Published: June 1, 2013 By

Tom Garfinkel sunglassesSan Diego Padres chief executive officerĀ Tom GarfinkelĀ (Commā€™91) always has viewed baseball as a platform to bring people together.

Throughout his career he has met CEOs, politicians, innovators, celebrities, scientists, military leaders and everyday people doing extraordinary things.

ā€œIā€™ve always looked at it as an opportunity to learn,ā€ says Tom who started with the Padres as president and chief operating officer in April 2009. ā€œLast week I was having a conversation about leadership with one of the highest ranking officials in our military. I also spent time with one of the leading scientists in the fight against cancer. I try to use it in that way to impact peopleā€™s lives off the field whenever we can.ā€

Before the Padres, Tom worked as executive vice president and chief operating officer of the Arizona Diamondbacks. During his tenure there, he built a long-term strategic plan for the franchise, led the re-branding of the club and updating of Chase Field and led a team that produced the highest controllable revenues in the franchiseā€™s history in 2008.

Today Tom supports the San Diego community, members of the military, people fighting cancer and even CU, whether hosting Buff alumni in a suite before a Padres game or hiring CU students as interns.

For instance, at a Little League Day at Petco Park, Tom observed about 8,000 young players waiting to participate in a parade. Nobody was wearing Padres gear.

ā€œWhen you think back to playing Little League and that first jersey, itā€™s usually the team you root for. I thought, ā€˜These kids should be rooting for the Padres,ā€™ā€ Tom recalls.

With Tomā€™s guidance, the Padresā€™ Youth Baseball Initiative, born shortly thereafter as a community partnership, today supports more than 1,000 teams in San Diego County by providing 15,000 authentic jerseys and caps from throughout the teamā€™s history.

In addition, under Tomā€™s leadership, the Padres followed Major League Baseballā€™s lead in 2010 and became the first team to develop a comprehensive initiative to build awareness for Stand Up to Cancer, raising more than $300,000. Everyone is affected by cancer, he says, noting the impact the association has had on peopleā€™s lives, including players, employees and fans.

ā€œThe challenge of winning a World Series is the ultimate motivator, but one of the best parts of my job is the chance to provide once-in-a-lifetime experiences for other people and to use baseball as a way to bring them together,ā€ he says.