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Forget the Castro brothers, it's baseball playoff time in Cuba

by PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Apr 6, 2008 at 02:58 PM

Forget the Castro brothers, it's baseball playoff time in Cuba
Ray Sanchez | Direct from Havana
April 6, 2008
HAVANA

For the rest of this month, many Cubans will pay less attention to the 
ubiquitous speculation about Fidel Castro's health or the government 
restrictions that seem to wither away almost daily under his brother Raul.

The baseball postseason has arrived.

"The playoffs are the best thing happening in Cuba right now," insisted 
Victor Acosta, 47, who took time off from his job as a bricklayer to 
bring his 11-year-old son to the Estadio Latinoamericano to watch a game.

"This is a Cuban celebration," Victor Jr. said. "On every corner people 
are talking about baseball."

On this baseball-mad island, the s****t is a metaphor for life — a long, 
drawn-out affair full of unexpected twists, thrills and heartbreak. As 
America's national pastime opened its season, Cubans sought escape in 
the final weeks of their baseball season.

But the way Cuba views even its favorite s****t appears to be changing, 
in what some observers see as a time of greater tolerance and debate on 
the island. On a Saturday night in January, state television 
unexpectedly broadcast a controversial do***entary about Cuban baseball 
made five years ago by a young filmmaker.

Ian Padron's film touched on a number of taboo subjects, including the 
tough conditions the island's top athletes face and the success of Cuban 
icons who defected to the United States to play in the big leagues.

Although the 68-minute film was made with money from the state's Cuban 
Film Institute, government censors considered it too controversial for 
release. The film, Out of this League, never played in state-run 
theaters or on television before January. Instead, it became one of the 
hottest pieces of contraband on the island.

"I can bet you that nearly everyone in this stadium saw that film before 
it appeared on television," Oscar Suarez, 20, a university student, said 
during a recent game at Latinoamericano, Havana's ballpark, the biggest 
in the country. "When it comes to baseball, we stay up to date."

In the film, Cubans saw one of the country's finest pitchers and a 
fallen hero of the revolution, Orlando "El Duque" Hernandez, for the 
first time since he defected to the United States a decade ago.

"I'm not a traitor. I'm an Industrial," said Hernandez, referring to 
Havana's team, the Industriales. "I've had the op****tunity to play for 
the two best teams in the world: the Industriales and the Yankees."

A former Yankee, Hernandez now earns $5 million a year pitching for the 
Mets. When he defected in 1997, Hernandez had a career 129-47 record in 
Cuba but was under suspension for alleged contact with a s****ts agent 
from Miami.

"It hurt to leave my country behind — my whole life, my family, my 
friends," Hernandez said in the film.

Other defectors also appear in the do***entary, including Kendry 
Morales, now a Los Angeles Angel, and Rene Arocha, who pitched with the 
St. Luis Cardinals and now runs a baseball school in Miami.

"They were defeated by dollars," a Cuban baseball fan says in the film 
of the players who left for the United States. "They sold out."

Raul Arce Galindo, a baseball writer for the Communist youth newspaper, 
Juventud Rebelde, said the broadcast of the do***entary signaled a trend 
of greater tolerance and debate on the island.

"There are mixed feelings whenever a Cuban athlete leaves the country," 
Arce said. "I don't want to use the word 'deserter.' But many people 
feel hurt. They figure the Industriales would be a stronger team with 
many of the players who have left. At the same time, people feel pride 
when these players succeed. It's a love-hate thing."

Even the state press, Arce said, has begun to tackle some harsh, 
once-unmentionable realities, including massive unemployment, food 
production problems and rampant corruption. With that kind of change in 
the air, he suggested, the Cuban papers might someday publish American 
box scores and standings.

In the do***entary, defectors spoke nostalgically about possible 
reunions with former teammates and Cuban exhibition games followed by 
beers at the Hotel Nacional. Maybe, some fans hope, that could happen,
too.

Last week, seated with his son in the left field stands, Acosta said he 
still pictured El Duque Hernandez and his trademark delivery on the 
mound at Latinoamericano.

"To me, El Duque was the best pitcher to come out of Cuba," the 
bricklayer said. "His career was taken away from him and he said, 
'Enough.' He went after his dream."

For the Acostas and other Industriales fans, the postseason escape was 
brief. Pinar del Rio swept their team in the first round of the playoffs.

Ray Sánchez can be reached at rlsanchez@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 .com.


http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/cuba/sfl-flrndcubanotebook0406sbapr06,0,5792818.column
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
Forget the Castro brothers, it's baseball playoff time in Cuba
PL <pl.nospam@[EMAIL P  2008-04-06 14:58:54 

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