Hmm, can it be a coincidence that, just one day after the Daily Telegraph reported that communist Cuba, wanting “to emphasise their Caribbean status and tempt the younger generation away from the Yankee-influenced baseball diamond” has launched a Commission of Rescue and Development of Cricket in Cuba, President Bush took turns at batting and bowling during his visit to Pakistan?
The sport was popular in Cuba before the communist takeover. Sides from other Caribbean countries toured the island regularly. Then, as the president of the new Cuban commission delicately puts it, Cubans became “busy”.
They were moving around. Cricket died out. The last game we have scorecards for was in 1974, between two small local sides. After that, it only existed in one town in the south called Baraguá, where they would play a game once ayear . . .
The government-sponsored revival is largely motivated, I suspect, by the calculation that there won’t be any embarrassing defections of cricket players to Yankee teams. President Bush’s calculation in giving visibility to the sport is doubtless more subtle: Either Americans will begin paying attention to it, leading to high-paying contracts and another frustration for Fidel, or BDS sufferers will be torn between reflexive loathing for all things touched by the Greatest Satan and sycophantic admiration for their Cuban supremo. It isn’t nice to add to their miseries, but how can one resist?
Further reading: For those who are interested, I once reviewed a pair of books on “Baseball’s Elder Brother”.
Comments