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Fernandez hearse escorted by Marlins
Somber farewell for star pitcher
Marlins players and team personnel, dressed in white T-shirts, surround the hearse carrying Jose Fernandez. (Rob Foldy/Getty Images)
By Curt Anderson
Associated Press

MIAMI — Somber Miami Marlins players and personnel escorted a hearse carrying the body of star pitcher Jose Fernandez from the team’s ballpark Wednesday, as the farewell for their beloved teammate marched on.

As players and fans honored Fernandez’s memory, US Sen. Marco Rubio sought a safety probe into the rock jetty where a boat crash claimed the lives of the baseball star and two friends.

Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria, manager Don Mattingly, hitting coach Barry Bonds and the players including Marcel Ozuna and Giancarlo Stanton wore white T-shirts emblazoned with Fernandez’s image and the letters ‘‘RIP’’ as they slowly walked the hearse away from Marlins Park in Miami’s Little Havana neighborhood. Many in the crowd of about 1,000 chanted ‘‘Jose! Jose!’’ and some waved Cuban flags in honor of the popular Cuban-American player.

Jose Portuondo, 55, came to the event with his dog, Sophie. He said Fernandez, 24, was a shining example for Cubans who often risk their lives at sea to come to the US seeking freedom. Fernandez defected from the communist island at age 15.

‘‘His is the story of many in South Florida. He brings it home,’’ said Portuondo, who drives a city trolley bus. ‘‘Being here, the sadness is just thick in the air.’’

Junko Sasaki, 40, who is Japanese but spends a lot of time in South Florida, brought an offering of fruit, rice and water to a makeshift memorial to Fernandez that has sprouted up outside the ballpark. She said it was a traditional Japanese way of ensuring the honored dead have what they need in the afterlife.

‘‘It is a Japanese custom. Every day he can eat,’’ she said, adding that Fernandez once tossed her a baseball from the field at a game.

Hundreds of fans streamed into St. Brendan’s Catholic Church later Wednesday for a public viewing, which was scheduled to last into the night. Many said they felt compelled to come not only because of Fernandez’s popularity as a player but also because he was a hero to many in the Cuban-American community.

‘‘I have to be here. I’m a huge fan,’’ said Rick Gerena, 31, an environmental project manager. ‘‘He loved everybody. You almost felt like he was one of us out there.’’

Inside the church, mourners filed past a closed casket framed by flower arrangements in the shapes of the US and Cuban flags, with a large family photo of Fernandez off to one side. Many touched the casket lightly and crossed themselves.

A private funeral Mass is set Thursday for the Fernandez family and Marlins players and personnel.