LOS ANGELES – Rod Carew raised his right hand and recited the Oath of Allegiance to the United States on Friday, and with that, the Hall of Fame first baseman and former Twins and Angels star was officially sworn in as a U.S. citizen at age 78, more than six decades after he moved to New York City from his native Panama.
“Hi you guys, I’m an American citizen!” Carew beamed as about 40 family members and friends, including former Angels teammate Bobby Grich, cheered him on in an assembly room at the Federal Building in Santa Ana, Calif. “I don’t know what took me so long!”
As a newly minted U.S. citizen, Carew will be able to apply for a U.S. passport. He’ll be able to vote. He’ll be able to serve on a jury. He’ll be able to run for public office.
Carew served a six-year stint in the Marine Corps Reserve in the 1960s, and as part of his oath of allegiance, he agreed to “bear arms on behalf of the U.S. when required by law,” though at his age, and having endured heart-and-kidney transplant surgery in 2016 and knee-replacement surgery in May, that probably won’t be necessary.
But Carew, who won the American League Rookie of the Year award in 1967 and the AL MVP award in 1977, sounded ready to do just about anything his adopted nation asks of him.
“I will support the U.S. any way I can, because this is my home, and it’s one of the greatest countries in the world,” Carew said. “I’ve been waiting for this day for a long time. I want to be a part of the great things this country has given us, so any way I can help, I’m gonna help.”
Carew has lived in the U.S. since he moved to the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan with his mother, Olga, when he was 14. He always intended to apply for citizenship, but baseball and life happened, the former rather quickly, and as the years and decades passed, he never got around to it.
“He would talk about it, then not talk about it, talk about it, then not talk about it,” said Rhonda Carew, Rod’s wife of 24 years. “He was not focused on it.”