But the six-foot-two Contreras cast a giant shadow over Baltimore's
stirring 3-2 victory in 11 innings. He confounded Baltimore hitters with a
dizzying array of sliders, curves and 95-mph fastballs in pitching eight
shutout innings.
After Contreras struck out 10 batters, Castro congratulated him,
privately calling him ``the intrepid stopper for our leaking pitching
staff.''
Speculation abounds in Cuba and the United States that players such as
Contreras could defect when the Cuban team plays in Baltimore in May.
``I don't care what the score of [Sunday's] game was. If the prize
decides to leave us, the embarrassment to Castro will be bigger than any
exhibition loss,'' said one Cuban who spoke from the island nation Sunday
evening.
When the Cuban national team travels to Baltimore May 3, the
customary group of exiles offering a link to defection will also be
there.
``The only reason I won't be there is if I'm dead,'' said South
Florida baseball agent Joe Cubas, who has helped half a dozen players
defect from Cuba.
Cubas will not say if he has contacted or will target any Cuban
players for defection in Baltimore. But he is traveling to Baltimore
perilously soon after a major surgical procedure. He is not risking his
health simply to take in an exhibition game.
Whether some players defect or not will not determine the fate of
these exhibitions. Baltimore owner Peter Angelos said Sunday he knows of
``two or three'' other major league teams that have applied to travel to
Cuba. And Cuba is fertile ground for baseball talent so replacements will
always crop up to replace the defectors.
But the heightened concerns about defections by some of Cuba's
baseball heroes serve as clear evidence that Castro's repressive rule is
rotting the country to its core.
And baseball, my friends, is at Cuba's core.
During his 40-year reign, Castro has robbed the Cuban people of
their human rights, their food, and in the extreme, their lives. But word
spread around La Habana last week that Castro was about to pull his most
sinister act: He was going to rob the common person of the national
game.
The government prohibited ordinary citizens from attending Sunday's
exhibition. Invitations were printed and issued and no one without one
could attend.
Of course, the invitations went to communist party members and
others within Castro's favored elite. The common folks were so enraged,
they stayed away en masse from the country's league championship series
game Saturday night.
The Estadio Latinoamericano was only half-full as the Industriales
took a 2-0 series lead over Santiago de Cuba. So Castro's invitation
miscalculation has already heightened civil dissent within the
populace.
There are local Cuban exiles who argue Sunday's exhibition was
nonetheless poorly conceived and ill-timed. Cubas is a powerful voice in
that chorus.
``I think it's a tragedy and a travesty that on one side of the
world we're bombing a dictator for committing atrocities against his
people and on the other side of the world we're playing baseball with a
dictator for doing the same thing,'' Cubas says.
Many exiles also argue Castro benefits from the exhibition.
Where? Everywhere you look, this exhibition exacted a cost from
Castro.
He had to stand during the Star Spangled Banner. That had to cut a
slit in his communist, imperialist-hating heart. And the pain was no-doubt
amplified when baseball commissioner Bud Selig sang a full-throated
rendition right next to him.
Second, Castro was forced to endure sitting between the egomaniacal
Angelos and the personality-deprived Selig for 11 innings.
Then, the Orioles controlled most of the game. Yes, the Cubans
rallied with runs in the seventh and eighth innings. But it was clear
Cuba's players had little muscle in the lineup and little mastery on the
mound absent Contreras.
A shell of the Baltimore team that will be lucky to play .500 ball
in the American League East this summer was obviously superior.
But the greatest cost from this exhibition series to the publicity
conscious Castro may not come until May -- when the hero the dictator
treasured on Sunday may travel to Baltimore, and never leave.Castro took baseball away, too
Copyright © 1999 The Miami Herald