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Fans make their own
stands at a Cuban baseball park (top). Players may ride to work on
their bicycles. Kit Krieger saw one score a home run ‘and a fan
came up and gave him a chicken. That’s not going to happen at
Fenway Park.’
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Cuba, sí; béisbol,
too
The Caribbean island nation is neither the hell of right-wing
imaginings nor the heaven of the Left. Its old-school love of
baseball, says superfan Kit Kreiger, is where the twain
meet
story by JON
AZPIRI

The most surreal
sporting experience of my life was attending a baseball game at the
Estadio Latinoamericano in Havana, Cuba. At first, the 62-year-old
stadium seemed like any other ballpark, but several key elements
were missing. There was no admission or assigned seating. There was
no advertising in the outfield, just giant banners of Che Guevara.
In between innings, there were no contests or promotions. Instead,
the crowd danced to the beat of salsa or reggaetón. There were
virtually no concession stands or souvenir stands. The only chance
I had to spend my money was when I was propositioned by a
prostitute while sitting in the stands (I declined).
The only thing that
was the same was the game itself. Although there were stylistic
differences, the game was familiar to North American eyes. There
were several ballplayers that day who were good enough to make
millions in the Major Leagues. Instead, they stay in Cuba, isolated
from the world, and make a few dollars a month.
“It’s a parallel
baseball universe,” says Kit Krieger, the retired BCTF President
who runs Cubaball Tours, a company that operates baseball tours in
Cuba. “Baseball, like everything else in the world, has been
homogenized. The Dominican Republic, Japan, it’s all the same. It’s
in the orbit of American-style pro baseball. Here’s one place
that’s a time warp, it’s a parallel universe where people can see
baseball where it’s the game and only the game. It’s not
adulterated by all the things that fans think diminish
baseball.”
During my visit to the
Havana ballpark, there were several times when I wished I had
someone like Krieger to show me around. Even though I speak
Spanish, I had a tough time getting around due to Cuba’s limited
transportation and resources. I also missed out on Cuba’s rich
baseball history, in large part because much of it remains unknown
to everyone except the most rabid baseball fans.
That’s where Krieger
comes in. The Cubaball Tour (cubaballtours.com) takes fans to five
or six Cuban baseball games in cities far from the tourist resorts.
The group visits historic baseball sites and meets some of Cuba’s
baseball legends. One of those legends is Conrado Marrero, a
97-year-old Cuban who played in the Major Leagues in the 1950s.
Krieger has helped raise money for Marrero, who lives off of a
meager Cuban pension.
That’s not all Krieger has done for Cuban baseball. He helped
restore a plaque at a stadium in Havana that commemorates a 1930
tour of Major League all-stars. He also collects equipment from
local Little League teams and sends them to Ciudad Deportivo, the
largest sports facility in Cuba.
Krieger’s passion for
Cuban béisbol started in 1997 when he visited the island nation on
behalf of the B.C. Teacher’s Federation. The lifelong fan, who once
was clubhouse manager for the old Vancouver Mounties of the Pacific
Coast League, became fascinated with the Cuban game. He used the
connections he developed through the BCTF to set up Cubaball in
2001. Over the years, Krieger has fostered relationships with
several Cuban government and sporting officials, giving him
unprecedented knowledge and access to Cuban baseball.
The majority of the people on Krieger’s tour are guys in their 50s,
60s and 70s who love the game’s history. For them, Cuba brings back
waves of nostalgia. “It’s baseball as they think they remember it,”
says Krieger. “They are people who love baseball but are
disillusioned by the gap between the lives of players and fans.
They say that Mickey Mantle rode the subway to Yankee Stadium. He
lived in the neighbourhood. To them, this is what baseball should
be. We went to a game where a guy hit a walkoff home run, then went
back to the dugout, got on his bicycle to ride home and a fan came
up and gave him a chicken. That’s not going to happen at Fenway
Park.”
Krieger hopes the tour
is more than just a walk down memory lane. He wants it to break
down preconceived notions about Cuba and give travelers a glimpse
of the complexity and richness of Cuban life. “Cuba is not the hell
that the Right says it is and it’s not the heaven that the Left
says it is either,” says Krieger.
Cubans are famous for
their warmth and good humour, but there can be a cool distance
between Cubans and foreigners, due in large part to what critics
call “tourism apartheid,” a policy that tries to limit contact
between tourists and locals. While the government appears to be
easing those restrictions, it still can be hard to get a Cuban to
let his guard down.
To Krieger, baseball is a way to break through those barriers.
During his tour, he takes his group to “Esquina Caliente” (Hot
Corner), a place in Havana’s Parque Central where Cubans stand
around and talk baseball. The conversations can get pretty heated.
In a country where people often watch what they say, it’s a place
where Cubans can talk freely about something that everyone,
regardless of their political persuasion or country of origin, can
relate to. Says Krieger: “I’ve never met a Cuban who couldn’t talk
baseball.”
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