Medicine Hat News

Long road to Williamspo­rt for Little Leaguers from Venezuela

- MATT MARTELL

SOUTH WILLIAMSPO­RT, Pa.

The players from Venezuela look as happy as any other team, dancing to “Shake Your Groove Thing” with the tournament mascot before a win over Mexico and raising the roof to “Taking Care of Business” before a loss to Canada.

They go through all the baseball routines — greeting a slugger after a home run, blessing themselves before atbats and cheering their pitcher.

But they might not be at the Little League World Series were it not for the support of a couple of major league players from their home country.

“In a way, this helps them appreciate this in a different way,” Carolinne Valbuena, the mother of third baseman Jhann Bozo, said through an interprete­r.

Venezuela has been caught in internal strife, pitting socialist President Nicolas Maduro against an opposition-led congress increasing­ly stripped of power. Underlying the civil unrest is a country living in poverty and beset by runaway inflation.

In addition, Maduro’s government has been at odds with the Trump administra­tion. The U.S. president said this month he would not rule out a “military option” in Venezuela.

Texas Rangers second baseman Rougned Odor first learned to play baseball in Maracaibo, the town that’s home to the Venezuelan squad.

“I know everybody on that team, in that league,” Odor told The Associated Press in Texas this weekend. “And that’s why I tried to help those kids.”

The first step for the players was obtaining a visa to the U.S., and they had to go to Caracas, the nation’s capital, to get them. Odor paid for their flights.

Simply flying to Caracas, though, wasn’t enough to get the players to the Little League World Series. Visas to the U.S. run about $170.

San Diego Padres pitcher Jhoulys Chacin is also from Maracaibo. He found out from a friend about the players’ financial plight and paid for all their visas.

Chacin’s Little League team lost to the Maracaibo team that eventually went on to win the Little League World Series in 2000.

“I know how big a deal it is for the young guys ... so they deserve to go,” Chacin said Sunday in San Diego. “I’m glad I could help them come here to play in the Little League World Series. That was one of my dreams when I was young.”

Still, there is a part of the Little League World Series experience that’s missing for most of the Venezuelan players. Only three parents of players on the team were able to make the trip.

And those three might not have made it if not for a donor from Venezuela who now lives in Lock Haven, Pennsylvan­ia, about a 30-minute drive to Williamspo­rt. The man let them stay at his house, Valbuena said.

Yasiel Puig homered in the 12th inning, helping Los Angeles top Pittsburgh.

Puig drove a 1-0 pitch from rookie Dovydas Neverauska­s (1-1) over the wall in centre for his 22nd of the season. The Pirates put runners on first and second with two out in the bottom half, but Ross Stripling retired Max Moroff on a liner to right for his second save.

Curtis Granderson hit a grand slam off Gerrit Cole in Los Angeles’ five-run seventh,

CHICAGO — Yolmer Sanchez homered and drove in four runs, Jose Abreu hit his 25th of the season and Chicago held on to beat Minnesota in the first game of a doublehead­er.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GENE J. PUSKAR ?? Santiago, Dominican Republic pitcher Esmil Collado delivers in the second inning of an Internatio­nal eliminatio­n baseball game against Maracaibo, Venezuela at the Little League World Series tournament in South Williamspo­rt, Pa., Monday.
AP PHOTO/GENE J. PUSKAR Santiago, Dominican Republic pitcher Esmil Collado delivers in the second inning of an Internatio­nal eliminatio­n baseball game against Maracaibo, Venezuela at the Little League World Series tournament in South Williamspo­rt, Pa., Monday.

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