National Post

Cuba’s defectors finally come home

- By Michael Weissenste­in

HAVANA • A lineup of Cuban- born baseball stars, including some of the most famous defectors in recent memory, made a triumphant return Tuesday as part of the first Major League Baseball trip to the island since 1999.

Long the object of official disdain in Cuba for leaving the country illegally, Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig, White Sox first baseman Jose Abreu and shortstop Alexei Ramirez and St. Louis Cardinals catcher Brayan Pena were swarmed by star-struck fans and members of the state media in the lobby of Havana’s soaring Hotel Nacional at the start of a three-day mission meant to warm relations between MLB and Cuba.

The high- profile, official return of baseball defectors earning tens of millions of dollars a year in the Major Leagues was a landmark in Cuba’s relationsh­ip with the hundreds of players who have abandoned their country that trained them.

The trip is part of a rapid warming in relations between Major League and Cuban baseball that has taken place since Presidents Barack Obama and Raul Castro declared a year ago Thursday that they were moving to reestablis­hment diplomatic relations.

Puig, who fled to Mexico in a smuggler’s fast- boat in 2012 and then crossed the border to Texas, wrapped his childhood coach Juan Arechavale­ta in a bear-hug, resting the side of his face atop the smaller man’s head.

“I’m very happy to be here,” said Puig, who signed a seven- year, $ 42 million contract and was barred from returning to Cuba until he was granted special permission for this week’s trip.

Pena, who is from Havana, was met by at least 20 family members, who laughed at stories of the catcher’s life in America and handed him the phone to talk to relatives who hadn’t been able to make it.

The players will hold two days of youth clinics while league and Major League Baseball Players Associatio­n executives talk business with their Cuban counterpar­ts, including former President Fidel Castro’s son Tony, one of the most powerful men in Cuban baseball.

League officials said they were optimistic about sealing a deal by early next year for the Tampa Bay Rays to play two spring training games in Cuba. They also hope to make progress in creating a legal route for Cuban players to make their way to the Major League.

“It’s the goal of our commission­er and our owners to ultimately negotiate with the Cuban Baseball Federation and with the co-operation of the U. S. government and the Cuban government a safe and legal path for Cuban baseball players who desire to play Major League Baseball to reach the Major Leagues,” Dan Halem, MLB’s top lawyer, told a press conference covered by what appeared to be virtually every state newspaper, radio and television station in Cuba.

Cuban television avoids games featuring defectors but fans watch their idols’ performanc­es on pirated recordings distribute­d on computer USB drivers. A group of fans who gathered in the lobby of the Nacional waiting for the Cuban stars to pass by said the defectors’ return to Cuba filled them with optimism about the future of the sport in Cuba.

“I see it as a big step forward in baseball in general,” said Gustavo Fernandez, a 21-year-old sculptor. “I think we’ll see better facilities here, players’ contracts with other leagues, relations with Major League Baseball.”

U. S. teams played spring training games in Cuba before Castro’s revolution but none appeared here from March 1959 until the Baltimore Orioles faced Cuba’s national team in Havana in March 1999. MLB has not returned since.

Under Fidel Castro, a passionate baseball fan who saw sports as an expression of national glory, defectors were barred from returning. Most were banished from official memory, never mentioned on Cuban television even as they made headlines on U. S. sports pages.

Castro’s brother and successor, President Raul Castro, has eased the treatment of players who leave as part of a broader easing of social controls. That included the 2013 removal of a required exit permit for all Cubans, except those considered essential to the country.

Some Major League players have been allowed back on low-key trips to see family. A few others, like star infielder Yoan Moncada, have received permission from Cuban authoritie­s to depart legally to start careers in the United States. Moncada won a $31.5-million signing bonus with the Boston Red Sox in March.

Players sneaked off Cuba’s coast by smugglers in powerboats are a different matter. Their illegal departures have been treated until now as deep betrayals of the socialist system. Many have been banned from returning for eight years, like other Cubans who leave illegally.

Peter Bjarkman, author of the upcoming book Cuba’s Baseball Defectors: The Inside Story, said that he had counted 102 national- level players who had left Cuba this year, nearly a third of all those who have departed since 1980. It’s part of a broader wave of Cuban emigration sparked by the fear that the U. S. will cancel special Cold War-era privileges for Cubans as part of the broader warming with the island.

Cuba has been allowing some stars to legally play in countries such as Japan and Mexico during the offseason. Similar policies for the Major Leagues would be far more difficult due to the U.S. trade embargo on Cuba and Cuban fears that broad legalizati­on of departures to the U. S. would make the talent drain even worse.

“I got the distinct impression that right now the Cubans have absolutely no idea of what they’re going to do. They’re in total chaos in this right now,” said Bjarkman, who spent much of the fall in Cuba speaking with people involved in the country’s baseball league.

 ?? Desmond Boylan / th e asociat ed pr ess ?? St. Louis catcher Brayan Pena reunites with his grandmothe­r
Rosa de las Nives, 85, at the Hotel Nacional in Havana, Cuba, on Tuesday.
Desmond Boylan / th e asociat ed pr ess St. Louis catcher Brayan Pena reunites with his grandmothe­r Rosa de las Nives, 85, at the Hotel Nacional in Havana, Cuba, on Tuesday.

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