BA lists 5 teams in the hunt for Abreu. None is the Tribe:
http://www.baseballamerica.com/internat ... ose-abreu/
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3212Well, Civ, Let's hope we change our minds about getting involved. In my opinion, he's at least as good as Cespedes and Puig. I would go out on the limb and say he is better. Since Abreu is a first baseman, there would be a problem with Santana/Swisher. It is a nice predicament to be in I guess. I hate to lose out on a player that is a definite upgrade.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3213<
New Cuban Regulations Block Any Détente with Big League Baseball
by Peter C. Bjarkman
October 1, 2013
My return last Friday from a weeklong sojourn in Havana was met with a firestorm of media requests for my opinions on a breaking news item apparently suggesting sharp reversals in Cuba’s long-standing Cold War with North American professional baseball. As NPR and other stateside outlets misreported the story, Cuba’s sports ministry had suddenly and unexpectedly announced that their best ballplayers would now be free to negotiate contracts abroad and thus that we were about to witness an immediate and long-awaited floodtide of top Cuban talent into the clutches of major league baseball clubs.
Like so much that involves Cuba-USA relations, the true motivations behind the Cuban government’s announcement went unnoticed; the facts of the INDER press release were both distorted and misapprehended, and worst still, fantasies about a new explosion of Cuban big league talent were fueled by a North American press corps rushing to be first in print with a sensational and attention-grabbing headline. No one actually bothered to do their homework on this “too good to be true” story.
But there were a few experienced Cuban League watchers who got it all essentially right. My colleague Ray Otero this weekend published an excellent Spanish-language account of the complexities of the INDER bulletin and the always informative Cuba-based “Zona de Strike” website has also posted a report (http://zonadestrike.wordpress.com/2013/ ... more-21297) which details the new INDER policies for any who wish to read and analyze them with more care. It is time here for a brief and concise analysis of the situation for our English-language readers.
First and foremost, the announcement released in Cuba on Friday makes no mention of Major League Baseball per se, and its contents offer little possibility of Cubans reaching the big leagues by any route outside of the current practice of abandoning their homeland (what is referred to stateside as “defection”). The raw truth of the matter remains that there is no reasonable possibility of any MLB-INDER détente or any free flow of Cubans northward under the current political and economic climate. More specifically, until the Cuban government changes its socialist framework and embraces free market capitalism, and until the US government completely abandons the embargo policies of the Helms-Burton legislation, there can be no accord. More damning yet is the fact that, even if the above two transitions were somehow miraculously to transpire, there is still a third obstacle here and that is MLB’s current business practices which involve the league’s complete contractual ownership of all its ballplayers. A player under contract to an MLB club is owned by MLB and does not share his contractual obligations with the sports federation from his nation of origin. The implications of the latter fact will become clear here as the story unfolds.
Nonetheless, the recent surprising policy reversal by INDER does certainly have major implications within Cuba itself. The main thrust of the announcement was a revolutionary new pay scale for Cuban players participating in the domestic National Series season. League players will now be divided into several categories based on their talent-level, service time, achievement (the common Cuban term being “rendimento” which means productivity), and whether or not they have earned slots on the various Cuban national squads chosen for international tournaments (such as the MLB World Baseball Classic, the Haarlem Baseball Week event, or the Pan American Games). Top level players will now receive 1,500 Cuban pesos per month (about $60 US) plus a bonus of $300 US for national team status. There are also bonuses that will be paid out in US dollars for players on national squads that earn medals or individual trophies (MVP or all-star awards for example) in international events. And players receive free housing plus additional perks.
The revelations (played up heavily here stateside) concerning players contracting with foreign leagues was only a secondary phase of the INDER announcement and not the main thrust as suggested by US press accounts. And that “new” condition was a actually confirmation and formalization of a policy that had already gone into partial effect this past summer when three Cuban leaguers (Alfredo Despaigne, Yordanis Samón and Michel Enríquez) were contracted out to the Campeche ball club of the AAA Mexican League. This precedent will apparently now be expanded and we can expect more top Cuban stars playing in Mexico (and perhaps also in Taiwan and maybe even the Dutch League) in coming summers. But this situation must be understood in context. Cuban players are not now suddenly free to hire agents and negotiate openly with pro ball clubs outside Cuban shores (after the stateside capitalist model); such contract negotiation will work through INDER (the Cuban sports ministry and baseball commission) and any player’s primary contractual obligation (at least under the current regime) will remain with the Cuban League.
Two conditions are clearly stated under the new regulations: Cuban ballplayers can perform overseas with INDER approval, but (1) they must be free to bring they salaries back home to Cuba, and (2) they must fulfill their homeland obligations by performing with the national team if selected, and more importantly, by returning each winter to play a full November-March schedule with their domestic ball clubs in the Cuban National Series. An example of the policy is currently found with the case of slugger Alfredo Despaigne who performed in Mexico this summer and is now back on the hometown Granma roster for the November start of a new Cuban League National Series season.
It is precisely the two above-specified conditions that effectively block any immediate contracts with big league clubs. OFAC regulations and embargo polices completely rule out Cuban ballplayers sending home salaries earned on American soil, salaries that might benefit their families on the island but that are also seen in Washington (and much of Miami) as shoring up an enemy communist government now headed by Raul Castro. It is precisely these embargo regulations that require all “defecting” athletes to be first cleared (unblocked) by OFAC (the US Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control administering Helms-Burton embargo provisions) before they can sign contracts with any big-league clubs. Players like Aroldis Chapman, Yoenis Céspedes, Yunieski Maya and Yasiel Puig were delayed in signing (some for longer periods than others) by precisely these regulations. So stingy is OFAC in controlling cash flow to Cuba that the monies earned by the Cuban teams and players for participating in the second and third editions of the World Baseball Classic (2009 and 2013) – funds already duly paid out by MLB – are still being frozen by OFAC and have not yet been received by INDER and thus by the Cuban players who participated. Ballplayers representing all other countries were long ago paid their earned contractual amounts for WBC participation.
But OFAC is not even the largest obstacle here. The newly stated Cuban requirement that INDER maintain the primary contracts with ballplayers, putting them under obligation to play a full winter National Series season, is something that will never fly with MLB ball clubs. No MLB clubs now allow their players (especially big-investment top-dollar stars, or carefully limited pitchers with strictly monitored annual pitch counts) to opt for winter league service. Risk of injury or excessive wear and tear is always the rationale. That is precisely why the winter leagues have died on the vine in Puerto Rico, Venezuela and the Dominican Republic. No more names like Iván Rodríguez, Roberto Clemente, Pedro Martínez or Albert Pujols entertaining the locals back home with an annual full slate of native-soil winter league games. If Yulieski Gourriel or José Miguel Fernández were to be playing in Boston and San Diego during summer months they assuredly would not be also logging games in Havana and Matanzas during the winter season.
Take this even one step further. Olympic baseball has now disappeared largely (if not entirely) because MLB owners are unwilling to release players to man USA, Dominican or Dutch squads during Olympic events that might overlap with regular-season or post-season play. How then can we image MLB releasing Chapman or Céspedes or a newly signed Yulieski Gourriel or Erisbel Arruebarruena for a Cuban squad in playing the July Rotterdam World Port Tournament should Cuban officials decide to insist on it? In short, the new Cuban regulations do not at all open the door to an MLB pipeline; instead they add a further dead bolt to the already tightly sealed portal.
Why then, one might ask, did the Cuban baseball officials release this series of new regulations at precisely the time they did? This is a question completely overlooked by most US media outlets in the rush to salivate over fantasies about plucking the island clean of all its remaining talent in order to staff big league stadiums. The reasons are not hard to uncover. The announcement and the changes specified were aimed largely if not almost exclusively at disarming an increasingly tense situation on the home front and thus letting some of the potentially explosive steam out of the pressure cooker that is the current National Series scene.
Hundreds of young players have left the island in the last five years and the past two years have seen an even more alarming abandonment by a significant number of front line stars – Céspedes, Puig, Leonys Martin, Alex Guerrero, Leslie Anderson, Dalier Hinojosa, Miguel Alfredo González and José Dariel Abreu are among the most recent and most celebrated. While the national squad remains strong, and while the bulk of the young escapees harbor only small hopes for professional careers up North, the loss of so many mid-level athletes has weakened the league considerably. Cuban League teams are now forced to carry increasing numbers of 17 and 18 year old prospects who lack proper seasoning and should still be in the Cuban minors (what they call the Developmental League).Morale is noticeably low on the home front and Cuban fans are growing more disillusioned. Under the embargo athletes are forced to play with inferior equipment and on sandlot-level fields. Something drastic had to be done to shore up spirits at home by providing larger financial incentives and rewards that might stem the “defection” tide and keep more players at home. The days are disappearing when playing for national honor alone is sufficient to sustain the island’s national sport.
And there was also likely another motive here. The Cuban Baseball Federation, like the Cuban government itself and certainly the bulk of the Cuban people, is chafing under a long and unproductive US economic embargo; stadiums are dilapidated, balls and bats are in short supply, uniforms are often of industrial-league quality, and the squeeze on cash flow under the embargo is a major culprit here. At the same time the drum beat heard up north remains that tired repeated mantra that Cubans can’t play big league baseball simply because of the odious restrictions of what we like to call the “Castro regime.” But the Cubans have another view and it is not an unreasonable one. As far back as the 1999 Cuba-Orioles exhibition in Baltimore star Omar Linares voiced the opinion that he would love to play big league baseball, and many Cuban stars have subsequently echoed that opinion. But the embargo means that players like Linares or Gourriel or Cepeda must abandon the homeland (“defect”) in order to do so. And they must take that difficult and life-altering step not only because their own government blocks free departure, but also because OFAC restrictions will not allow them to return to their homeland with their hard-earned salaries.
Victor Mesa captured the Cuban ballplayers viewpoint perfectly for me last week in Matanzas. “We would love to pay our players more here in Cuba but we simply cannot because we have no resources thanks to the American embargo.” And Victor was quick to state another Cuban viewpoint. “I love the big leagues and our guys would love to play there if only they could come back every winter with all their earnings and thus improve their lives and families back here.” And Mesa also captured the bottom line at the root of the Cuban stance. “What the Americans have to do, both the government, and the big league bosses, is to open the doors to us but yet also let us keep our own values and our own system and our own way of doing things.” In brief the point being made here is that American relations with the Cubans must be based on some form of détente that doesn’t involve any plans for American-imposed regime change. And history has taught us over the past five and more decades that this is apparently a very tough hurdle to jump.
The timing of the Cuban announcement detailing conditions on foreign professional play seemingly had a well-crafted (even if secondary) motivation. By placing precisely those conditions on professional contracts (first, pay returning to Cuba, and second, players available for winter league service) that OFAC and MLB cannot abide, a clever way was found to send a message that the problems do not reside on the Cuban side of the fence but are found rather in the American camp. The signal here is that it is the policies of OFAC and MLB that are the true insurmountable obstacles to any reasonable accord in the ongoing baseball cold war. At least that is the Cuban viewpoint, and it is not entirely without merit.
I cannot leave this piece without voicing some editorial comments about a few politics-inspired blind spots held by American fans and press when it comes to discussing Cuban baseball. The first has to do with the whole distorted notion of “defection” as it is applied to Cuban players like Yoenis Céspedes or Orlando Hernández. The Cuban players themselves reject (and largely abhor) the very term. They leave home not to make a political statement or to undercut the Communist government, but rather they do so to improve their lives economically and to test themselves at the highest level of athletic ability. It is not a stretch to suggest that the Mexican grape picker or construction laborer who risks his life to sneak over the Texas border is essentially doing the same thing (seeking to better his economic life) as the Cuban “defecting” ballplayer, and yet the Mexican wetback is never labeled a “defector.” Many (especially many in the Miami community) who protest vehemently that Cuban ballplayers should be allowed to sneak onto Florida soil in order to entertain us in big league stadiums (and also grab roster spots from homegrown California or Nebraska-bred talent), are among the same voices who scream the loudest that despicable “illegal” Mexican immigrants should be shipped home immediately as perceived leeches who steal American jobs. Some will protest that there is a world of difference here because the Mexicans can turn around and hightail it home with their paychecks and the Cubans athletes can’t. But is that more the fault of the Castro regime policies or OFAC legislations? I have long struggled with the irony here.
And then there is the issue of the Cuban baseball system itself. For many here it is despicable to have top athletes playing with a spirit of amateurism (but without top dollar compensation) for community, flag and country without permitting them to negotiate to huge dollar for their services. Time and again we are told the Cuban players are slaves used by the state without proper reward. But then how does one explain one of America’s most popular sporting spectacles – big time NCAA college football where top athletes perform for campus, school banner and sacred Alma Mater and do so as faux amateurs? Are not Division I college football players in the same sense “slaves” of lucrative collegiate athletic departments? The naysayers here will again argue that this is very different because footballers at Oklahoma or Notre Dame receive other forms of remuneration like four-year scholarships, plus educations (for that percentage that actually graduate) plus other hefty perks. But the top Cuban players receive houses or apartments, automobiles, and the privilege of foreign travel. Where exactly does the difference lie? How can one condemn Cuban baseball as a system of “slavery” and then cheer loudly for the patriotic spectacle of Nebraska or Ohio State or Miami University football? It is all a matter of perspective one presumes.
But let’s desist with editorial sidebars here. Those who greeted last week’s Havana announcement with hardy cheers and began celebrating the imminent opening of the Sugar Cane Curtain surrounding Cuban baseball have again been somewhat duped by American media outlets who failed to do their homework and thus failed to revel the full story behind transpiring events. As long as there is a US embargo of Cuba there is not likely to be any “normalization” with baseball or any other phase of Cuban-American relations. That was in large part the message Cuban officials were sending both to the Obama administration and to the Bud Selig MLB regime. So let all the misguided celebrations die down and instead let the much-needed serious negotiations now begin.
Peter Bjarkman is author of A History of Cuban Baseball, 1864-2006 (McFarland, 2007) and is widely recognized as a leading authority on Cuban baseball, past and present. He has reported on Cuban League action and the Cuban national team as senior writer for http://www.BaseballdeCuba.com during the past half-dozen years and is currently writing a groundbreaking book (“The Yanqui in the Cuban Dugout”) on his two decades of travel throughout Cuba and his adventures covering the Cuban national team abroad.
New Cuban Regulations Block Any Détente with Big League Baseball
by Peter C. Bjarkman
October 1, 2013
My return last Friday from a weeklong sojourn in Havana was met with a firestorm of media requests for my opinions on a breaking news item apparently suggesting sharp reversals in Cuba’s long-standing Cold War with North American professional baseball. As NPR and other stateside outlets misreported the story, Cuba’s sports ministry had suddenly and unexpectedly announced that their best ballplayers would now be free to negotiate contracts abroad and thus that we were about to witness an immediate and long-awaited floodtide of top Cuban talent into the clutches of major league baseball clubs.
Like so much that involves Cuba-USA relations, the true motivations behind the Cuban government’s announcement went unnoticed; the facts of the INDER press release were both distorted and misapprehended, and worst still, fantasies about a new explosion of Cuban big league talent were fueled by a North American press corps rushing to be first in print with a sensational and attention-grabbing headline. No one actually bothered to do their homework on this “too good to be true” story.
But there were a few experienced Cuban League watchers who got it all essentially right. My colleague Ray Otero this weekend published an excellent Spanish-language account of the complexities of the INDER bulletin and the always informative Cuba-based “Zona de Strike” website has also posted a report (http://zonadestrike.wordpress.com/2013/ ... more-21297) which details the new INDER policies for any who wish to read and analyze them with more care. It is time here for a brief and concise analysis of the situation for our English-language readers.
First and foremost, the announcement released in Cuba on Friday makes no mention of Major League Baseball per se, and its contents offer little possibility of Cubans reaching the big leagues by any route outside of the current practice of abandoning their homeland (what is referred to stateside as “defection”). The raw truth of the matter remains that there is no reasonable possibility of any MLB-INDER détente or any free flow of Cubans northward under the current political and economic climate. More specifically, until the Cuban government changes its socialist framework and embraces free market capitalism, and until the US government completely abandons the embargo policies of the Helms-Burton legislation, there can be no accord. More damning yet is the fact that, even if the above two transitions were somehow miraculously to transpire, there is still a third obstacle here and that is MLB’s current business practices which involve the league’s complete contractual ownership of all its ballplayers. A player under contract to an MLB club is owned by MLB and does not share his contractual obligations with the sports federation from his nation of origin. The implications of the latter fact will become clear here as the story unfolds.
Nonetheless, the recent surprising policy reversal by INDER does certainly have major implications within Cuba itself. The main thrust of the announcement was a revolutionary new pay scale for Cuban players participating in the domestic National Series season. League players will now be divided into several categories based on their talent-level, service time, achievement (the common Cuban term being “rendimento” which means productivity), and whether or not they have earned slots on the various Cuban national squads chosen for international tournaments (such as the MLB World Baseball Classic, the Haarlem Baseball Week event, or the Pan American Games). Top level players will now receive 1,500 Cuban pesos per month (about $60 US) plus a bonus of $300 US for national team status. There are also bonuses that will be paid out in US dollars for players on national squads that earn medals or individual trophies (MVP or all-star awards for example) in international events. And players receive free housing plus additional perks.
The revelations (played up heavily here stateside) concerning players contracting with foreign leagues was only a secondary phase of the INDER announcement and not the main thrust as suggested by US press accounts. And that “new” condition was a actually confirmation and formalization of a policy that had already gone into partial effect this past summer when three Cuban leaguers (Alfredo Despaigne, Yordanis Samón and Michel Enríquez) were contracted out to the Campeche ball club of the AAA Mexican League. This precedent will apparently now be expanded and we can expect more top Cuban stars playing in Mexico (and perhaps also in Taiwan and maybe even the Dutch League) in coming summers. But this situation must be understood in context. Cuban players are not now suddenly free to hire agents and negotiate openly with pro ball clubs outside Cuban shores (after the stateside capitalist model); such contract negotiation will work through INDER (the Cuban sports ministry and baseball commission) and any player’s primary contractual obligation (at least under the current regime) will remain with the Cuban League.
Two conditions are clearly stated under the new regulations: Cuban ballplayers can perform overseas with INDER approval, but (1) they must be free to bring they salaries back home to Cuba, and (2) they must fulfill their homeland obligations by performing with the national team if selected, and more importantly, by returning each winter to play a full November-March schedule with their domestic ball clubs in the Cuban National Series. An example of the policy is currently found with the case of slugger Alfredo Despaigne who performed in Mexico this summer and is now back on the hometown Granma roster for the November start of a new Cuban League National Series season.
It is precisely the two above-specified conditions that effectively block any immediate contracts with big league clubs. OFAC regulations and embargo polices completely rule out Cuban ballplayers sending home salaries earned on American soil, salaries that might benefit their families on the island but that are also seen in Washington (and much of Miami) as shoring up an enemy communist government now headed by Raul Castro. It is precisely these embargo regulations that require all “defecting” athletes to be first cleared (unblocked) by OFAC (the US Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control administering Helms-Burton embargo provisions) before they can sign contracts with any big-league clubs. Players like Aroldis Chapman, Yoenis Céspedes, Yunieski Maya and Yasiel Puig were delayed in signing (some for longer periods than others) by precisely these regulations. So stingy is OFAC in controlling cash flow to Cuba that the monies earned by the Cuban teams and players for participating in the second and third editions of the World Baseball Classic (2009 and 2013) – funds already duly paid out by MLB – are still being frozen by OFAC and have not yet been received by INDER and thus by the Cuban players who participated. Ballplayers representing all other countries were long ago paid their earned contractual amounts for WBC participation.
But OFAC is not even the largest obstacle here. The newly stated Cuban requirement that INDER maintain the primary contracts with ballplayers, putting them under obligation to play a full winter National Series season, is something that will never fly with MLB ball clubs. No MLB clubs now allow their players (especially big-investment top-dollar stars, or carefully limited pitchers with strictly monitored annual pitch counts) to opt for winter league service. Risk of injury or excessive wear and tear is always the rationale. That is precisely why the winter leagues have died on the vine in Puerto Rico, Venezuela and the Dominican Republic. No more names like Iván Rodríguez, Roberto Clemente, Pedro Martínez or Albert Pujols entertaining the locals back home with an annual full slate of native-soil winter league games. If Yulieski Gourriel or José Miguel Fernández were to be playing in Boston and San Diego during summer months they assuredly would not be also logging games in Havana and Matanzas during the winter season.
Take this even one step further. Olympic baseball has now disappeared largely (if not entirely) because MLB owners are unwilling to release players to man USA, Dominican or Dutch squads during Olympic events that might overlap with regular-season or post-season play. How then can we image MLB releasing Chapman or Céspedes or a newly signed Yulieski Gourriel or Erisbel Arruebarruena for a Cuban squad in playing the July Rotterdam World Port Tournament should Cuban officials decide to insist on it? In short, the new Cuban regulations do not at all open the door to an MLB pipeline; instead they add a further dead bolt to the already tightly sealed portal.
Why then, one might ask, did the Cuban baseball officials release this series of new regulations at precisely the time they did? This is a question completely overlooked by most US media outlets in the rush to salivate over fantasies about plucking the island clean of all its remaining talent in order to staff big league stadiums. The reasons are not hard to uncover. The announcement and the changes specified were aimed largely if not almost exclusively at disarming an increasingly tense situation on the home front and thus letting some of the potentially explosive steam out of the pressure cooker that is the current National Series scene.
Hundreds of young players have left the island in the last five years and the past two years have seen an even more alarming abandonment by a significant number of front line stars – Céspedes, Puig, Leonys Martin, Alex Guerrero, Leslie Anderson, Dalier Hinojosa, Miguel Alfredo González and José Dariel Abreu are among the most recent and most celebrated. While the national squad remains strong, and while the bulk of the young escapees harbor only small hopes for professional careers up North, the loss of so many mid-level athletes has weakened the league considerably. Cuban League teams are now forced to carry increasing numbers of 17 and 18 year old prospects who lack proper seasoning and should still be in the Cuban minors (what they call the Developmental League).Morale is noticeably low on the home front and Cuban fans are growing more disillusioned. Under the embargo athletes are forced to play with inferior equipment and on sandlot-level fields. Something drastic had to be done to shore up spirits at home by providing larger financial incentives and rewards that might stem the “defection” tide and keep more players at home. The days are disappearing when playing for national honor alone is sufficient to sustain the island’s national sport.
And there was also likely another motive here. The Cuban Baseball Federation, like the Cuban government itself and certainly the bulk of the Cuban people, is chafing under a long and unproductive US economic embargo; stadiums are dilapidated, balls and bats are in short supply, uniforms are often of industrial-league quality, and the squeeze on cash flow under the embargo is a major culprit here. At the same time the drum beat heard up north remains that tired repeated mantra that Cubans can’t play big league baseball simply because of the odious restrictions of what we like to call the “Castro regime.” But the Cubans have another view and it is not an unreasonable one. As far back as the 1999 Cuba-Orioles exhibition in Baltimore star Omar Linares voiced the opinion that he would love to play big league baseball, and many Cuban stars have subsequently echoed that opinion. But the embargo means that players like Linares or Gourriel or Cepeda must abandon the homeland (“defect”) in order to do so. And they must take that difficult and life-altering step not only because their own government blocks free departure, but also because OFAC restrictions will not allow them to return to their homeland with their hard-earned salaries.
Victor Mesa captured the Cuban ballplayers viewpoint perfectly for me last week in Matanzas. “We would love to pay our players more here in Cuba but we simply cannot because we have no resources thanks to the American embargo.” And Victor was quick to state another Cuban viewpoint. “I love the big leagues and our guys would love to play there if only they could come back every winter with all their earnings and thus improve their lives and families back here.” And Mesa also captured the bottom line at the root of the Cuban stance. “What the Americans have to do, both the government, and the big league bosses, is to open the doors to us but yet also let us keep our own values and our own system and our own way of doing things.” In brief the point being made here is that American relations with the Cubans must be based on some form of détente that doesn’t involve any plans for American-imposed regime change. And history has taught us over the past five and more decades that this is apparently a very tough hurdle to jump.
The timing of the Cuban announcement detailing conditions on foreign professional play seemingly had a well-crafted (even if secondary) motivation. By placing precisely those conditions on professional contracts (first, pay returning to Cuba, and second, players available for winter league service) that OFAC and MLB cannot abide, a clever way was found to send a message that the problems do not reside on the Cuban side of the fence but are found rather in the American camp. The signal here is that it is the policies of OFAC and MLB that are the true insurmountable obstacles to any reasonable accord in the ongoing baseball cold war. At least that is the Cuban viewpoint, and it is not entirely without merit.
I cannot leave this piece without voicing some editorial comments about a few politics-inspired blind spots held by American fans and press when it comes to discussing Cuban baseball. The first has to do with the whole distorted notion of “defection” as it is applied to Cuban players like Yoenis Céspedes or Orlando Hernández. The Cuban players themselves reject (and largely abhor) the very term. They leave home not to make a political statement or to undercut the Communist government, but rather they do so to improve their lives economically and to test themselves at the highest level of athletic ability. It is not a stretch to suggest that the Mexican grape picker or construction laborer who risks his life to sneak over the Texas border is essentially doing the same thing (seeking to better his economic life) as the Cuban “defecting” ballplayer, and yet the Mexican wetback is never labeled a “defector.” Many (especially many in the Miami community) who protest vehemently that Cuban ballplayers should be allowed to sneak onto Florida soil in order to entertain us in big league stadiums (and also grab roster spots from homegrown California or Nebraska-bred talent), are among the same voices who scream the loudest that despicable “illegal” Mexican immigrants should be shipped home immediately as perceived leeches who steal American jobs. Some will protest that there is a world of difference here because the Mexicans can turn around and hightail it home with their paychecks and the Cubans athletes can’t. But is that more the fault of the Castro regime policies or OFAC legislations? I have long struggled with the irony here.
And then there is the issue of the Cuban baseball system itself. For many here it is despicable to have top athletes playing with a spirit of amateurism (but without top dollar compensation) for community, flag and country without permitting them to negotiate to huge dollar for their services. Time and again we are told the Cuban players are slaves used by the state without proper reward. But then how does one explain one of America’s most popular sporting spectacles – big time NCAA college football where top athletes perform for campus, school banner and sacred Alma Mater and do so as faux amateurs? Are not Division I college football players in the same sense “slaves” of lucrative collegiate athletic departments? The naysayers here will again argue that this is very different because footballers at Oklahoma or Notre Dame receive other forms of remuneration like four-year scholarships, plus educations (for that percentage that actually graduate) plus other hefty perks. But the top Cuban players receive houses or apartments, automobiles, and the privilege of foreign travel. Where exactly does the difference lie? How can one condemn Cuban baseball as a system of “slavery” and then cheer loudly for the patriotic spectacle of Nebraska or Ohio State or Miami University football? It is all a matter of perspective one presumes.
But let’s desist with editorial sidebars here. Those who greeted last week’s Havana announcement with hardy cheers and began celebrating the imminent opening of the Sugar Cane Curtain surrounding Cuban baseball have again been somewhat duped by American media outlets who failed to do their homework and thus failed to revel the full story behind transpiring events. As long as there is a US embargo of Cuba there is not likely to be any “normalization” with baseball or any other phase of Cuban-American relations. That was in large part the message Cuban officials were sending both to the Obama administration and to the Bud Selig MLB regime. So let all the misguided celebrations die down and instead let the much-needed serious negotiations now begin.
Peter Bjarkman is author of A History of Cuban Baseball, 1864-2006 (McFarland, 2007) and is widely recognized as a leading authority on Cuban baseball, past and present. He has reported on Cuban League action and the Cuban national team as senior writer for http://www.BaseballdeCuba.com during the past half-dozen years and is currently writing a groundbreaking book (“The Yanqui in the Cuban Dugout”) on his two decades of travel throughout Cuba and his adventures covering the Cuban national team abroad.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3214
Gomez, Polanco and Salcedo first day plans for defending champion Leones del Escogido
02/10/2013 12:00 AM
By Julio E. Castro C.
With 16 days to start the winter season, the coach of the Leones del Escogido, Audo Vicente, has a perspective on what players could be from the first day of action as he cited cases for Mauro Gomez, Gregory Polanco, Edward Salcedo and Wilkin Castillo whom he described as important pieces in the first half of the tournament.
"Although it is too early to give out a lineup, he said that these players will be on the team early. These players will be of great value to the team for the first half of the season as we will observe other boys as they go through the training, "said Vincent.
The Lions will have their first game of the season on 18th of this month when they face the Tigres del Licey at Quisqueya Stadium.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3215
Panama's Paolo Espino, who last year played his second season in Venezuela and the first with Caribes, despite not having a good performance in the minors, had a negative 6-11 record with ERA. of 4.72 in 141 innings pitched with the Cleveland Indians affiliate.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3216
Dayan Viciedo has played against Jose Abreu and said Tuesday he’d have no problem if the White Sox asked him to recruit the big Cuban first baseman.
With the success of Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Yaisel Puig, speculation is rampant Abreu would start a bidding war were he to become a free agent for Major League Baseball as is expected.
The 6-foot-2-inch, 258-pounder had a .360/.385/.760 slash line with three homers and nine RBIs in 25 at-bats in the World Baseball Classic earlier this season.
Abreu has put up gaudier numbers professionally in Cuba, where he previously played against Viciedo. The White Sox outfielder played for Villa Clara from 2005-07 and remembers playing against Abreu, 26.
“He’s a good hitter,” Viciedo said through a translator. “He’s always been representing Cuba in international tournaments, and he’s always been good. I wouldn’t go past that in saying anything else. But he’s a good hitter.”
The White Sox have made no indication whether or not they’d have interest in Abreu. Though the team could be in need of a first baseman in the near future. Paul Konerko is a free agent after this season, and Adam Dunn is under contract for only one more year.
The White Sox also have a strong history of signing Cuban players such as Viciedo and shortstop Alexei Ramirez.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3217With most rosters be finalized, the list with all of the imported players has been completed.
Águilas del Zulia
Vigil Vásquez (Lanzador)
Joshua Schmidt (Lanzador)
Dryl Maday (Lanzador)
Kevin Hankerd (Jardinero)
Mark Minicozzi (Infielder)
<
Bravos de Margarita
Caleb Joseph (Utility)
Antoan Richardson (Jardinero)
Paul Smyth (Lanzador)
Frank del Valle (Lanzador)
Bryan Price (Lanzador)
Matt Hoffman (Lanzador)
<
Caribes de Anzoátegui
Mark Serrano (Lanzador)
Chris Smith (Lanzador)
Paolo Espino (Lanzador)
Jon Hunton (Lanzador)
Leslie Anderson (Jardinero)
Cory Aldrige (Jardinero)
<
Cardenales de Lara
Anthony Vásquez (Lanzador)
Brodie Downs (Lanzador)
Chris Jakubauskas (Lanzador)
Logan Bawcom (Lanzador)
Red Patterson (Lanzador)
Joc Pederson (Jardinero)
Joe Thurston (Utility)
<
Leones del Caracas
Yoanner Negrín (Lanzador)
Tiago Da Silva (Lanzador)
Diegomar Markwell (Lanzador)
Mike Piazza (Lanzador)
Danny Dorn (Jardinero)
Aharon Eggleston (Jardinero)
Steve Susdorf (Jardinero)
<
Navegantes del Magallanes
Anthony Lerew (Lanzador)
Mitch Lively (Lanzador)
Matt Palmer (Lanzador)
Sergio Pérez (Lanzador)
Erik Hamren (Lanzador)
Daniel Bromberg (Lanzador)
Adonis García (Jardinero)
Lew Ford (Jardinero)
<
Tiburones de La Guaira
Taylor Thompson (Lanzador)
Brandon Kloess (Lanzador)
Pedro Villarreal (Lanzador)
Severino González (Lanzador)
Nick McCully (Lanzador)
Tyson Brummet (Lanzador)
Andy Wilkins (Inicialista)
Trayce Thompson (Jardinero)
C J Retherford (Tercera base)
<
Tigres de Aragua
Aaron Thompson (Lanzador)
Jermaine Mitchell (Lanzador)
Dakotta Watts (Lanzador)
Carlos Hernández (Lanzador)
Justin Hampson (Lanzador)
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3218It's disappointing to see only one Tribe player, Paolo Espino, on a Venezuelan roster for the first half of the winter ball season.
I'm hoping to see Trevor Bauer's name pop up somewhere along the lines. He could use the work under the pressures of the winter ball season.
It's still early though.
I'm also anxious to see whether or not Francisco Lindor's name will pop up.
I'm hoping to see Trevor Bauer's name pop up somewhere along the lines. He could use the work under the pressures of the winter ball season.
It's still early though.
I'm also anxious to see whether or not Francisco Lindor's name will pop up.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3219SPORTS.
Leones de Caracas announced today the hiring of outfielder Chad Huffman and pitcher Johnnie Low, to complete the quota of 11 imports for the start of the season on October 10 against the Bravos de Margarita. The team lead Dave Hudgens takes shape.
Leones de Caracas announced today the hiring of outfielder Chad Huffman and pitcher Johnnie Low, to complete the quota of 11 imports for the start of the season on October 10 against the Bravos de Margarita. The team lead Dave Hudgens takes shape.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3220Unbeaten Eagles ace Tanaka takes 5th straight monthly MVP award
TOKYO, Oct. 4 (16:54) Kyodo
Masahiro Tanaka continued to rule Nippon Professional Baseball's
monthly awards for the fifth straight month, when the winners of the
Central and Pacific leagues' pitchers and players of the month were
announced on Friday.
The Rakuten ace, who is 23-0 this season and has won his last 27
decisions dating back to August 2012, went 3-0 with one save, the
save coming when he pitched the final inning of the game in which the
Eagles clinched their first PL pennant. It was the right-hander's
12th monthly honor and his fifth of the year, both NPB records. He
posted a 1.33 earned run average in September.
Softbank Hawks center fielder Yuya Hasegawa won his second
career player of the month award, having won his first in June. The
CL's pitcher of the month nod went to Hiroshima Carp right-hander
Bryan Bullington, while the league's top honor for position players
went to Yakult Swallows infielder Shingo Kawabata.
Hasegawa batted .379 in September and led the league with a .600
slugging percentage and twice had game-winning, walk-off hits for
Softbank.
Bullington went 4-0 with a 1.00 earned run average for the Carp,
who booked their first postseason appearance since 1991. It was his
second award. He beat out Carp ace Kenta Maeda (4-1, 1.69 ERA).
Kawabata earned his first honor of his eight-year career after
batting .393 in September.
TOKYO, Oct. 4 (16:54) Kyodo
Masahiro Tanaka continued to rule Nippon Professional Baseball's
monthly awards for the fifth straight month, when the winners of the
Central and Pacific leagues' pitchers and players of the month were
announced on Friday.
The Rakuten ace, who is 23-0 this season and has won his last 27
decisions dating back to August 2012, went 3-0 with one save, the
save coming when he pitched the final inning of the game in which the
Eagles clinched their first PL pennant. It was the right-hander's
12th monthly honor and his fifth of the year, both NPB records. He
posted a 1.33 earned run average in September.
Softbank Hawks center fielder Yuya Hasegawa won his second
career player of the month award, having won his first in June. The
CL's pitcher of the month nod went to Hiroshima Carp right-hander
Bryan Bullington, while the league's top honor for position players
went to Yakult Swallows infielder Shingo Kawabata.
Hasegawa batted .379 in September and led the league with a .600
slugging percentage and twice had game-winning, walk-off hits for
Softbank.
Bullington went 4-0 with a 1.00 earned run average for the Carp,
who booked their first postseason appearance since 1991. It was his
second award. He beat out Carp ace Kenta Maeda (4-1, 1.69 ERA).
Kawabata earned his first honor of his eight-year career after
batting .393 in September.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3221
By Enrique Rojas / ESPNdeportes
MLB seeks U.S. permission.
The next edition of the Caribbean Series will be held from 1 to February 7, 2014 in Isla Margarita, Venezuela. (Archive)
Orlando.
After submitting the necessary documents to the U.S. government to verify that it does not violate the economic embargo against Cuba, the office of the Commissioner of Baseball is optimistic that a team from the island will participate in the upcoming Caribbean Series baseball .
"Since we submitted the papers to the Department of State of the United States and we are now waiting for the licenser," the international development director for the majors, Dominican Joel Araujo told ESPNDeportes.com.
"We have no choice in the matter, but the experience in previous cases, such as the World Baseball Classic, makes us think that there will be no problem and that Cuba will play on Margarita Island in February," he continued.
Araujo and other major league representatives received this week in the agency's offices in New York, Mr. Juan Francisco Puello Herrera, president of the Confederation of Baseball, to report the status of the request to the U.S. government agency that monitors compliance of the economic embargo.
After an absence of 53 years, the Cuban announced in June that he accepted the invitation of the Caribbean Confederation to return to the Caribbean Series, an event created in 1949 and continued until 1960, when the authorities of the new communist government banned the professional baseball their country.
But in recent times, the Cuban government has softened its stance, formerly radical, to professional sports.
Last week it was reported from the island that President Raul Castro adopted at its last meeting with the Council of Ministers that local athletes could be recruited abroad, but conditional permission with the athletes would be fulfilling their commitments to national teams and pay taxes on wages earned.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3222
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3223
2:31 p.m.Béisbol
Billy Hamilton is Cangrejero
The speedy outfielder from Cincinnati could play all season with Santurce
Joel Ortiz Rivera
The sensational Billy Hamilton, arguably the fastest player in baseball today, will be the center fielder for the Santurce Crabbers in the season will begin on November 1.
Naturally, the hiring depends on Hamilton eventually signing the Winter League Agreement. Currently he is not guaranteed the participation of protected players on the roster of 40 in the majors.
José David Flores, leader of the Santurce, confirmed the agreement to see Hamilton in action with the Crabbers.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3224
With Jose Abreu set for a hefty multi-million dollar payroll, how long will it take before Alfredo Despaigne becomes one of the very few high profile ballplayers left in Cuba to defect?
I would think it's almost a certainty.
Talk about holding onto a winning power ball lottery ticket and not turning it in !!!!! I can't imagine leaving all that cash on the table. Despaigne is just reaching his prime years as is Abreu. He'll hit the jackpot. You can bank on it. But if he decides not to defect, I would not like being in his shoes 10-15 years from now and think about what might have been.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
Re: Winter/Fall/Latin/Asian/World Ball
3225
Manny arrived in Santiago and will play winter ball with the Aguilas under the leadership of Felix Fermin.
“Every day is a new opportunity. You can build on yesterday's success or put its failures behind and start over again. That's the way life is, with a new game every day, and that's the way baseball is.”
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO
-- Bob Feller
Democracy Dies In Darkness - WAPO