Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Cuba's visit to Miami spurs complicate­d emotions

- By James Wag■er

MIAMI ❯❯ This is the most Cuban region in the United States.

More than 1.2 million people of Cuban heritage are estimated to reside in the greater Miami area. That, though, comes with a long, complex history: The city was largely remade over the past six decades by Cuban exiles who fled the communist government on the nearby Caribbean island. The region is an epicenter of anti-Castro activism and is where, in the past, entertaine­rs sympatheti­c to the Cuban government were protested or banned.

That complicate­d history is what adds intrigue and importance to the proceeding­s today when the Cuban national baseball team makes what is believed to be its first trip to Miami since the communist revolution in 1959. The oncemighty team, which has faded as its top players have left for the United States, worked its way through the group stage of the World Baseball Classic in Taiwan and shocked the internatio­nal baseball world by winning a quarterfin­al game in Japan. That qualified the team for the semifinals of the quadrennia­l tournament, where it will face the winner of Saturday night's quarterfin­al game between the United States and Venezuela.

The stadium hosting the championsh­ip rounds of the tournament is loanDepot Park, which is in the Miami neighborho­od known as Little Havana.

“In Miami, the symbolism is very powerful,” said Andy Gomez, a retired professor of Cuban studies at the University of Miami. “For both sides.”

The presence of the Cuban

team, which is seen not only as a symbol of the country's most popular sport but as a propaganda tool of the government, is expected to stir conflictin­g emotions in the South Florida community.

“I'm there for sports, not for politics,” Josuet Martinez, 48, who is Cuban and a baseball fan, said in Spanish. “We're going to enjoy sports.”

Martinez said this on Friday while standing with his brother inside Westland Mall in Hialeah, a city with a large Cuban population in Miami-Dade County. Martinez was at a Lids store in the mall having the Cuban team's logo sewn onto a blue hat because the store did not have any of the official team hats in stock.

He said he left his business and his country seven months ago to come to the United States for better economic opportunit­ies.

“In Miami, there are a lot of Cubans, so I imagine there will be a lot of fans,”

Martinez said.

Others are not so sure. Armando Lopez, 68, lives near the stadium, the home of the Miami Marlins, but said he did not plan to attend the game. When he lived in Cuba, he was a fan of the national team. But after he left for the United States in 1980, he said, he started “evolving and realizing the manipulati­on of the sports teams.”

“It's not that as a Cuban you don't love a team from Cuba,” he said in Spanish. “You sympathize with a team from your country. But the problem is the indoctrina­tion.” He added that the players, many of whom have chosen not to leave the Cuban team in favor of the MLB, where they could earn millions, should “come here to play and come see how different it is here versus there, that people here live in liberty.”

The contrastin­g viewpoints were emblematic of a changing atmosphere among Cubans in South

Florida. Older generation­s fled for ideologica­l reasons, while younger waves have left for economic ones. Large protests of Cuban artists were more common in past decades. Children and grandchild­ren of Cuban immigrants have grown interested in visiting the island.

And there has been some normalizat­ion of relations between the countries, at times through baseball. On March 22, 2016, the Tampa Bay Rays played an exhibition game against the Cuban national team in Havana, with President Barack Obama seated next to President Raul Castro of Cuba. In 2018, MLB and the Cuban Baseball Federation struck a deal to ease the path for players to compete in the United States without defecting — but the Trump administra­tion later nixed it, saying it constitute­d a violation of trade laws because the Cuban federation was part of the government in Havana.

“You can't put the entire Cuban American community into one group,” said Gomez, who came to the United States as a child and is now 68. For example, he said, some Cubans of his generation suffer from what he called Cuba fatigue, in that they have been waiting for the big moment of change but it hasn't happened, even after the death of Fidel Castro in 2016. And for people of Gomez's daughter's generation, he said, the Cuba topic is somewhat irrelevant because it is not part of their daily lives.

“I think there'll be mixed emotions across the board,” Gomez said. “Those wounds will open up again and bring back bad memories for many people. I think it will bring out a certain level of madness in some other groups that are planning to protest.”

Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel has supported the national team, saying goodbye to players in person before they left for training before the WBC. On social media, he has donned the team's hat and shared messages about them.

Some politician­s in the United States have spoken out against the game.

“It is of the utmost disrespect to the entire Cuban exile community that this team is here,” Hialeah Mayor Esteban Bovo, a Republican, said in a statement. “I am outraged, and I stand with the families of the political prisoners who are currently being tortured in the regime's prisons without being able to see their families. I stand with the opposition, and all those who peacefully express their opinion about the baseball game.” The Cuban national team has been to Florida before. In June 2021, it played in an Olympic qualifying tournament in West Palm Beach and Port St. Lucie, but went 1-2 and failed to earn a spot in the Summer Games. There were a few demonstrat­ions outside the stadiums.

To even compete in the WBC, the Cuban team needed special permission from the U.S. government because of its sanctions, which prohibit doing business with Cuba. After consulting with the State Department, the Department of Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, which enforces the country's trade sanctions, issued specific licenses to allow Cuba's inclusion and the “voluntary participat­ion of certain Cuban origin baseball players,” including those playing on MLB teams, a Treasury spokespers­on said.

Cuba was not expected to reach this far in the tournament. The country has won three Olympic gold medals and two silver in the six Summer Games featuring baseball. It also was the runner-up in the inaugural 2006 WBC. But as more and more players defected to play in MLB, the team struggled internatio­nally. It did not qualify for the Tokyo Olympics and hasn't reached a WBC semifinal since that first tournament.

After pressure from defected Cuban players trying to form their own WBC team, the Cuban federation changed its stance. For the first time, it allowed defected players to represent it in this WBC — but only some accepted and others weren't invited or rejected the offer.

To reach this far in the tournament, Cuba finished 2-2 in Pool A play in Taiwan and advnced as the top seed from that group. In a quarterfin­al matchup Wednesday in Japan, it defeated Australia, 4-3, and then flew to South Florida.

 ?? EUGENE HOSHIKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Cuban players celebrate after defeating Australia in a World Baseball Classic quarterfin­al on Wednesday in Tokyo. Cuba plays a semifinal game tonight in Miami.
EUGENE HOSHIKO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Cuban players celebrate after defeating Australia in a World Baseball Classic quarterfin­al on Wednesday in Tokyo. Cuba plays a semifinal game tonight in Miami.

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