DETROIT — His heart and mind were more than 1,000 miles away, but Omar López had a job to do. Five Houston Astros infielders awaited pregame ground balls and someone had to hit them.That is his responsibility, so on a staggering day for López and scores of others from his home country, there stood the 49-year-old Venezuelan on the right side of home plate at Comerica Park. Houston’s bench coach banged baseballs into the ground, trying to generate normalcy on a day where that seemed impossible.“Our country has been suffering so much for years and we’re still getting more hard stuff in our way,” López said, before drawing a deep breath to compose himself and suppress a sob.In March, López managed Team Venezuela to a joyous World Baseball Classic title, his country’s first. On Wednesday night and into Thursday morning, members of that team comforted each other in the club’s WhatsApp group chat. Some struggled to contact friends and family after twin earthquakes shook San Felipe and Caracas.“It’s frustrating,” López said. “Three months ago we were able to do something special and now, three months later, we have to go through the sad, frustrating part. We’re doing our best right now to support our community and our country from the distance.”Venezuela is dealing with the aftermath of Wednesday’s earthquakes. (Jesus Vargas / Getty Images)That limits what López and his countrymen can do, but he has long been a man of faith, someone who lives by the mantra “that God has a plan.” Even then, though, he knows that “for some reason stuff happens.“Our country, it seems like everyone started to see the bright light at the end of the tunnel at some point,” he said. “I think probably there has to be a reason for this.”Wednesday’s tectonic event began at 6:04 p.m. Eastern time, with the first of two earthquakes, a 7.2 magnitude event occurring in San Felipe, a town roughly 127 miles from the capital of Caracas. About 39 seconds later, a second earthquake at a 7.5 magnitude struck near Yumare. By Thursday evening, The New York Times had reported that the death toll had grown to at least 188 people.