Kuwait Times

Cuban baseball hit with record number of defections

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HAVANA: One player took off from the airport, while another jumped out the window of his hotel room. In all, of the 24 members of Cuba’s national baseball team who arrived in Mexico for the under-23 World Cup, only about half came home. This year, a record number of players have defected from the communist-run island nation, where baseball is the national pastime but which is enduring its worst economic crisis in 30 years.

The mass defection is “unpreceden­ted in the history of baseball,” Francys Romero, a sports journalist who has written a book on the phenomenon, told AFP. The player who jumped from his hotel room window? He told Romero that he shimmied down a palm tree to get to a waiting getaway car.

Cuban baseball players leaving their homeland is not new — when profession­al sports were upended in the wake of the revolution led by Fidel Castro, many sought better opportunit­ies abroad. After a smattering of defections during the Cold War, the exodus picked up pace after the fall of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s.

Since Rene Arocha left the national team at the airport in Miami in 1991 for a career in the United States, about two or three players a year have deserted their country. Nine jumped ship in 1996. Those players are consistent­ly treated as disloyal traitors.

Some have left legally — an option that became possible with immigratio­n reform in 2013, but which was starkly curtailed when flights were reduced due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. A who’s who of players who became Major League stars have made the leap, including Orlando and Livan Hernandez, Jose Abreu, Aroldis Chapman, Yasiel Puig and current Tampa Bay Rays standout Randy Arozarena.

Not only has the number of players seeking a career abroad exploded, but their profiles are different: they are younger and not always destined for Major League stardom, according to Romero. So why are they risking it? “To change their lives. Sports comes after that,” he says.

Those who have left have faced criticism on social media, but many Cubans have simply wished them well

— they are all too aware of how difficult life is in Cuba at the moment, with major shortages of food and medicine.

Earlier this year, when Cuba’s national team came to the United States to play Olympic qualifying games, top talent Cesar Prieto, two other players and the team psychologi­st defected. Cuba, a three-time Olympic champion and 25-time Baseball World Cup winner, failed for the first time ever to qualify for the Summer Games in Tokyo.

For Luis Daniel del Risco, currently the highest-ranking official in the Cuban baseball federation, there is “a

war” under way to “destroy Cuban baseball.” He slammed what he called “a harassment campaign” by foreign recruiters, who attend most games that Cuba plays abroad.

“These people have access to the hotels (where the players stay), and many of them come just to contact these young people” with proposals to play elsewhere, he said. Recruiters also call the players and send them messages via WhatsApp, either directly or through their relatives, Del Risco claimed, saying such overtures prevented players from concentrat­ing on the competitio­n at hand. — AFP

 ?? ?? HAVANA: Baseball players play with friends at a field in Havana, on October 7, 2021. — AFP
HAVANA: Baseball players play with friends at a field in Havana, on October 7, 2021. — AFP

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