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Posts Tagged ‘baseball

Baseball Player Booed for Supporting Chavez

12:03 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Controversia|Politics|Sports|Venezuela · Comments Off

19 Mar 2009

t_abn_27_11_2007_maglio_sisi_chavez_190Being a Chavez supporter can have its ups and downs. It really depends on the crowd you’re with, and in the case of Detroit Tigers All-Star player Magglio Ordoñez, the crowd is the fans and the reaction to Ordoñez’s support of Huguito has been anything but positive. NPR reports that Ordoñez has had to face all sorts of criticism from fans, most recently at the World Baseball Classic:

After every at-bat boos rain down on Ordonez from his team’s own supporters, and cheers erupt from Venezuelans in the stands when Ordonez strikes out. At issue is Ordonez’s vocal support of Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president known for his commitment to socialism and the glee he takes in criticizing the United States. Other famous Venezuelan players past and present have voiced support for President Chavez, and the fans have cut them a break.

Venezuelan baseball expert Leonte Landino says in the cases of Melvin Mora, Ozzie Guillen, Dave Concepcion and Francisco Rodriguez, fans acknowledge “you can think different from me, but still you’re a baseball player and you’re representing Venezuela.”

But Ordonez is in another category, says Landino, who was working as a producer for ESPN Deportes during the World Baseball Classic games. Ordonez actively campaigned with Chavez, even appearing at softball events held to promote a vote to change the Venezuelan Constitution and eliminate term limits. That effort succeeded, allowing Chavez to run for re-election again in 2012.

This has earned Ordoñez the wrath of some Venezuelans and Venezuelan Americans. Chavez himself has called Ordoñez a “patriot” and the fans’ reaction “shameful”.

This makes me wonder: if it’s acceptable to mix sports with politics, why don’t we boo all the baseball players who supported Bush?

Via / NPR

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A-Rod might be yesterday’s news for Madonna (who is allegedly now living with her Latin lover Brasileiro Jesus Luz), but Madge’s ex-lover doesn’t look like he’s sulking. In the photo above, A-Rod loses all inhibitions to appeal to Details magazine’s main demographic: gay guys.

But wait, who’s that hot guy A-Rod is getting all kissy with? Oh, it’s…his own reflection! WTF?

I like the photography, and you gotta hand it to A-Rod for being bold enough to do a shoot like this. Baseball is a man’s game and it takes some guts to shake off all that machismo. Way to go, A-Rod!

Via / Details

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Cuba defeats the U.S., in spite of Castro’s expectations

3:59 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Cuba|Sports · Comments Off

20 Jul 2007

_1474029_010804corresponsal150b.jpgCuba’s baseball team beat its U.S. counterpart 3-1 in the finals of the Pan American Games today. While Fidel Castro, a huge baseball fan claimed the match up between rich and poor countries was “unfair”, he must have been delighted to see the results.

The game, originally scheduled for yesterday, was postponed because of rain, giving Fidel a moment to reflect on the match before it happened in his column:

In many countries, athletes do not even compete for their own nation. Some of them earn up to 102 million dollars a year, more than the owner of a large sugar mill. Cuba only has her own athletes, and they are not professionals. It is an unfair contest.

Cuban players were indeed happy that whatever unfairness existed was overcome, and the team’s manager went so far as to say that they owe success to Fidel’s mention of them in his column: “The words of the Commander are like an injection into our veins; el jefe mentioned us,” he said. Castro’s son is part of the team — he’s the team doctor.

Via / 20 Minutos and Prensa Latina

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Nomar is Coming Home

8:06 pm By Maegan La Mala · Sports · Comments Off

19 Dec 2005

nomar_garciaparra.jpgThe former two-time batting champion and five-time All-Star returns to Los Angeles.

The Los Angeles Dodgers and Nomar Garciaparra have agreed to a 1 year $6 million contract for the 2006 season. Garciaparra has a good opportunity with the Dodgers to return the form that made him a favorite of the great Ted Williams.

Garciaparra who is of Mexican descent was born in Whittier, graduated from St John Bosco High school in Bellflower and later attended Georgia Tech.

Via / Los Angeles Times

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delgado_carlos041003.jpgI have a lot of respect for Carlos Delgado, for having the conviction to stand behind his beliefs. The former Florida Marlin has refused to stand for the singing of God Bless America during the 7th inning stretch of baseball games.

I find the singing of God Bless America I tad bit jingoistic. I’ve never understood why the national anthem is played during a sporting event. Singing Take Me Out the Ball Game is awesome. Singing God Bless America is not. What does God blessing America have to do with baseball anyways?

Anyhow, Carlos Delgado was traded this off-season to the New York Mets. Controversy soon followed when Anna Benson, the wife of Mets pitcher Kris Benson, criticized Delgado for being “unpatriotic” for his refusal to stand. Not standing for God Bless America is unpatriotic? I think that people that call other people unpatriotic are unpatriotic, especially when the Boriqua ball player is exercising his first amendment right.

Via / Chicago Tribune

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Latino Baseball Pioneer Dies

4:27 pm By Maegan La Mala · Puerto Rico|Sports · Comments Off

30 Nov 2005

power_vic_card.jpg One of the first Latinos in the Major Leagues has passed away. Vic Power was a seven-time Gold Glove winner from Puerto Rico.

Power started his career with the Philadelphia Athletics in 1954. Aside from being a defensive wizard on the field, Power also completed the rarest of baseball feats when he stole home plate twice in the same game! Some players play a lifetime without stealing home once, and Power did it twice.

Power who was born in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, later returned to the isla del encanto where he managed several amateur teams and ran a youth baseball academy. Power passed away of cancer in Puerto Rico.
Via / Miami Herald

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Viva Venezuela!

12:31 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Sports|Venezuela · Comments Off

27 Oct 2005

beisbol-126a.jpgVenezuela’s feeling proud today of their native son, Ozzie Guillén, who did what no one thought was possible; he took the White Sox (or “las medias blancas” as they are known in Latin America) to the World Series and they won. This makes him the first Latino manager to ever lead a team to victory in a World Series:

Ese orgullo por ser venezolano es lo que también le ha dado una personalidad especial, porque en cada una de la entrevistas que ofrece en inglés siempre las finaliza con un recuerdo al país y el “Viva Venezuela”.

“En mi Venezuela están celebrando como si fuese carnaval, están disparando cohetes. Eso me llena el corazón de felicidad. Todo esto es por Venezuela, que necesitaba esta alegría”, afirmó. “Como desearía estar ahora mismo en mi tierra”.

Venezuela’s passion for baseball has always been insatiable. It remains that way now, as evidenced by the fact that despite strained relations between Venezuela and the United State, President Hugo Chavez took a moment to congratulate Guillen on his victory in a weekly radio address.

Venezuela has played a key role in professional baseball in the United states since the 1960s, when Luís Ernesto Aparicio Montiel, a native of Maracaibo, was named to the Hall of Fame. But America’s game became Venezuela’s game far before that. Baseball arrived in Venezuela with oil-hungry Americans in 1895 and has thrived there ever since.

Venezolanos everywhere see this win as not just a win for Chicago, but more of a win for Venezuelans and their favorite sport. America’s favorite pastime is Venezuela’s national pride today.

Via / ESPN Deportes

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