NEW YORK — Confined to a wheelchair, unable to move his right side, Michael Weiner spoke about his brain tumor.
"I don't know if I look at things differently. Maybe they just became more important to me and more conscious to me going forward," the baseball players' association boss said Tuesday. "As corny as this sounds, I get up in the morning and I feel I'm going to live each day as it comes. I don't take any day for granted. I don't take the next morning for granted. What I look for each day is beauty, meaning and joy, and if I can find beauty, meaning and joy, that's a good day."
Weiner took over from Donald Fehr in December 2009 to become the fourth head of the union since 1966. He was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor last August and remains at work. The union will appoint a deputy executive director within two weeks, and the union's executive board will decide whether that deputy will succeed him. The executive board meets in La Jolla, Calif., from Dec. 2-5.
"We have an emergency contingency plan that's been in place for several months, and we are within a week or two of having a plan that will deal with a deputy executive director that will succeed and ultimately be voted on by the board in November," Weiner said Tuesday during his annual pre-All-Star game meeting with the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
If Weiner can't serve between now and the board meeting, the deputy will become interim executive director.
Former major league first baseman Tony Clark, who joined the union staff in 2010 after a 15-year playing career, has emerged as the top contender for the deputy role. Clark, a 2001 All-Star, became a union leader shortly after going to his first executive board meeting in 1999 and currently is director of player services.
"He was always a guy that everyone looked up to as far as young players coming up. Veteran players always fed him questions. They had a problem, they would go to Tony Clark," Texas Rangers closer Joe Nathan said. "He's still a guy that everyone thinks that's the guy to go whenever you have a question, and he'll have an answer. He is a natural leader, and he's right where he needs to be for the players and Major League Baseball."
Fehr and former union chief operating officer Gene Orza will not be returning.