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Commie Ball (Michael Lewis, Yuniesky Betancourt, and Cuban baseball)

Michael Lewis (the author of Moneyball and The Blind Side) has written a fantastic piece about the many sides and contradictions of modern Cuban baseball. It centers around the federal government's prosecution of Gus Dominguez and smuggling of Cuban baseball players, but also talks a lot about the current personalities that populate the Cuban teams and the general culture of baseball there.

Commie Ball: A Journey to the End of a Revolution

It's fantastic in general, but if nothing else it's a must read because our starting shortstop Yuniesky Betancourt plays a major role as a key player in the Cuban defections.

Mesa’s Villa Clara team vies for the lead in an important stat: player defections. Live through a season with Víctor Mesa and a few days on a raft surrounded by sharks doesn’t seem so terrifying. Mesa’s shortstop and catcher were banned from baseball for speaking on the phone with Cuban defectors. His shortstop Yuniesky Betancourt hopped a boat to Florida one night in 2003. Established as Seattle’s starting shortstop two seasons ago, Betancourt was asked if he had problems adjusting to big-league managers. “We have a manager in Cuba, and that manager is worse than anything you have in the major leagues,” Betancourt replied. “His name is Víctor Mesa.”

An invisible line runs from Víctor Mesa, yelling from his dugout, to Gus Dominguez, in his cell inside a California prison. For the one thing that the U.S. attorney general and the jailed sports agent agree upon is that all the trouble began when Yuniesky Betancourt fled Víctor Mesa’s ball club.

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This is as good a place to mention it, but

Dayan Viciedo, one of the more exciting talents out of Cuba in a while, just defected.

Viciedo led the Cuban league in home runs a few years ago at the tender age of… 16. He also hit .350ish; it’s been a while since I’ve seen the stats.

There are two oddities here: 1) he’s apparently put on the pounds, much in the mold of our own Yuniesky Betancourt. This has many teams thinking he’ll never be more than a 1b, although many teams don’t really care. 2) He immigrated to the US. As Yuni knows, the smart defector moves to the Dominican Republic or Mexico in order to escape the provisions of the US draft. MLB will have to sort through Viciedo’s status – if he, like Betancourt or Kendry Morales, is a free agent, able to sign with the highest bidder, or, if he’s like our own Johan Limonta, and is subject to the US draft.

Sorry… carry on. I haven’t read this Lewis piece, but friends tell me it’s stellar.

by marc w on Jun 11, 2008 9:45 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Oh dear, if he's draft eligible...

I hope he doesn’t tempt them over Strasburg :(

The really terrible thing is that I’m actually serious about that…

by seattlebruin on Jun 11, 2008 11:21 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

The way I understand it...

... is that they meant this year’s draft.

Prior to the draft, names have to be submitted to the MLB head office, and the list is then distributed amongst the 30 teams. You can’t pick names that are off the list, but if a player is on the list and isn’t picked, then he’s eligible to sign as a non-drafted free agent, which plenty of lesser college players often do.

If Viciedo was on the list and snuck through overlooked, he may be eligible for a NDFA signing.

I could be wrong though.

"Ever tried? Ever failed? No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." - Samuel Beckett http://mvn.com/milb-mariners/

by JY on Jun 11, 2008 11:51 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Have they actually made a determination yet?

I’d highly doubt he was on the draft list given that he defected a few days ago – a few days after the draft.

If it’s ruled that he’s subject to the draft, he’ll go to some south florida CC like Limonta did (I’d guess).
Given that his profile and everything, he’ll fight hard to be a free agent, but I really don’t know the process for determining if he is or isn’t subject to the draft.

by marc w on Jun 12, 2008 8:58 AM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

I thought the report was that he'd been in the US for a few weeks now

but yeah, I was assuming it would be for next year’s draft, if anything, too.

by seattlebruin on Jun 12, 2008 9:39 AM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Oh, hey, look at that

He got here ~ late May. So that’d be before the draft, but still so close to it that I doubt his name would’ve been on the List.

by marc w on Jun 12, 2008 9:50 AM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

I've got that issue of VF just sitting around, toying with me.

I keep reading the first page right before bed. It looks absolutely fantastic, though.

Brought to you by Carl's Jr.

by acblue on Jun 11, 2008 10:44 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I read this during lunch

Fantastic article, incredibly interesting.

Yuni comes off as a bit of an ass, but I can’t blame him.

by patsfan on Jun 12, 2008 11:14 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

Most ball players tend to be this way.

Jl/Robert '08: Promise for a CoachCage on Friday nights!

by Fin on Jun 12, 2008 1:24 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Very great read, but a couple of quotes stuck out

First is this one:
“The managers do dopey things to remind everyone they exist—like bat their best hitter seventh or bunt the D.H. in the top of the first with runners on first and second and nobody out. “

Funny how our manager’s logic somehow resembles this.

Second one:
” but these Cubans weren’t like the others: they’d been governed by fear, and when you took the fear away they were rudderless. They ate too much and listened too little, all the while longing for their loved ones back in Cuba”

This could possibly explain Yuni’s weight gain and less effectiive playing along with the quote stated above about Victor Mesa’s tough managing.

Jl/Robert '08: Promise for a CoachCage on Friday nights!

by Fin on Jun 12, 2008 1:30 PM PDT reply actions   0 recs

The weight gain for Betancourt was huge

I thought it was bulk in terms of muscle though, like he was trying to hit for more power. Whatever he did to his body though it’s killed his range.

by nfreakct on Jun 12, 2008 1:40 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

Great read -

makes me think less of Yuni though. He won’t help the guy who made him a millionaire? The biggest ass in that story is Dominguez’s attorney.

by nwtrev on Jun 13, 2008 10:06 AM PDT reply actions   0 recs

I agree

Both Yuni and his attorney were the assholes. I feel bad because Dominguez seems like an overall good guy being scapegoated for the smuggling of cuban baseball players into the country.

Jl/Robert '08: Promise for a CoachCage tomorrow!

by Fin on Jun 13, 2008 1:20 PM PDT up reply actions   0 recs

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