CUBA NEWS

March 1, 2006 6w253z


Gloom on deck?

From the man on the street to Fidel Castro, Cuba's baseball fans are a bit pessimistic about their team's tournament chances.

By Mike Clary. South Florida Sun-Sentinel, February 28 2006.

HAVANA In beisbol-mad Cuba, fans have come to expect their national team to dominate in international competition. So the U.S. decision allowing the Cubans into the World Baseball Classic would seem to offer one more chance for the communist island nation to outshine bigger capitalist rivals.

But as the team prepares for its March 8 opener against Panama in Puerto Rico, many here worry that the Cubans won't even make it out of the first round of the 16-team tournament.

"No pitching," lamented Guillermo Cabrera, 48, a regular at the celebrated "esquina caliente," or hot corner, of Parque Central where fans talk baseball all day, every day.

Indeed, no less an analyst than Cuban President Fidel Castro has expressed pessimism about the team's prospects for a championship marquee matchup against the U.S. squad of Major League Baseball stars.

"We're not going to say that we're the best," Castro said, according to the Associated Press. Americans, Castro remarked, "have taken away a lot of the best pitchers, offering them millions of dollars."

Many Cuban stars have left the island to sign lucrative major-league contracts. Defectors have included pitchers Orlando Hernandez and Jose Contreras, who helped the Chicago White Sox win last year's World Series.

What is new is the gloomy outlook in a country that has captured gold in baseball in three of the past four Olympic Games.

The team will lack international experience, home-run power and pitchers, according to Cuban fans.

"We have a very young team, with only one strong pitcher, Pedro Luis Lazo," Cabrera said. "I think they will be able to compete with Panama and the Netherlands -- but Puerto Rico ... "

"They can beat Puerto Rico," said another man in the circle.

"Vayase!" responded Cabrera. Get out of here.

Cubans want to believe, and those looking for hope can find it in the pages of Granma, the communist party newspaper. Under a headline that read "Training: Going splendidly!", baseball writer Sigfredo Barros predicted that the Cubans would do well, even against powerhouse teams from Venezuela, the Dominican Republic and the U.S.

And the players believe.

"We're all enthusiastic, crazy to reach that moment when we will step out on the field in Puerto Rico and show off our quality," Eduardo Paret, the captain, told the Associated Press.

The Bush istration originally opposed Cuba's entry into the tournament, citing the 45-year-old trade embargo on the island. The U.S. Treasury Department lifted the ban after the Castro government agreed to donate to Hurricane Katrina relief any profits the team makes. That raised protest from at least one Cuban-American lawmaker, U.S. Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Miami. He described the decision as "lamentable and unfortunate" and called on the Cuban players to defect once they reach U.S. territory in Puerto Rico.

Max J. Castro, a Miami-based analyst and columnist, called the objections of Diaz-Balart and others on the right in the Cuban-American community "incredibly knee-jerk and misguided."

If those opposed to the Cuban team playing in the classic really want the players to defect, Max Castro said, "they should be advocating for them to play. This is baseball mixed with politics as usual."

Mike Clary can be reached at [emailprotected].


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