Cuba Lost the World Baseball Classic Semifinals—and a Player—to the U.S.
Iván Prieto didn’t board the flight back to the communist island on Monday.

The Cuban national baseball team lost to the United States 14–2 in the World Baseball Classic semifinals Sunday night in Miami. But that's not all it lost.
Bullpen catcher Iván Prieto didn't join his teammates as they flew back to the communist island on Monday, staying in Miami, reported Pelota Cubana, which broke the story. The details of his whereabouts—and whether he was picked up by family members at his hotel, as some have speculated—remain unclear. The Miami Herald reported that Prieto simply "didn't show up at Miami International Airport for the team's flight to Havana."
Why exactly Prieto chose to defect is also uncertain, but one can assume that it is to pursue a career in the MLB. For decades, Cuban players have been barred from joining the MLB due to the U.S. trade embargo, leading to multiple defections. To offset this, the Baseball Federation of Cuba in 2019 proposed a deal with the MLB to allow a list of players to join the league without having to defect. The Trump administration rejected that deal. For Cuban baseball players, abandoning their team while abroad is a way to chase their dreams.
It's also speculated that Prieto was unhappy with the country assigning him as only a bullpen catcher and not an official player on the national roster, seeing as he's known as one of the best catchers in Cuba, playing for the Alazanes de Granma team in the Cuban National Series. Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel hasn't commented on Prieto's defection, though he congratulated the Cuban national team on Twitter on its historic run.
More than 1 million people of Cuban descent reside in the greater Miami area. As such, the stands at loanDepot park, the home stadium of the Miami Marlins, were filled with both proud expatriates and protesters opposed to Cuba's dictatorship. Individual protesters ran onto the field throughout the game waving banners, one reading "Freedom for Cubans," another reading "Country and Life." Another protester unfolded one behind home plate that read, "Down the dictatorship." As one protester was escorted off the field, the stands erupted in a chant for libertad.
The U.S. embargo makes it more difficult for those who are trying to leave the authoritarian regime to bring their talents here, but some politicians are trying to ease the journey. In January, the Biden administration announced new pathways for asylum for Cubans, and earlier this month, a bipartisan group of senators introduced a bill to finally end the embargo.
Despite these efforts, as Anthony Fisher wrote for Reason in 2017, "free and unrestricted travel for Cubans is still prohibited, particularly for Cubans the government would rather keep in service of the motherland—such as doctors and baseball stars." Hundreds of Cuban players have defected over the years, many choosing to play American Major or Minor League Baseball.
Prieto's future plans remain unclear, but he may very well join them in building a better professional life as an American baseball player. "Those high-value Cubans (like most Cubans) will still desire to live free from government repression," wrote Fisher, "and earn a better living for themselves than they will ever be able to do as long as the impoverished island is governed by the same corrupt regime." Just as it has welcomed Cuban defectors before, the U.S. should welcome Prieto—and extend that attitude toward others fleeing the authoritarian regime.
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athletic defections are the most beautiful of all.
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(like most Cubans)
Seems like if most Cubans were valuable in liberating people from the shackles of an authoritarian regime, we wouldn’t have an embargo.
It is too bad Fidel couldn't hit a curve ball. Today the "Havana Sugar Kings" would be a major league baseball team, and probably have won a World Series along the way.
He should have prayed to Jobu.
Did his girlfriend put a curse on his bat?
Jobu was no good at the curve either.
Because they didn't use a live chicken!
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Cuba is a commie hell hole. The US embargo has nothing to do with that fact. They could have opened up, traded with the rest of the world, became prosperous, and stuck it in the face of the US. Instead they went full Stalinist.
They do trade with the rest of the world.
Their real problem is that they don't have The Jones Act holding them back.
Sending doctors to other countries for pay? You can't do much trade when your currency is worthless. They have food shortages and are still driving cars from the 1950's. So, where's all this trade ? Open trade would be the people would be able to buy and sell goods and they can't. You don't know what you're talking about.
The vintage cars are mostly limited to tourist districts these days. The rest of the country drives crappy but modern cars. Well, those who can afford one at all, anyway.
I agree that the largest driver of Cuba's economic dysfunction is their command-and-control government-dominated system. That said, the embargo is still a stupid and failed policy. It restricts the legitimate freedoms of Americans as well as Cubans. It also restricts their trade with other countries, since the US government believes it has the right to tell other countries how to behave as well. Many of the countries willing to trade with Cuba aren't much better off themselves. Finally, the embargo provides the Cuban government with a handy scapegoat for their own failures. Blaming bid, bad Uncle Sam may not be terribly honest, but they've still gotten a lot of mileage out of it.
"Why exactly Prieto chose to defect is also uncertain"
Probably tired of living in paradise with free food, housing, and healthcare, and super-fortified democracy.
I hope nobody tells him the US is on the way to mimicking that paradise.
He wanted to try one of those cuban sandwiches he's heard so much about.
Don’t get a lobster roll, because nobody knows what they cost.
"All Cubans should take up baseball and move to the United States" - Fiona Harridan
I was at a U.S. vs. Cuba World Cup qualifier in DC in ‘08. Usually any central and South American visiting country pack those stadiums. But I’m pretty sure the “Cuban” section was only about a dozen really down beat looking fellows, with slapped together banners. They looked miserable. Probably travelled with the team had family hostages at home or something. Plenty of other nationalities there to root against us but they had their own flags.
We beat them 6-1. The players were too busy checking exits, wondering if they could blend in past security.
Remember that old joke?
"Today the East German pole vault champion became the West German pole vault champion."
> More than 1 million people of Cuban descent reside in the greater Miami area...
See, this is why we need to crack down on immigration. You just end up with a bunch of ethnics opposed to communism. I hope Sleepy Joe builds a wall around Florida to keep them out. Don't want to turn the state Red after all.
And well above a million Nicaraguans, as well. Back before the heavily rigged and very unfair election that was "certain" tp return Daniel Ortega to the throne but instead gave Nicaragua the greatest gift they'd had in at least half a century in Doña Violeta, there were more adult Nicaraguans in the Miami area than there were in Nicaragua. Once she was elected and went to work DOING what she had promised to do, many oved back, and Nicaragua began to prosper for a season. then they went to sleep again, allowed a not so clean and honest new president to change the law concerning presidents serving more than one term (6 years) Ortega became president AGAIN.... and again and again.. I think e's now in his fourth illegal term.... and the place is now almost as bad as it was under any of the three generations or US backed puppet Somozas.
Daniel Ortega is the brother of the guy that was Fidel Castro's lead army general or jefe or whatever he was called. He was almost as dirty as Fidel, nd his brothre Daniel is cut of the same cloth.
After Ortega's first reelection things went downhill rapidly, so fast not many locals caught on quickly enough. There SHOULD have been another coup to remove him. they ALL knew of what he is made.
If I am not mistaken the Nicaraguan population in Miami area has been steadily growing again these past couple of decades. How soon they forgot.
When will we start admitting Canadian refugees from authoritarianism?