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NPB teams are preparing to start the camp in the midst of the COVID-19 contagion wave

Byadmin Globally 24

January 31, 2022


Amid the fury of the sixth wave of the corona virus pandemic, 12 Japanese NPB teams will open their spring training camps in Miyazaki and Okinawa prefectures on Tuesday, where locals hope the game could bring economic boom.

With the spread of the highly addictive variant of Omicron, the feeling of discomfort surrounding the baseball spring grows as one becomes infected after another.

In January alone, at least 70 players tested positive, and infections increased through groups of players participating in joint non-compulsory training that is common in the weeks before spring training.

Six infections from two groups have been reported around Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks stars Yuki Yanagita and Nobuhiro Matsuda. The killer of Tokyo Yakult Swallows Munetaka Murakami, last year’s Central League MVP, was infected for the second time just before the start of the camp.

The league rules give teams limited contractual authority over player activities in December and January, making it difficult to implement the protocol.

“We cannot control or check them. We just don’t work (during this period), “said Isao Inoue, communications director for the Pacific League Hawks, who had at least 10 players infected this offseason.

If the virus infiltrates a spring training camp, where a large number work and live nearby for several weeks, the risk of spreading to the community is enormous. This raises concerns about the cancellation of baseball activities.

In response, 12 NPB teams requested mandatory testing at least twice a week and strict enforcement of the joint meal rules.

In addition to strengthening infection prevention measures, there are ways to limit the consequences of infections once they occur.

Those found by local health authorities to have been in close contact with infected persons will be quarantined for as long as government policy requires.

However, individuals their teams consider “likely close contacts” will face a quarantine of at least six days and will be able to continue training after two negative tests.

Faced with a recent rise in infections, new Hokkaido Nippon Ham Fighters manager Tsuyoshi Shinjo expected trouble.

“It could be that half of the players get infected, and we can’t think of such scenarios,” he said.

Infectious disease specialist Kazuhiro Tateda called on people to remain vigilant.

“We can’t suppress this if we lower our caution,” said a Toho University professor.

Until local governments ban it, the teams intend to allow fans to attend their camps.

According to the Ryukyus Ryukyus Research Institute in Naha, the southern island prefecture of Okinawa received an increase of 2.36 billion yen ($ 20.4 million) last year, when fans could not visit the sites for spring training. This was a serious drop compared to 2020, when the camps brought in 12.17 billion yen.

Given that the quasi-state of emergency COVID-19 is now being applied to most of the country, there are concerns that consumer traffic will suffer. But at the same time, hopes remain that tourists will flock to spring training locations and bring a big economic boost during Okinawa’s low season in February.

In time and misinformation and too much information, quality journalism is more important than ever.
“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.”
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Pacific League MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (left) and Central League MVP Munetaka Murakami pose for photos during the NPB Awards on Wednesday. | KYODO

Rising stars Munetaka Murakami and Yoshinobu Yamamoto named MVPs of 2021 NPB season

BY JASON COSKREY

STAFF WRITER


Munetaka Murakami and Yoshinobu Yamamoto already had a few things in common before the NPB Awards.

Both are rising stars who helped Japan win a gold medal at the Tokyo Olympics in the summer and led their teams — the Tokyo Yakult Swallows and Orix Buffaloes — to their respective league pennants in the fall. They were both All-Stars who put up big numbers during the regular season, before helping their teams reach the Japan Series.

Now they have one more thing in common: they’re both MVPs.

Murakami, the Swallows’ slugging third baseman, and Yamamoto, the Buffaloes’ ace pitcher, were named the MVPs of the 2021 season during NPB’s annual awards ceremony on Wednesday night.

“I’m very honored to win this award,” Murakami said.

The 21-year-old Murakami, who was named Central League MVP, finished tied for the league lead with 39 home runs and drove in 112 runs to finish one behind RBI leader Kazuma Okamoto. He also batted .278 and was second in the CL with a .974 on-base plus slugging percentage. At 21, the fourth-year player is the youngest to win the award in the CL.

“I didn’t win this alone,” Murakami said. “I feel a lot of gratitude toward the Swallows and everyone who supported me and I want to say thank you.”

Murakami was in the lineup as the cleanup hitter for all 143 of the Swallows’ games this season and was one of the driving forces behind the club’s run to the Central League and Japan Series titles. Murakami hit a pair of home runs against the Buffaloes to help the Swallows win one of the most exciting Japan Series in history in six games.

The Swallows’ success was on his mind when he was asked about his most memorable moment of the season.

“No. 1 has to be the team finishing on top,” he said.

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The Swallows’ Munetaka Murakami was the CL co-leader with 39 home runs in 2021. | KYODO

Murakami received 287 of a possible 306 first-place votes and earned 1,472 points to win the award by a comfortable margin. Yakult second baseman Tetsuto Yamada, who was the last Yakult player to win an MVP award (2015), was second with 348 total points and Swallows reliever Noboru Shimizu was third.

Murakami was the CL Rookie of the Year in 2019 and is the seventh player in CL history to earn both awards.

Yamamoto added the PL MVP to the Sawamura Award he won last month after a dominant season for the Buffaloes. Yamamoto was 18-5 with a 1.39 ERA and 206 strikeouts over 193⅔ innings in 26 starts. The right-hander helped take a Buffaloes team that had fallen on hard times from last-place finishes in 2019 and 2020, to the PL pennant and an appearance in the Japan Series this year.

The 23-year-old led the PL in wins, ERA, strikeouts, innings pitched, WHIP (0.85), winning percentage (.783), quality starts (23) and complete games (6).

“I’m going to do my best next season to have even better numbers than I had this year,” Yamamoto said.

Yamamoto stumbled out of the gates, going 3-5 with a 2.37 ERA in his first nine starts. The right-hander then went on one of the most dominant runs ever seen by an NPB pitcher, going 15-0 over his final 17 starts of the season. He threw at least six innings and allowed no more than two runs during his streak of winning decisions.

“I had more losses than wins at the start of the season, but I was able to bounce back with 15 straight wins, so I think I had a really good result,” he said.

Yamamoto received all but three first-place votes in the PL. His teammates received the others, with two going to slugger Yutaro Sugimoto and pitcher Hiroya Miyagi receiving the other.

Miyagi didn’t go away empty-handed, as the left-hander was named PL Rookie of the Year. Carp closer Ryoji Kuribayashi was the CL’s top rookie,

Miyagi was 13-4 with a 2.51 ERA in 23 starts for the Buffaloes, teaming with Yamamoto to give Orix a pair of double-digit winners.

“Miyagi and I created a really good base and if we are both able to have even better results next year, it will be good for the team,” Yamamoto said.

Kuribayashi set a rookie record with 22 consecutive scoreless appearances to start the season and allowed just five runs in 52⅓ innings overall. He finished second in the CL with 37 saves.

The right-hander was also a member of the Samurai Japan team that earned gold at the Tokyo Games over the summer.
“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

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Leaders Cuban baseball season after 16 games

Tuesday, February 15, 2022 10:44 AM

Havana.-

Teams with the day off.

Santiago de Cuba is at the top of the standings.

Carlos Gómez Roque from Sancti Spiritus leads the hitters.

Individual leaders:

Carlos Gómez Roque from Sancti Spiritus stands out with a .457 batting average.

Industrialist Andrés Hernández leads in RBIs 20, slugging .767 and OPS 1.275, 38 at bats.

Marlon Vega from Mayabeque 1.00 era

Yander Guevara stands out with 4 wins 0 losses in 4 games.

Yordanis Alarcón (LTU) and Yaser Julio González (PRI) leads in hits with 24.

Yasiel Andy González (HOL) leads with 9 doubles.

Lázaro Martínez (MAY) in triples 3

Yurién Vizcaíno (VCL) and Alexander Ayala (CMG) in home runs 5.

Raidel Pedraza (VCL) in RBIs 20.

Alberto Calderón (IND) in runs scored 17.

Kelbis Rodríguez (SSP) leads in appearances 8 and games saved 2.

Marlon Vega also with 2 games saved.

Yander Guevara also leads in innings pitched 29.

Erlis Casanova from Pinar del Rio in strikeouts 21.
“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

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Santiago De Cuba goes back to Las Tunas and retains the lead in Cuban baseball standings

15 FEBRUARY 2022

Havana, Feb 15 (ACN) In a duel extended to 10 innings, Santiago de Cuba defeated Las Tunas 7-6 today at the Guillermón Moncada stadium and increased its lead at the top of the LXI National Baseball standings. With the game tied 2-2, the Las Tunas scored four runs in the top of that 10th inning in which they exploited left-hander Luis Fonseca, the tournament's saves leader (7). But Santiago de Cuba responded with a decisive five-run rally in the bottom of the tenth inning. The Wasps improved to 12 and 4 and increased their lead over Mayabeque and Matanzas by 1.5. Santiago made four errors and left 12 runners on base, the third reliever Adrián Sagarra won. On offense, catcher Harold Vázquez went 2-3 with a double and two RBIs.

Meanwhile, Mayabeque had 15 hits and knocked out Artemisa 13-3 in seven innings. Designated Rafael Fonseca went 3-4, with a double and three runs scored. The Mayabeque victory went to José Ignacio Bermúdez, who pitched 5.2 innings allowed four hits and gave up a whopping 7 walks; but Artemisa left 12 men on base.

And Matanzas fell 3-8 to Pinar del Río. Yayfredo Domínguez won despite allowing six hits and giving up three walks in five innings. The savewent to Frank Luis Medina, who pitched an immaculate 1.2 innings with a strikeout. At bat, the leading man for the Vegueros was Juan Carlos Arencibia hitting 2-5 with a double and three RBIs.

In the remaining games, Sancti Spíritus reached its fifth successive victory by beating Granma 6-1, and now shares fourth and fifth places with the Industriales, both with a record of 9-6.

The Havana beat Villa Clara 8-1, Holguín 8-5 over Ciego de Ávila and Camagüey beat Guantánamo (17-8) shortstop Alexander Ayala hit his 7th homer, leader of the season.
“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

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Santiago extended their winning streak with a KO over Las Tunas.

Latin Press

Wednesday, February 16, 2022 09:50 PM


Havana.-

THE Wasps of Santiago de Cuba today knocked out the Lumberjacks of Las Tunas 12-2 and maintain their lead at the top of the 61st National Baseball Series. Santiago de Cuba extended their winning streak with an overwhelming offense and pitching in the capable hands of Alberto Bicet (4-0). After six and a third innings, Bicet successfully defended his undefeated status, allowing two runs -one earned- and five hits, in addition to striking out two of his rivals and walking one at the Guillermón Moncada stadium. The Wasps had 14 hits and were led by Manuel Pérez 3-2, 1rbi, Yoelkis Guibert 4-2, 2rbi, 2r, 1HR, Adriel Labrada 3-2, 1rbi, 1r, Dasiel Sevila 3-2, 2rbi, 2r and Nelson Batista 4-2, 3rbi, 1r, 2-2B).

Similarly, Artemisa beat Mayabeque 11-4, Matanzas over Pinar del Río 4-2, Isla de la Juventud 6-1 over Cienfuegos, Holguín 6-4 over Ciego de Ávila and Granma 4-1 over Sancti Spíritus.

In the rest of the action, Camagüey defeated Guantánamo 9-5, while the Industriales beat Villa Clara 5-4.

Standings:

1 Santiago 15-4
2 Matanzas 11-5
3 Mayabeque 10-6
4 Industriales 9-6
5 Sancti Spíritus 9-7
6 Ciego de Ávila 9-8
7 Pinar del Río 9-8
8 Granma 9-8
9 Artemisa 8-8
10 Isla de la Juventud 9-9
11 Villa Clara 7-8
12 Camagüey 7-10
13 Cienfuegos 6-11
14 Las Tunas 6-11
15 Guantánamo 6-11
16 Holguin 5-12
“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

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Baseball: COVID-19 forces cancellation of Japan-Taiwan games

February 17, 2022

TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Two games between Japan and Taiwan set for Tokyo Dome in March have been canceled at the request of the visitors, Japan's national team announced Wednesday.

Samurai Japan was to play Taiwan on March 5 and 6 in what were to be the first games under new Japan manager Hideki Kuriyama. But given the recent surge in coronavirus infections in Japan, Taiwan officials have decided it is better to prioritize the health of its players ahead of its season.

"It's very regrettable that we won't be able to show off our newest Samurai Japan team as it begins its new challenge to the many baseball fans," Kuriyama said in a statement.

The games were to be the start of Japan's buildup for the next World Baseball Classic to be held in the spring of 2023.
“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

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Lumberjacks save honor against the Wasps

Latin Press

Thursday, February 17, 2022


Havana.-

Los Lenadores from Las Tunas saved their honor today against the Wasps from Santiago de Cuba in the 61st National Baseball season with an 11-4 win. Las Tunas had 16 hits including two home runs and four doubles to support the pitching work of Yudier Rodríguez and Alberto Pablo Civil and achieved their first victory against the Santiago team after two setbacks. The left fielder/catcher Rafael Viñales led the Las Tunas offensive going 3-3 with a homer, two RBIs and the same number of runs scored. Centerfielder Yuniesky Larduet was4-3, with a double, one RBI and one run scored. The catcher/first baseman Yosvani Alarcón also stood out with the bat 5-3 with a homer, three RBIs and two runs scored. For the losers, center fielder Yoelkis Guibert went 4-3 with a pair of doubles and two RBIs. The winner was starter Rodríguez who pitched seven innings allowed four earned runs and 10 hits with four strikeouts and three walks. Civil pitched the remaining two innings and permitted three singles. Starter Carlos Font was charged with the defeat with seven runs in, 10 hits in four innings, with four walks allowed.

The Leones de Industriales completed a sweep by beating the Azucareros de Villa Clara twice by scores of 6-3 and 5-4. The first game went 11 innings, in a game postponed from Wednesday. Now they occupy the third position in a tie with the Hurricanes of Mayabeque, who defeated the Hunters of Artemisa 11-1 in a 7 inning knockout.

In the remaining games on Thursday, Matanzas beat Pinar del Río 5-1, Cienfuegos lost 6-12 to Isla de la Juventud, Ciego de Ávila beat Holguín 20-4, Sancti Spíritus lost 8-9 to Granma and Camagüey beat Guantánamo 10-5.
“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

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“I LEARNED MANY NEW THINGS”

02/11/2022

Caribbean baseball leagues are widely known for influencing the birth and evolution of a baseball player's career.

There are plenty of reasons: the level, the competitiveness, the atmosphere and the adrenaline are, among other things, the main reasons why a player wants to play in the winter leagues.

Catcher Juan Fernández, a rookie for Tiburones de La Guaira and a prospect for the San Diego Padres, spoke with our press department about his first experience in the Venezuelan Professional Baseball League.

“I think it was a very good year for me. I managed to get a lot of help from the league and especially the advice from veteran players. If you know how to take advantage of an experience like this, it will help you in your growth as a player. I learned a lot of new things.”

Fernández was one of the attractive figures on the sharks this season. He dazzled with a powerful .420 average (50-21) in 14 games with three home runs, four doubles, 15 RBIs and 11 runs scored. He was during that period the team's offensive spark plug along with fellow rookie Brayan Rocchio.

Part of that productivity led him to win Player of the Week in the third week of the season.

“It helped me a lot to be surrounded by so many experienced players,” Fernandez emphasized.

Although his performance last season was interrupted by commitments with the national baseball team and later with his organization in the United States. Fernández seems optimistic and wants to play with the sharks again next season.

“There is a very good possibility I will be with the team again next year. I hope to receive the opportunity to be with them again.”

He only participated in 14 games, but he managed to build a good relationship with the shark fans and confessed to having admiration and respect for them.

“I send a greeting to my fans of La Guaira, with love from Juan Fernández. I hope to see you this year supporting us. Good things are coming in the name of God, "concluded the catcher.
“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

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The 1950s—baseball integrates

A significant breakthrough for Latin players came in 1949 when the Cleveland Indians signed the renowned black Cuban player Minnie Miñoso. He was the first unquestionably black Latin American in the majors. Certain players with some black ancestry had played in the major leagues before Miñoso. Cuba had racial barriers to integration in its amateur baseball teams, but the Cuban League had been integrated since 1900. Thus, race had not been an issue in Cuba, where players such as Roberto Estalella and Tomás de la Cruz were considered to be mulattos. In the United States these players’ racial heritage was not recognized, as they were light-skinned and “passed” as white. Thus, Miñoso was a groundbreaker racially for the major leagues and became the first Latin American since Adolfo Luque to attain celebrity status. An exciting, charismatic player known to give his all, Miñoso was the premier Latin in the majors for most of the 1950s. His career extended until 1964, and he was brought back for promotional reasons for token appearances in 1976 and 1980, which made him a five-decade player. The New York Giants (later the San Francisco Giants), the Brooklyn Dodgers (later the Los Angeles Dodgers), the Pittsburgh Pirates, and the Chicago White Sox also fielded Latin players.

The Giants were aided in signing Latin American players by Alejandro Pompez, the owner of the Negro league New York Cubans, who had strong connections in Caribbean baseball. As the Negro leagues waned, Pompez, whose Cubans played at the Polo Grounds when the Giants were on the road, became a special Caribbean scout for the National League team. Some of the talent recruited by Pompez included Puerto Rican pitching ace Rubén Gómez, who joined the Giants in 1953. Eventually the Giants signed Puerto Rican infielders José Pagán and Julio Gotay, and in Orlando Cepeda they found a true star who reached the Hall of Fame. The White Sox’s Alfonso (“Chico”) Carrasquel (nephew to Alejandro) became the team’s permanent shortstop until 1956, when his countryman and future Hall of Famer Luis Aparicio replaced him. Other Latin shortstops in the 1950s were Cubans Guillermo Miranda, José Valdivielso, and Humberto (“Chico”) Fernández.

Cuban pitchers dominated among Latin American pitchers during the 1950s; most were players Cambria had signed for the Senators. Two of the best, Sandalio Consuegra and Miguel Fornieles, had their best seasons with the White Sox and Red Sox, respectively. Camilo Pascual and Pedro Ramos both developed into front-line pitchers in the 1960s.

The player who would be the first Latin in the Hall of Fame, Roberto Clemente, was signed by the Dodgers while he was still in Puerto Rico. Clemente ended up playing for the Pirates, where in 1955 he began his remarkable career as a hitter and outfielder whose only peer was Willie Mays. Clemente, a proud and sensitive man, did much to change the image of Latin players as happy-go-lucky, reckless base runners and free-swinging batters who cared little for their teams. A black Latin, Clemente protested racial bias against Latin players, swaying opinion by virtue of his intelligence and unparalleled skills on the field. His untimely death while on a mercy mission to earthquake-ravaged Nicaragua in 1973 transformed him from superstar to martyr and into a baseball icon. Clemente was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1973 without the required five-year wait (this waiting period has been waived for only one other inductee at Cooperstown, Yankee great Lou Gehrig).

The 1960s through the 1990s

In the 1960s the flow of Cuban baseball talent to the United States was cut off by the advent of the Castro regime. Still, those already in the minors and a few early defectors included players such as Tony Oliva, who won three batting championships; Tony Pérez, who would become a outstanding player with Cincinnati’s “Big Red Machine” (as that Reds team was known in the 1970s); Zoilo (“Zorro”) Versalles, who won a Most Valuable Player (MVP) award while with the 1965 championship Minnesota Twins; Luis Tiant (Jr.), who had a long, distinguished career that began with the Cleveland Indians but peaked with the Red Sox and the Yankees; Cookie Rojas, an acclaimed second baseman with the Phillies; Miguel Cuéllar, winner of a Cy Young Award with the Orioles; and Bert Campaneris, a great shortstop and premier base stealer with the Oakland Athletics.

During the 1960s the number of Puerto Rican players increased, and preeminent players such as Clemente and Cepeda were reaching their peak. A Panamanian second baseman, Rod Carew, began his Hall of Fame career in 1967. In the 1960s and ’70s Carew won seven batting titles in the American League and wound up with a lifetime batting average of .328. A new development was the arrival of players from the Dominican Republic in increasing numbers. Osvaldo Virgil, an infielder with the Giants, was the first Dominican in the majors (1956), and Felipe Alou (1958), with the same team, was the second. The first Dominican star, pitcher Juan Marichal, made his debut in 1960, also with the Giants (by now in San Francisco). With Marichal, Alou and his two brothers Mateo and Jesús, and Puerto Ricans Cepeda and Pagán, the Giants of the early 1960s were a team that, like the 1945 Senators, was loaded with Latins. Other teams, mostly in the National League, followed suit. The Pirates—with Panamanian catcher Manny Sanguillén, Dominicans Manny Mota and Manny Jiménez, Puerto Rican José Pagán, and Mateo Alou—became another heavily Latin team, led by the incomparable Clemente.

Meanwhile, Rico Carty, a slugging outfielder with the Braves, became the first Dominican power hitter in the majors. By the 1970s Dominicans were nearly as numerous in the majors as Puerto Ricans, and Cubans had dwindled to a very few because Cuba remained closed. Dominican players overtook all other Latins by the 1980s and ’90s. Pitcher Joaquín Andújar, catcher Tony Peña, and hard-hitting infielder Tony Fernández became leaders in the sport. The excellence of Dominican shortstops, such as Fernández, Frank Taveras, Rafael Ramírez, Rafael Belliard, and Rafael Santana, created the impression that the Dominican Republic was the premier producer of players for that crucial position. Actually, Venezuela leads in that department, going back to Carrasquel and Aparicio in the 1950s, the Reds’ David Concepción in the 1970s, and more recently the White Sox’s Ozzie Guillén and the Indians’ acrobatic wizard Omar Visquel.

The predominance of Dominicans among the Latins in the majors is due in part to the controversial—some think exploitative—baseball academies established by major league teams in that country; the summer league is also a factor in the development of Dominican talent. The Dominican winter league continues to be a premier circuit in the Caribbean, and Dominican immigrants to the United States have also produced some excellent players, such as the Seattle Mariners’ all-star shortstop Alex Rodríguez and the Indians’ slugging outfielder Manny Ramirez. One of the brightest Dominican stars of all time, second only to Marichal, is the Cubs’ Sammy Sosa, who batted in 66 home runs in 1998 during his famed home run race with Mark McGwire.

Several outstanding players emerged in the 1970s, ’80s, and ’90s from Mexico, where the existence of a long-established summer league discourages many prospects from going to the United States. The most accomplished and popular of the Mexican players was left-handed pitcher Fernando Valenzuela, who had tremendous seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 1980s. Valenzuela, a charismatic player, was the only Latin player in the major leagues at that time to have a large following of his own compatriots at his home field. This situation is becoming more common, however, and the large Latin populations in several major league cities in the United States have led teams to offer Spanish-language radio and television broadcasts.

The 21st century

As the third century of professional baseball begins, the growing instability of Fidel Castro’s government in Cuba threatens to alter radically the composition of the Latin talent pool. Recent Cuban defectors such as Rey Ordóñez and Liván and Orlando (“El Duque”) Hernández are but a small sample of the wealth of players that could become available. “El Duque” has been the greatest revelation. Because of his cunning and pitching know-how, he is a throwback to Méndez, Luque, Marrero, Pascual, and Tiant, the legendary Cuban pitchers of old. But he is also a superbly conditioned athlete, the product of modern training techniques. Cuba has nearly twice the population of the Dominican Republic and a baseball tradition that goes back to the 19th century. In a very short period, Cubans could again dominate Latin baseball in the majors, though never as absolutely as they did in the 1940s and ’50s.

A sudden influx of Cuban talent to the major leagues could have an unsettling effect. Major League Baseball, the governing body of the U.S. major leagues, would need to institute a draft to regulate the flow of players from Cuba. Given the potential number of Cuban players ready to play professional baseball, the Latin presence in the majors would increase dramatically, speeding up changes that are already occurring. Major league teams already have Spanish-speaking managers and coaches throughout their systems, but their numbers would have to increase. Some of these coaches would have to act as interpreters, as former player José Cardenal did for “El Duque” Hernández during his first two years with the Yankees. Spanish coverage via radio and television will surely increase with more Latin players involved and with Latin communities, such as the one in Miami, having enough purchasing power to make a difference.

The game itself will not deviate much from the model offered by Major League Baseball. The fact that there are Latin sluggers like Sosa and Canseco and flame throwers like Armando Benítez and Mariano Rivera means the Caribbean is adapting to the game as it is played in the majors. Latin baseball was once a game of “inside baseball.” This type of baseball depends on advancing runners one base at a time via offense such as the bunt and the hit-and-run. For some time U.S. baseball has instead focused on power baseball, in which players concentrate on hitting home runs far more than on advancing a base runner with a well-hit single. Power is the foundation of the spectacle for pay, and even in communist Cuba baseball is a power game today. There is a homogenization of baseball at all levels. Even the distinctiveness of the National and American leagues is being eroded as they are subsumed under the umbrella of Major League Baseball. Umpiring has been standardized, and interleague play has been instituted. With a commissioner drawn from the ranks of the owners themselves, it is very unlikely that market forces will be thwarted by aesthetic, ethical, or political criteria, except those that benefit Major League Baseball. Having played league games in Japan, there is the possibility that Major League Baseball will become a global monopoly, with affiliated leagues throughout the world. But there is also the danger that the North American version will remain the majors and the rest of the world the minors.

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Latin- ... integrates
“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

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Cleveland Indians outfield Minnie Miñoso, right, talks to Tribe General Manager Frank Lane March 9, 1959 in Phoenix, Ariz. (AP Photo)

Minnie Miñoso and the history he made in Cleveland finally arrives at the Baseball Hall of Fame

Feb 09, 2022 and last updated 6:02 PM, Feb 09, 2022

CLEVELAND — When Black History Month meets America’s Pastime, Jackie Robinson is the first name that comes to mind…and for good reason.

By breaking Major League Baseball’s color barrier in Brooklyn, he opened the game to an entire community that had been aggressively kept out.

But soon after, Cleveland played a central role in opening the door even wider and keeping it open for more players from more parts of the world. This year, when the Baseball Hall of Fame enshrines its 2022 class, Minnie “The Cuban Comet” Miñoso will finally clear his last barrier.

Growing up, it took a while for Charlie Rice-Miñoso to realize his dad wasn’t quite like the other dads.

“I always just thought it was dad going to work,” said Rice-Miñoso. “He was an extremely humble guy and he was from a ranch in Cuba.”

By the time Rice-Miñoso was growing up, Minnie Miñoso’s playing days were behind him as a third baseman for the Negro League's New York Cubans, and outfielder for the Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox. By then, he was traveling the United States and North America as an ambassador for baseball.

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Miñoso stands with White Sox star José Abreu.

Negro Leagues Baseball Museum President Bob Kendrick says it was a job Miñoso was great at.

“Once you met Minnie, you just fell in love with Minnie,” said Kendrick. “He had an energy, a charisma that was so very infectious.”

That’s despite everything Miñoso faced just to play the game he loved. He started in the Negro Leagues because when he came to the United States to play baseball in 1946, that was the only place where he could play.

“And here’s Minnie, coming from another country, speaking an entirely different language, having to adjust from his native homeland of Cuba to life in the Negro Leagues, being called the n-word...when he had no idea what the n-word even meant,” said Kendrick. “These athletes were literally carrying the weight of a race of people, and in Minnie’s case, the weight of two peoples.”

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Former baseball player in the Negro League Minnie Miñoso, stands behind the podium and jokingly gives a speech during his visit to the West Wing of the White House in Washington following his meeting with President Barack Obama, Monday, Aug. 5, 2013. Miñoso, who also played major leagues with the Chicago White Sox, is the only ball player to appear professionally in seven different decades. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

A few months after Jackie Robinson broke Major League Baseball’s color barrier, Miñoso won the Negro Leagues World Series. His New York Cubans beat the Cleveland Buckeyes in six games, including a match-up at both Cleveland Municipal Stadium and League Park in Cleveland.

Two years later, Miñoso would return to Cleveland, this time playing for the Indians as the first Afro-Latino player in the Majors, joining other Cleveland legends Satchel Page, Larry Doby and Luke Easter. Still, prejudices of the time were often made clear, no matter how good those players were.

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Minnie Miñoso broke into Major League Baseball with the Cleveland Indians before spending most of his career with the Chicago White Sox.

“Minnie, Satchel, and Larry Doby were all part of the Cleveland Indians team. They’re playing an exhibition game in Texas, and the three of them had to walk almost two miles to the ballpark because no cab would give them a ride,” said Kendrick. “And they’re walking in their uniforms because they couldn’t change into their uniforms at the stadium.”

The relatively large number of non-white players on the Cleveland roster is at least part of the reason Kendrick says Miñoso didn’t get a fair shot in Cleveland.

“I think there were those within the ranks of the Cleveland organization that went, ‘Uh oh, that’s too many Black folks on this team, we can’t have a fourth guy,” said Kendrick.

In 1951, Miñoso was traded to the Chicago White Sox, where his #9 uniform jersey number was retired in 1983 and a statue was unveiled in the early 2000s. He was elected to the Mexican Professional Baseball Hall of Fame in 1996.

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A statue of Minnie Miñoso stands in the outfield stands at the White Sox's Guaranteed Rate Field in Chicago

Seven decades later, about a quarter of Major League Baseball’s players are Latino, including the only modern-era Hall of Fame Inductee elected by baseball’s writers in 2022, David Ortiz. Ortiz was born in the Dominican Republic, and Charlie says that connection isn’t lost on the Miñoso family.

“He would just be very proud of the fact that he was able to open doors and be the first for many and inspire many,” said Rice-Miñoso.

The irony is that a career partially defined by breaking barriers couldn’t clear the final hurdle into the Baseball Hall of Fame before Miñoso died in 2015.

“Minnie Miñoso wanted to be in the National Baseball Hall of Fame and he deserved to be in the National Baseball Hall of Fame,” said Kendrick.

Kendrick says Miñoso’s stats and role breaking down barriers should have made him a lock. Baseball players and historians lobbied for The Cuban Comet, but he stayed on the outside looking in until the Golden Days Era Committee voted Miñoso in for the 2022 induction ceremony.

Miñoso is going in right alongside fellow Negro Leagues stars Buck O’Neil and fellow Cuban, Tony Oliva.
“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

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White Sox have deep Cuban connection

Club's history of players from the nation started with Minoso


April 19th, 2019

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Jose Contreras, Jose Abreu, Yoán Moncada, Luis Robert, Yonder Alonso and Jon Jay walk into a conference room at Camelback Ranch on a Sunday morning in early March during Spring Training.

A bond has been forged between the group via the White Sox organization they work for, but there’s something deeper shared within these six men.

Contreras, Abreu, Moncada, Robert and Alonso were born in Cuba, but made their way to the United States. Jay is of Cuban descent, but was born and raised in the U.S. This is the White Sox Cuban connection.

It all started, of course, with Minnie Minoso, one of the greatest players in the history of baseball not enshrined in the Hall of Fame. Minoso -- who in 1951 became the first black player to take the field for the White Sox and the first black Latino player in the Major Leagues -- played 12 highly accomplished years in Chicago. He was a gregarious fixture often seen at White Sox home games up until his death on March 1, 2015. He was a friend and mentor to Abreu, among the countless others whose lives he touched over the years.

In all, 20 players with Cuban heritage have played for the White Sox, not counting Robert, who has yet to reach the Majors, but appears well on his way. Robert, ranked by MLB Pipeline as one of the top 40 prospects in baseball, is tearing it up at Class A Advanced Winston-Salem after being limited to 50 games in 2018 due to a thumb injury.

When Robert arrives, he will continue the White Sox rich Cuban pipeline. And while a couple of franchises have had more Cuban-born players over the years (Twins, Reds, A’s and Angels), no club has seen Cuban players make a bigger impact on its franchise, culture and success than Chicago.

Minoso, as noted, is the one who started it all. And the franchise’s finest moment in recent memory -- the 2005 World Series title -- was made possible by two pitchers who defected from Cuba around the turn of the century -- Orlando Hernandez and Contreras. In fact, a picture of Contreras pitching in the playoffs sat up on the wall of the Camelback Ranch conference room where this interview took place.

Contreras was the de facto ace of that club, starting the first game in that year’s American League Division Series, the ALCS and the World Series, and posting a 3-1 record with a 3.09 ERA over the course of the 2005 postseason. He now serves as a special assistant to baseball operations.

Hernandez, aka El Duque, was a swingman who famously entered Game 3 of the ALDS against the Red Sox in the bottom of the sixth inning with the bases loaded and the White Sox clinging to a 4-3 lead. He calmly induced popups from Jason Varitek and Tony Graffanino before fanning Johnny Damon to escape the threat. He pitched two more scoreless innings -- including retiring Edgar Renteria, David Ortiz and Manny Ramirez in order in the seventh -- as the White Sox went on to clinch a series sweep.

he performances by Contreras and Hernandez resonated within their home country and with other Cubans who had Major League dreams. They were soon followed on the South Side by shortstop Alexei Ramirez, who defected in late 2007 and signed a four-year deal with the White Sox, as well as outfielder Dayan Viciedo, who signed a four-year deal a year later.
“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

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Taiwan to reopen to world, Su says

Reuters, TAIPEI

Taiwan is aiming to ease its strict COVID-19 quarantine policy from next month as it needs to gradually resume normal life and reopen to the world, the government said yesterday.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began two years ago, Taiwan has succeeded in keeping reported cases below 20,000, having enforced a blanket two-week quarantine for everyone arriving in the nation, even as large parts of the rest of the world have reopened.

Speaking at a meeting with senior health officials, Premier Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) said that even though there could be further domestic infections, the government was “quite confident” in its disease prevention measures.


“The government must also take into account livelihoods and economic development, gradually return to normal life and step out to the world,” the Executive Yuan cited Su as saying.

On the precondition that there are sufficient medical supplies and preparations, and that the vaccination rate continues to rise, Su said that he had asked the Central Epidemic Command Center to “consider whether reasonable and appropriate adjustments” should be made to the quarantine and entry policy for businesspeople.

Minister of Health and Welfare Chen Shih-chung (陳時中), who heads the center, said that it would aim to cut the quarantine period from 14 days to 10 days before the middle of next month, confident that it could detect any infections within that period with testing.

“Basically, we can relax epidemic prevention” measures, Chen said.

Asked whether quarantine could be done away with completely before the summer holidays, Chen said: “The possibility is not high.”

About 30 percent of the nation’s 23.5 million people have now had a booster dose of COVID-19 vaccine, a figure that is gradually rising, and the government has said that it wants to get that to 50 percent before easing entry requirements.

Taiwan has never gone into full lockdown during the pandemic and has never closed its borders, although arrivals have generally been limited to Taiwanese and foreign resident certificate holders.

Chen said business travelers would be able to return and would have to do the same 10-day quarantine, but he could not offer a time frame on allowing tourists back in.

The center is dealing with a handful of new domestic COVID-19 cases per day, all as a result of the more infectious Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2.

Officials have said they are confident they can contain those outbreaks.
“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

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Taiwan's new CPBL baseball season to start in April

Taipei, Dec. 29 (CNA) The upcoming new season of Taiwan's CPBL professional baseball league is slated to start early April, with the defending champions CTBC Brothers hosting last year's runner-up, according to a top CPBL official Wednesday.

Speaking with reporters after a team general manager's meeting, CPBL commissioner Tsai Chi-Chang (蔡其昌) said the CPBL will start on April 2 with the Taichung-based Brothers at home against the Uni-President Lions from Tainan.

Other important dates for the upcoming 2022 season include July 15, the start of the second-half of the CPBL season, and July 30-31, the dates of the CPBL All-Star Game weekend, Tsai said, adding that the postseason will be held from Oct. 29 to Nov. 1, with the Taiwan series to start on Nov. 5.

The new season will also introduce a mandatory Playoff Series.

The half-season winner with the highest win percentage will go straight to the Taiwan Series, while the half-season winner with the lower win percentage will have to play against the non-half-season winning team with the highest win percentage in a best-of-five Playoff Series.

The half-season winner will be granted an automatic win, while also enjoying home advantage for the first game, as well as the third and fourth games if played.

Meanwhile, the winner of the Playoff Series will punch their ticket to the Taiwan Series, where the half-season winner with the highest win percentage will enjoy home field advantage for the first two games and the fifth game, as well as the sixth and seventh game if played.

If the same team wins both halves of the season, then the second and third teams with the highest winning percentage for the full season will play in a best-of five Playoff Series for the right to face the team that automatically qualified for the Playoff Series.
“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

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Brothers win first Taiwan Series title in 11 years

12/01/2021 10:50 PM

Taipei, Dec. 1 (CNA) The CTBC Brothers completed a four-game sweep of the Chinese Professional Baseball League's (CPBL) Taiwan Series Wednesday, defeating the Uni-President Lions 5-0 in game four to take home the championship trophy for the first time after 11 years.

Thousands of yellow streamers showered the stands as the CTBC Brothers took the title after winning games one, two, three, and four of this year's best-of-seven Taiwan Series, the 32nd edition of the championship.

The win marks the eighth time the CTBC Brothers have won the title, following on from victories in 1992, 1993, 1994, 2001, 2002, 2003, and 2010.

Wednesday's game four, played out in front of 10,000 fans, saw the CTBC Brothers knock out 11 hits to the Uni-President Lions' 4 in a game dominated by Dominican pitcher José Valdez, who only gave up two hits over eight innings.

At the bottom of the ninth with two outs, fellow Dominican pitcher Jose De Paula struck out Uni Lions batsman Chen Chung-ting (陳重廷) to send the away fans into a frenzy, as celebrations broke out amid a sea of yellow.

Valdez was named the game's MVP, while his teammate Chan Tzu-hsien (詹子賢) was crowned Taiwan Series MVP.

The CPBL, formed in 1989 and which currently consists of five teams, is the top tier of professional baseball league in Taiwan. The other teams in the league are the Wei Chuan Dragons, Fubon Guardians, and the Rakuten Monkeys.
“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