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Local
Athletes Travel
to Cuba for a Senior
Softball Tournament
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Cuban
and American
players listening
to the Star
Spangled Banner
at the opening
ceremony.
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The
Havana sun glints
off the gold medal
around my father’s
neck. He smiles
as proudly as if
he, rather than the
man grinning next
to him, were the
Olympic champion.
Standing in the
outfield with his
arm around 1976 double-gold-winning
runner Alberto Juantorena,
Michael Eizenberg,
my father, celebrates
something more lasting
than victory: friendship.
In that sense, everyone
at the November
2009 Cuban and American
senior softball
tournament was a
winner.
Eizenberg,
a sixty-two-year-old
Wellesley resident,
first traveled to
Cuba in 1998 as a
Bentley College researcher,
and even today the
island brings out
a youthful wonder
in him. He gets that
same joy from playing
third base in the
Eastern Massachusetts
Senior Softball League
(EMASS), diligently
tracking his batting
average and regularly
scraping up his knees.
So when he conceived
the possibility of
uniting the two in
a softball tournament,
it was as much for
the sheer fun of it
as for the significance
of bringing together
these long separated
people.
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Alberto
Juantorena
and Michael
Eizenberg.
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Eizenberg
works as a Travel
Service Provider (TSP),
making Cuban travel
arrangements for licensed
visitors. He pitched
the Cuban tournament
to League Commissioner
Stu Gray, sixty-eight,
who embraced the idea
as an exciting new
opportunity for his
players. Fifty-four
men and two women,
ranging in age from
fifty-seven to seventy-six,
signed up the night
the trip was announced.
The league obtained
an Office of Foreign
Assets Control (OFAC)
public performance
license, the same
category under which
the Baltimore Orioles
played in Cuba in
1999. Francisco Grass,
a tour operator, helped
plan the trip from
the Cuban side, garnering
official support for
the program. “We
had several meetings
with the Ministry
of Athletics and the
Cuban Federation of
Softball,” said
Grass, “and
everyone was very
enthusiastic.” The
Cubans recruited senior
players, reserved
the fields, and distributed
the newly translated
EMASS rules.
The
EMASS teams brought
uniforms for their
opponents, blue jerseys
emblazoned with “Cuba” and
hats bearing Cuban
and American flags.
Eizenberg arrived
with ten boxes of
equipment, but was
waved through customs
once he explained
the tournament. When
he went to inspect
the fields, he found
a “fifty-five-year-old
guy cutting the grass
with a scythe. His
back hurt afterwards,
but he still umpired
a few days later.” Eizenberg
explains, “Everyone
wanted the event to
be perfect. Everyone
wanted to be part
of it.”
Having
witnessed the entirety
of U.S.-Cuban relations
since the Cuban Revolution,
the American players
were unsure of what
to expect. “I
guess I was anticipating
a heavy police and
military presence
and a somber atmosphere,” says
Keith Gross, a sixty-one-year-old
catcher from Weston.
Other players wondered
whether they would
be treated with respect
or resentment.
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The
EMASS B Team
front
row (l to
r):
Alan Joseph,
Gary Siegel,
Les Gore,
Mike Sobol,
Dick Willis,
John O’Rourke;
back row
(l to
r): Rich
Morris,
Larry Schwartz,
Tom Klem,
Mike
Mard, Jim
Leonard,
Glenn Shambroom,
Jim Raymond,
Mike Eizenberg
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One
Saturday last November,
they were greeted
in the airy hotel
lobby by signs reading
Bienvenidos
a los atletas—Welcome
athletes— and
bellmen wearing official
tournament hats. Any
trepidation they felt
quickly evaporated. “The
freedom and friendliness
of the people was
surprising and refreshing,” says
Gross. “We
were made to feel
completely welcome
and like we were old
friends.” Walking
through the narrow
streets of old Havana,
the players were stopped
by people who had
seen them on Cuban
TV. In the shadows
of beautifully ornate
but weary looking
buildings, people
pointed at their hats
and gave them the
thumbs up, or shook
their hands and thanked
them for coming. The
athletes had truly
arrived.
When
the EMASS busses pulled
into the sports complex
on Monday morning,
the Cuban players
scrambled down from
the stands to meet
them. With similarly
spry enthusiasm, the
Americans rushed off
the bus to meet their
counterparts in a
patch of freshly cut
grass. “There
was no ice to be broken,” says
Eizenberg, “because
we were all like a
bunch of kids eager
to play ball.” Handshakes,
greetings, and introductions
trampled the language
barrier. Sixty-five-year-old
Wayland centerfielder
John Darack explains, “Those
guys just seemed so
anxious to get to
know us that all the
political stuff was
left in the dirt.”
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Team
USA
Team
USA, a mix
of Cuban
and American
members
of the B
teams
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For
the opening ceremony,
the players lined
up World Series style:
EMASS players stretched
along the first-base
line and Cuban players
on the third-base
line, converging at
home plate. Their
hats over their hearts,
Cubans and Americans
alike listened as
a ceremonial band
played the Cuban national
anthem, El
Himno de Bayamo. A few moments
of nervous silence
followed, like a collective
drawing of breath.
The opening notes
of the Star
Spangled Banner rang in the
air, and the American
players found themselves
singing along with
tears in their eyes.
Says Darack, “I
felt more emotional
in that moment than
I can remember feeling
about anything in
a while.” A
live rendition of
the American anthem
is such a rarity in
Cuba that even the
Orioles heard only
a tinny recording.
For the final bit
of fanfare, world
champion boxer Teófilo
Stevenson hurled out
the ceremonial first
pitch, which Eizenberg
caught in a boxing
glove. Stevenson signed
the glove for Eizenberg,
and then asked for
a signed softball
in return. Eizenberg
happily obliged.
The
EMASS players arrived
much better equipped
than the Cubans, some
of whom didn’t
have gloves, so the
Americans tossed theirs
to the Cubans as they
jogged in from the
field. Gross gave
three extra gloves
to Cuban captain Ramón
Macola Olana for distribution
among his players.
In gratitude, Olana
gave Gross his prized
baseball possession,
a jersey worn by Fermin
Laffita, Cuban batting
champion in the 1975
National Series. A
few of the Cuban players
played in sneakers
that had been duct-taped
together, or in canvas
slip-on shoes. Darack
had brought an extra
pair of cleats, and
on the second day
he gave them to Carlos
Lopez, who had been
playing in torn sneakers. “The
next day, Carlos came
over to our dugout
with a bag holding
a gift-wrapped present.
It was a vase his
wife had made.” The
vase now resides on
Darack’s
desk, holding a softball
that traveled to Cuba
and back.
The
rest of the week unfolded
with games in the
morning, cultural
activities in the
afternoon, and occasional
beers in the evening,
when the American
and Cuban players
would swap stories
and share family photographs.
The games themselves
were fairly even,
with the Cuban teams
improving as they
adjusted to the EMASS
rules: slow pitch,
eleven-in-the-field,
and two home plates
and first bases. Says
Commissioner Gray,
a pitcher, “They
were excellent baseball
players who played
effortlessly and gracefully—formidable
opponents.”
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Michael
Eizenberg
catches
Teófilo
Stevenson’s
ceremonial
first
pitch.
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Certainly
the players remember
their athletic highlights:
Gray’s
grand slam, Gross’s
RBI that made Cuban
television, Eizenberg’s
double over the head
of Juantorena, and
Cuban pitcher Jorge
Rodriguez Rubio’s
first-game victory.
But they spoke with
far more passion about
the relationships
that developed between
them. As Rodriguez
Rubio said, “The
final results were
not important; we
all really enjoyed
the games. By the
last day we were like
old friends.” Even
the B and the C teams,
which went into their
final games tied at
three apiece, voted
to play their last
games with mixed Cuban
and American teams.
So they drew gloves
to determine who would
be on each team, then
swapped shirts accordingly.
Soon, Cuban players
were chanting, “U-S-A!” and
Americans were shouting “Cu-ba!
Cu-ba!” as
they cheered for their
newly designated teammates.
No one bothered to
keep score. Like kids
leaving camp, they
signed each other’s
jerseys with Sharpies,
turning their uniforms
into souvenirs.
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The
EMASS B
Team in
the visitors
dugout
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On
the final day, the
American players left
everything behind—gloves,
bats, balls, cleats,
and jerseys. Some
left the field bare-chested
in their stocking
feet. Michael Frank,
sixty-eight, runs
a little league in
Jamaica Plain, and
brought a box of kids’ equipment.
Gross donated little
league gloves and
bats to the oncology
department at Havana
Hospital. Seventy-five-year-old
George Chan even packed
a tiny bit of dirt
from his pitcher’s
mound in Wayland into
the Cuban mound. But
their new Cuban friends
gave gifts, too: postcards,
handicrafts, and baseball
memorabilia. Many
of the players traded
e-mail addresses,
and have since exchanged
photographs, memories,
and holiday wishes.
While
the tournament may
not signal an overall
thaw in U.S.-Cuban
relations, everyone
agreed that it was
a step in the right
direction. Gloria
F. Berbena, Public
Affairs Officer at
the U.S. Interests
Section in Havana
called the event “exactly
the kind of thing
that is needed in
our bilateral relationship.” Cuban
organizer Grass agrees
that such programs “help
increase the possibility
of normal relations
between the two countries.”
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EMASS
and Cuban
players shake
hands after
a game.
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As
Eizenberg puts it, “We’re
our own best goodwill
ambassadors.” The
tournament was special
in that it allowed
people to really get
to know each other
as people. While humanitarian
programs in Cuba are
essential, they don’t
foster a sense of
equality. Meeting
on the diamond put
the players on level
footing, making relationships
possible. “Understanding
each other is the
first step to normalizing
official relationships
between Cuba and the
USA,” says
Rodriguez Rubio, the
Cuban pitcher.
Eizenberg
and Gray plan to repeat
the EMASS Cuba tournament
annually, and Eizenberg
hopes to develop similar
programs in soccer,
volleyball, and basketball.
Talks are even underway
to bring the Cuban
softball players to
the U.S. for a tournament
in Massachusetts. “We
felt like we hit one
out of the park,” says
Eizenberg, “or
pitched the perfect
game. It was like
being a kid again:
we didn’t
want the sun to go
down; we didn’t
want to stop playing
ball. We didn’t
want it to end.”
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