Wife, kids of Dodgers' Miguel Rojas in Caracas when earthquakes hit Venezuela

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Set us as preferred Less than two hours before the Dodgers took the field in Minneapolis on Wednesday, a pair of powerful earthquakes rattled Venezuela, where the wife and two kids of Dodgers shortstop Miguel Rojas were visiting and where his sister lives.The successive magnitude 7.2 and 7.5 earthquakes left the country’s northern coastal state of La Guaira in ruins, collapsing more than 770 buildings and killing at least 1,450 people, local authorities said Sunday.All of Rojas’ family members were OK, the Venezuelan native told reporters ahead of Friday’s game against the Padres in San Diego.“Literally two blocks away from where my family was, two buildings collapsed — the whole building,” he said.“I’m lucky, to be honest with you guys.
I’m really lucky to have my family still alive and with me.I’m not taking this for granted.”Rojas’ wife and kids were in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, which is only about six miles south of the destruction along the coast.
His wife was there to renew her passport, and the kids were going to try to get Venezuelan citizenship.His sister was in Los Teques, Rojas’ hometown about 17 miles south of the coastal destruction.“It’s really tough to see teammates of mine and players that I played with at some point in my career to lose family members, to lose kids,” said Rojas, who had spent years playing baseball in La Guaira.
“It’s really devastating.It’s been really hard for me to go to sleep at night.”Rojas, on Friday, said he was talking daily with his family members, who were still in Venezuela.
He hoped to bring them back to the United States as soon as possible.Aftershocks continued to rattle the country into Sunday morning.As the Dodgers and Padres started their series in Petco Park on Friday, both teams wore caps with the letters “VZ” embroidered...