Tag Archives: Cuba

MLB heads to Havana as live games return to BT Sport

Live baseball returns to British TV screens this week with two games to watch.

ESPN in the States starts to cover a few Spring Training games once we get to the latter stages of the Cactus and Grapefruit Leagues. On Monday, they are broadcasting a game between the Boston Red Sox and St Louis Cardinals and BT Sport/ESPN in the UK will be picking up the feed with coverage starting at 17.00.

The Red Sox are scheduled to send plenty of ‘name’ players to the game, including starting pitcher Clay Buchholz. He has been a frustrating figure for Red Sox fans in recent seasons by mixing occasional brilliance with more regular rubbish. Spring Training stats don’t count for much, so we shouldn’t put too much emphasis on him allowing 6 walks in 5.1 spring innings so far, but it would be encouraging to see him hitting his spots and generally starting to gain some sharpness as the regular season approaches.

Fine tuning is what spring training is all about and so you could consider the games as a whole to be relatively meaningless.

That will not be true for the live game on Tuesday. The Tampa Bay Rays’ trip to Havana to play the Cuban national team is absolutely packed full with meaning, much greater than a mere game of baseball.

President Obama’s visit to Cuba is gaining headlines across the world and it is fitting that a baseball game is part of the overall occasion. Whilst baseball may be referred to as ‘America’s National Pastime’, it has long been an engrained part of Cuban culture.

The political situation between the two countries has meant that Cuban players have had to defect from their homeland, often taking great risks in doing so such as in Orlando ‘El Duque’ Hernandez’s fabled boat trip, to play in the Major Leagues. Current Yankees pitcher Aroldis Chapman famously scarpered from a Rotterdam hotel in 2009 whilst his team was competing in the World Port Tournament, unfortunately for me just a couple of days before I got there to take in some games.

Most recently, at the start of February Yulieski Gourriel – long seen as the best position player in Cuba – and his younger brother Lourdes snuck away from a hotel in the Dominican Republic and are now pursuing opportunities to potentially sign with Major League teams.

There is hope that the thawing of relations between the two countries will result in a regulated and legal path for baseball players in the not-too-distant future, although quite how much freedom of movement (and freedom on the player market) that will result in is yet to be determined. Hopefully it will be a step in the right direction at least.

The Rays’ visit should be a momentous occasion and the game is live on BT Sport/ESPN from 17.30 on Tuesday.

With Baseball Tonight episodes returning to BT Sport channels on a regular basis this week, and Nat Coombs’ new All American Sports Show on talkSPORT2 beginning on Tuesday at 18.00, excitement for the season ahead is really starting to build.

Cuban Céspedes a Cactus League curiosity

Oakland A'sSaturday will be an exciting day for Oakland A’s fans.

Their team’s new Cuban outfielder Yoenis Céspedes is set to make his Spring Training debut against the Cincinnati Reds at 20.05 GMT, with the game being covered live on MLB.TV.

Céspedes was one of the most intriguing free agents of the recent offseason. He had starred in the Cuban baseball league and for his national team before defecting to the Dominican Republic last year to follow his dream of playing in the Major Leagues.

Cuban players always fascinate in part because of that journey, whether from a symbolic point of view, a literal point of view or both. Orlando Hernández epitomized this better than any other, fleeing his homeland by crossing shark-infested waters on a little boat before signing for the New York Yankees.

When he made his debut on 3 June 1998, we were given the first chance to see whether the tales of El Duque’s excellence back home amounted to myth or reality. There is always an element of discovery when a prospect starts competing at the Major League level, but with Cuban exports this is increased ten-fold. You just don’t know how good they will be or how easily they will be able to adapt to a completely different culture in North America.  Continue reading

Netherlands win the Baseball World Cup

bwc2011The Netherlands Senior baseball team has turned what was already a positive year for European baseball into a great one.

In the early hours of Sunday morning European time, the Netherlands defeated Cuba 2-1 in Panama to win the Baseball World Cup for the first time. 

Technically this is the second time a European team has won the event, as the records show that the inaugural staging of it in 1938 was won by Great Britain. 

However, and without wishing to downplay the achievement of that team, the 1938 version was simply a series between Great Britain (actually England) and a U.S. Olympic team. 

The England team won the series 4-1 and the International Baseball Federation decided to crown the team as the first World Amateur Champions after the event, as explained in the excellent ‘History of the Great Britain Team’ available as a pdf on the Project COBB website.

The Netherlands’ triumph is therefore the first time that a European team has won the World Cup in its format as a truly international competition.  Continue reading