Game 6 by St. Louis at Miller Park.

Team principal owner Mark Attanasio said after the game that the Brewers would be players in the free-agent process with Fielder. The club has exclusive negotiating rights to Fielder for 15 days after the end of the World Series, after which other clubs can join in the bidding.

But you can bet Boras will be fielding calls from interested parties during that negotiating window. Teams expected to show interest include Seattle, Texas, Baltimore, Florida, the Los Angeles Angels and the Chicago Cubs, among others.

Fielder is one of two mega-free agent sluggers heading to free agency, along with St. Louis first baseman Albert Pujols. Whoever signs first will set the market for the other player, so don't expect either to rush into a deal.

The Brewers will be required to offer Fielder, a Class A free agent, arbitration by Nov. 23 to keep draft-pick compensation if he signs with another club. That's a mere formality because a free agent of Fielder's status would not accept arbitration, which offers only a one-year deal.

Boras has compared Fielder to another of his clients, first baseman Mark Teixeira, who signed an eight-year, $180 million free-agent deal with the New York Yankees before the 2009 season. Accordingly, it was hardly a shock when Boras snubbed the Brewers' initial offer of a five-year extension for about $100 million in spring 2010.

It would take a very creative package, with deferred money, out clauses, etc., for the Brewers to even fit Fielder into their budget for 2012 and beyond. That, more than anything, makes it nearly impossible to envision him wearing a Milwaukee uniform again.

The last thing the Brewers want to do is break up the 1-2 punch of Ryan Braun and Fielder, who formed one of the top offensive combos in the majors since becoming teammates in 2007. But the Brewers already have committed big money to Braun, including a five-year, $105 million extension that runs from 2016-'20.

With Pujols and Fielder jockeying for top dollar on the market, it is likely to go at least to the winter meetings in early December and more likely beyond before either signs a free-agent deal. That's assuming the Cardinals don't jump in and give Pujols what he wants before he entertains other offers.

After the Brewers' otherwise outstanding season ended in disappointment with the 12-6 drubbing by St. Louis, Fielder acted as if it would be difficult to walk away.

"I had to clear the throat once, but it was all right," he said of his goodbyes to teammates. "I love these guys. I've been playing with most of them since I was 18. So, this organization has been great to me. It's just been good. It's been real.

"Hopefully, I'm here for more years to come. But if not, it's been cool."

Doesn't sound like a player who thinks he's staying, does it?
 

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Over Under Fielder HR's in 2012 set:


Player must start season on active roster. Position players must play 130 games for action, starting pitchers must start 25 games, relief pitchers must not spend any time on the DL. Wager will have action if target has been reached without playing the minimum number of games. If player switches leagues or teams, stats will be combined.
*
Over
35½
(-115)o
(-115)u
*

@ Bovada
Under
 

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