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There's Nothing Wrong with Cuban Baseball

By Peter C. Bjarkman*
Prensa Latina
October 22, 2010

http://www.prensa-latina.cu/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=231318&Itemid=1

San Juan

The people of Cuba own a beautiful baseball, pure in
its concept and artistic in its execution.

Unlike its North American and Asian professional
counterparts, the Cuban League version of the sport is
played far more for pride and passion than for the
tarnished purposes of supporting a highly profitable
commercial enterprise.

Cuban fans not only witness major league style talent
in their own backyards but also enjoy a truly unique
experience of rooting for hometown teams that actually
consist of homegrown athletes' ballplayers born in the
local village and not merely rented for a season or two
before they peddle their talents on the open market to
some other bitter league rival.

Cuban fans-despite a sagging island economy-can still
walk to the downtown stadium, purchase a prime location
ticket for a mere pittance, and sit up close to the
action in an arena that still looks and feels more like
a neighborhood ballpark than a multi-level shopping
mall. And for decades the island's faithful have
enjoyed following the fortunes of super-talented
national teams that have with awesome regularity come
home easy winners from almost every international
tournament on the calendar. But as with all things
governed by human appetite, Cubans simply can not fully
appreciate nor savor what they have at hand.

Spoiled by a half century of true baseball paradise,
their contemporary national pastime seems always the
convenient excuse for endless second-guessing and
relentless dissatisfactions. Lost in the exchange is a
joyous air of celebration that once marked the past-era
island sporting experience. If ever there was
indisputable evidence that you can indeed have far too
much of a good thing, then early 21st century Cuban
baseball has to be the near-perfect exemplar.

The fallout of endless criticism and constant carping
has now begun to raise its ugly head once again in the
wake of Team Cuba's championship round 5-2 loss to the
Dominican Republic at last week's "Pre-Mundial"
Baseball World Cup tournament qualifier staged in San
Juan.

For a fifth consecutive year the once-invincible Cubans
have again limped home from a major international
tournament with runner-up silver medallions rather than
the almost universally expected top gold medal prize.
It apparently matters little to 10 million-plus Cuban
baseball fanatics that Team Cuba alone has reached the
championship match of these most recent five
prestigious events. Nor does it seem much satisfaction
that this string of "successes" has kept the Cubans
squarely atop the IBAF world baseball rankings (well
ahead of the powerhouse Americans, Japanese, Koreans,
and the remainder of the world's top ball-playing
nations). Nor does anyone on the island apparently care
to acknowledge a rather obvious truth: that
international tournament competitions are now so far
advanced over those of previous decades that five
straight trips to the title match in the world's top
international venues is something of a small miracle in
itself; silver medals in today's international
tournaments are thus anything but a shortcoming. The
Americans, by stark contrast, are now sending top big
league prospects to these games and yet have only
reached the final rung in two of these post-2006
showcase tournament events.

But victory-spoiled Cuban fans of course don't see it
this way. In the 1970s, 80s and 90s their crack
national teams won nearly every tournament outing in
sight (nearly every game played let alone every
championship trophy); they amassed the sport's most
miraculous feat imaginable with either outright victory
or at least trips to the finals of fifty straight major
world-class venues between the 1961 Amateur World
Series in Costa Rica and the 2008 Olympic tournament in
Beijing. That streak was finally ended with a second-
round ouster at the encore edition of the MLB "Clasico"
in March 2009, yet it has now been further extended
with final-day losses at both last September's European
World Cup and last week's San Juan Pre-Mundial.

Fifty-two out of fifty-three such triumphs is hardly
cause for alarm. Earned in combat against current top
professionals with big league credentials-instead of
rank amateurs drawn from collegiate or industrial
league ranks-the silver medals of 2006 (World Baseball
Classic, finals loss to Japan), 2007 (World Cup Taiwan,
finals loss to USA), 2008 (Beijing Olympics, finals
loss to Korea), 2009 (World Cup Europe, finals loss to
USA), and 2010 (Pre-Mundial, finals loss to Dominican
Republic) are truly boasting points, not
embarrassments. They should indeed stand out as rather
remarkable evidence of the Cuban League's long-doubted
yet now-proven competitive balance alongside the
world's top professional leagues.

For generations Cuban fans longed for the opportunity
to see their top stars buck heads against the world's
finest ballplayers. Now that this has finally happened,
the only response, time and again, seems to be an
unwarranted wailing and moaning because Team Cuba is
not still running roughshod over seasoned ex- and
future major leaguers, just like they once did versus
poorly prepared amateurs. It is certainly enough to
make an outside observer wonder just how well the
hordes of seemingly savvy Cuban fans ever really
understood the true nature or true stature of their own
cherished national sport.

Knee-jerk responses in Havana to each of the silver
medal "defeats" of the past five seasons (from street
corner fans and professional sportswriters alike) have
been predictable and universal. It is a familiar hue
and cry and it runs something as follows: immediate
actions should be taken to repair an obviously flawed
contemporary Cuban League structure that must somehow
be responsible for such international embarrassments.

Respected colleagues are suggesting a needed overhaul
of Cuban National Series structure. The mantra is
always the same. There should be fewer league teams so
that the remaining players face a stiffer level of
competition. The season should be longer, or perhaps
shorter. Traditional provincial teams should be
combined; there should be fewer players in the national
series; perhaps 90 games in the National Series are too
few, or then again maybe too many. There should be a
shorter-duration and smaller second season along the
lines of the long-abandoned "Selective Series" or Super
League. Managers should use their Cuban League pitchers
differently-perhaps following a big-league model of
specialized roles for starters, middle relievers and
closers. And so forth and so on.

The list of recommendations seems endless, and in the
end it all amounts, I think, to little more than utter
nonsense. Such changes would carry the huge negative
consequence of stripping current Cuban League baseball
of most of what makes it not only unique but perhaps
the most entertaining spectacle in the entire existing
baseball universe. A structure with teams representing
each province is precisely what lends Cuban baseball
its greatest charm.

The island sport is so special entirely because fans in
each outlying province can still root for their local
nine throughout the island-wide pennant race. And they
can watch the island's top stars all winter long in
their neighborhood parks in Guantánamo, Sancti Spíritus
or Holguín. Reducing the number of teams or collapsing
provincial squads into six or seven regional teams
would only destroy all the successes of Cuba's
revolutionary baseball over the past half-century. If
one wants proof of this, just look at what happened
with the brief experiment known as the Super League
between 2002 and 2005. That revamped competition (with
five regional teams) turned off Cuban fans completely;
no one went to the ballparks; no one watched on
television. Why? Because the traditional and popular
provincial teams with their historically built-in fan
bases were no long playing. Quoting here a timeworn if
non-baseball gem of wisdom, why should one throw out
the baby with the bathwater?

Imagen activa But there is a far stronger argument to
be made against radical changes in Cuban League
structure. It would be one thing to sacrifice something
of local island baseball tradition if there was any
concrete evidence that technical flaws were at the
heart of Team Cuba failures. But Cuba's losses (if
silver medals are indeed losses) in the international
arena have absolutely nothing to do with the quality of
domestic league play or the nature of domestic league
structure. Nor are they related to any failures in
selecting precisely the right combination of players
for recent Team Cuba rosters.

The team lost in San Diego in March 2006 because it ran
smack into one of Japan's top major league aces on one
of the best days of his career. And let us also
remember that in March 2006 it was only two rather
lucky victories in San Juan (over Panama and Puerto
Rico) that propelled a rather "charmed" Cuban team all
the way to the WBC finals in the first place. The loss
to Korea in Beijing resulted when the Korean manager
gambled successfully by playing his infield at double
play depth in the bottom of the ninth and Yulieski's
bouncer up the middle (the potential game winner) was
unfortunately two or three feet closer to the second
baseman's reach than  it might otherwise have been.
(Baseball is truly "a game of inches" and if Yulie's
grounder had been stroked closer to the second base bag
it would have rolled into center field as the game-
winning hit.

Bad luck and not bad planning defeated the Cubans in
Beijing.) A lost gold medal last September in Nettuno
also resulted only when an over-used Pedro Lazo was (on
one rare occasion) uncharacteristically ineffective,
and also when a big USA rally was aided by a dropped
toss at first by Ariel Borrero. This is baseball-the
ball doesn't always bounce precisely in the right
direction. The big hits don't always come at the
correct moment. The remarkable saga surrounding Cuban
baseball is precisely how often victory has still been
achieved at crucial moments, even against competition
which is now five or ten fold better than it was a mere
decade in the past.

Look more closely and objectively at what just happened
in San Juan. The Cubans played a remarkable game
against a talented Venezuelan club (one that was indeed
better than last September's Venezuelan World Cup entry
which had knocked off eventual champion Team USA in the
opening pool round in Germany). In that breath-stopping
semifinals victory Enríquez and Despaigne both produced
dramatic clutch late-inning hits and Jonder Martínez
and Yadier Pedroso were both brilliant in late-inning
relief roles. That very evening vaunted Team USA-the
most talented club in the field and one featuring a
trio of sure-fire future big league super stars-fell to
the gritty Dominicans and thus failed to achieve what
Cuba had already achieved-a ticket to the finals in one
of the most competitive and talent-laden international
tournaments ever staged.

In the finals Norge Vera got off to a rough start and
the club dropped way behind early. But then Yulieski
González produced one of the top Cuban mound
performances of recent memory, holding a Dominican
lineup with six ex-big leaguers totally at bay for the
remainder of the contest.  Cuba certainly had its
chances to pull this one out of the fire. In the top of
the sixth the bases were loaded when three of the
island's top sluggers failed to deliver (Bell popped
out and Cespedes and Mayeta both went down swinging).
In the eighth with two aboard and one retired, Bell (so
productive throughout the entire tournament) lined
sharply into a rally-killing double play. This is
baseball; it was one of those nights when the big hits
just were not there. Do we blame the size or
organization or length of the National Series season
here, or do we simply credit some very gutsy Dominican
pitching?

So what did the loss to the Dominicans have to do with
flaws in Cuban League structure or gaps in the Cuba
roster? Absolutely nothing, obviously. Where is the
logic here in wailing about the insufficiencies in
Cuban League baseball? Bell is one of Cuba's greatest
batsmen ever. This year's team (and that of the past
several seasons) is perhaps the best contingent Team
Cuba has every fielded (at least from the offensive
side of the game). This is not Kindelan and Linares
swinging aluminum war sticks against 20-year-old USA
collegians with no professional experience. This is a
Cuban lineup with such superior modern-era greats as
Cepeda (the only unanimous all-star at the recent
"Clasico"), Despaigne (who set an all-time home run
mark against the best World Cup field ever in Europe),
and Bell (whose eight grand slams last winter branded
him as the greatest clutch hitter in Cuban League
annals).

What would have been the reactions back home if Bell
had slammed the ball into the gab in either the sixth
or the eighth against the Dominicans and victory had
been pulled out of a hat just as it was a day earlier
versus Venezuela? All Cuba would have been in ecstasy
once more and no one in the Cuban press or in Havana's
Parque Central would have any longer been calling for a
complete overhaul of the Cuban League system. This is
the fine line in baseball between defeat and victory.
But where is the element of logic to be found in all
the island complaints? The problems facing Cuban
baseball are not at all internal problems. They are not
the result of flaws in the manner in which current
national teams are prepared. The problems-if any at
all-are external and are found in the elevated level of
competition. Cuba is now playing in the "big leagues"
leagues of international baseball. The gulf between
major league competition and international tournament
competition has now been narrowed considerably and at
this new competitive level no country wins all the
time. No one even comes close to winning all the
time-except of course the Cubans.

Cuba won so relentlessly on the world baseball stage
for a half-century precisely because its talented teams
played against lousy ball clubs of rank amateurs and
unpolished collegians. It is easy to play with spirit
and abounding confidence when it is so obvious that
most games will be knockouts and also when you only
have to prepare for perhaps one or two tough matches
during a given  tournament cycle. Those days are long
gone now, of course. Imagine for a moment a different
world of international baseball in the sixties ands
seventies and eighties and nineties in which USA
Baseball had been sending an American League or
National League squad (or perhaps the MLB World Series
winner) to  IBAF events like the Intercontinental Cup
or mislabeled Amateur World Series.

Who then would boast forty or fifty straight gold
and/or silver medals on the international stage? Had
Linares and his group, or Marquetti and Muñoz and
company, played the Chicago Cubs or Boston Red Sox (or
even the Pawtucket Red Sox of the AAA International
League) each year rather than Japanese and Korean
industrial league mainstays they would probably never
have won much of anything at all. But those earlier
Cuban clubs romped year after year over mere patsies in
a baseball of far inferior quality when compared with
today's upgraded product.

Cuban writers once again began suggesting (as seemingly
every year) a radical change of National Series
structure as the apparent silver bullet that would
restore Cuban domination on the international scene.
This is misguided for two reasons: foremost because
such changes will have little if any impact on changing
a Team Cuba product which is already at a higher level
than ever before; and also because it is based upon a
fantasy that any one country can ever again dominate an
international baseball that has now finally achieved a
true competitive balance. This is not to claim that
some tweaks and adjustments might not bring small
improvements in the already lofty Cuban product.

For example, if the quality of top Cuban players is to
be advanced further there is one possible alteration in
the Cuban League format that might strengthen those
possibilities. This would consist of  importing into
the domestic Cuban League some ex-big leaguers and
promising minor leaguers from the Dominican and Puerto
Rico and even the Mexican League (perhaps even from the
American minor leagues) to staff some of the Cuban team
rosters. Cuban rosters already feature the best talent
to be found on the island; elevating that talent level
still further can now only come from relying on some
non-native imports. Another alternative might also
involve releasing some of the top Cuban stars to play
(on loan) in the pro circuits of North America and thus
to extend their talents by pitting them against top
professional pitching week after week before returning
them to the Cuban national team for international
events. That would be the only way of truly upping the
level of domestic competition.

But please understand me well here. I do NOT (I said
NOT) advocate any such alterations that would involve
either sending players abroad or polluting the
traditional Cubans-only nature of island league
structure. If such a breakdown of Cuban League
isolation would perhaps better polish the performance
of certain Cuban players, it would also at the same
time destroy the integrity of the Cuban League itself.
It would sabotage the best baseball spectacle remaining
on the planet. I want to see the Cuban League remain as
it is for as long as it can, even if it may pay some
price for its isolation when it comes to the arena of
international competitions. The New York Yankees do not
win every single World Series title precisely because
they are playing in the big leagues (with its
relentlessly even talent pool) and not in the Pacific
Coast League, the Mexican League or the Dutch League.
The Cuban all-stars can no longer win every
international event precisely because they are playing
in the professional era of the 2000s and not the
amateur epoch of the 1970s or 1980s.

What Cuban baseball can and should hold onto jealously
is a National Series structure in which each province
boasts and celebrates its own homegrown talent and its
own home-based league ballclub. Cubans can still savor
a league which is all-Cuban and where ballplayers are
thus deeply motivated by national and regional pride
and not merely by top-dollar pro contracts.

Cuban fans can still celebrate a baseball in which
their heroes can be seen up-close and personal in the
neighbor stadium and not only as flickering television
images beamed from distant North American parks. The
Dominicans and Puerto Ricans and Venezuelans have
already all lost a once-precious but now only dimly
remembered domestic sport; that loss came once all the
young domestic talent began fleeing their homeland to
perform on the stages of North American "organized"
baseball.  To maintain the beauties of an elevated
homegrown baseball experience seems (to this writer)
worth far more than a few extra victories on the
international tournament circuit.

Many North American fans long nostalgically for a
baseball of their youth and most Cubans harbor a
similar desire; this is the nature of baseball as a
pastoral and backward-looking sport. Older generations
of Americans covet a return to a beautiful spectacle of
their childhood when the ballparks were smaller and
more intimate, the local stars didn't switch teams
almost yearly through rampant free-agency, and you
didn't have to take out a second mortgage on the family
homestead to be able to afford box seats and some hot
dogs during a family outing to the local major league
or minor league park. Cubans who still have that old-
time baseball spectacle instead want only to return to
an era of invincibility in which their cherished all-
stars were untouched and unchallenged every time they
sallied forth to play aboard. Both are idle fantasies.
Neither fantasy world can ever again return in any
realm but fond memory.

In short Cubans can still watch the most entertaining
and rewarding of all baseball spectacles while at the
same time enjoying that fact that their talented all-
stars can still hold their own tournament after
tournament against the best of the seasoned
professional mercenaries from the North American majors
and minors. The sad truth is that far too many Cuban
fans fail to appreciate the beauties of a unique brand
of baseball played in the current era because they are
so obsessed with the easy victories achieved in a far
inferior baseball of two or three decades back. It is a
truly sad disease, one that puts victory at such a high
premium that true enjoyment of the world's greatest
sport can never be fully experienced. I too (as a Cuban
fan by spirit if not by blood) cheered passionately for
a victory last Wednesday night against the Dominicans
at Hi Bithorn Stadium. But in the end I was far more
thrilled by what I had witnessed-and proud of what had
been achieved-than in any way deflated or angered by
what had for the moment seemingly been lost.
_________________

* Peter C. Bjarkman is the author of A History of Cuban
Baseball, 1864-2006 (McFarland, 2007) and is widely
recognized as a leading authority on Cuban baseball,
both past and present. He has reported on Cuban League
action and the Cuban national team for
http://bjarkman.com/ during the past three-plus years
and is currently completing a book on the history of
the post-revolution Cuban national team. He frequently
contributes stories to Prensa Latina.

_____________________________________________

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