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Please subscribe to my YouTube channel and thank you. Cuba’s professional baseball tradition is inseparable from the island’s struggle for identity, independence, and modern culture. Baseball arrived in Cuba in the 1860s, introduced by Cuban students returning from the United States and by American sailors and merchants. From its earliest days, the sport carried powerful political meaning. Spanish colonial authorities viewed baseball as a symbol of Cuban nationalism and American republican influence, deeply linked to independence conspiracies. By the 1870s and 1880s, as the Ten Years’ War and later independence movements gained strength, baseball clubs and players were often suspected of supporting the Mambí rebels. Spanish officials repressed and at times prohibited the sport, fearing it fostered anti-colonial sentiment. Some early Cuban stars, such as the legendary Cristóbal Torriente—renowned slugger and reputed Mambí sympathizer—embodied this fusion of sport and patriotism. After independence in 1898, baseball surged to become Cuba’s national passion, capturing the soul of the new republic. The Cuban League, founded in 1878 and professionalized in the early 20th century, evolved into one of the most competitive winter leagues in the world. Its classic teams—the Havana Lions (Leones), Almendares Alacranes, Marianao Tigers, and Cienfuegos Elephants dominated Cuban sporting life. The rivalry between Almendares and Habana became legendary—rivaling Boston versus New York in intensity, but with a distinctly Caribbean beat, full of music, pride, and barrio passion. The league attracted top American Major League talent in the offseason. Legends from Babe Ruth to Brooks Robinson played in Cuba’s vibrant stadiums, while Cuban stars left an indelible mark on U.S. baseball. From pitcher Adolfo “Dolf” Luque with Cincinnati in the 1920s to later icons Tony Pérez, Tony Oliva, Orestes Minnie Miñoso, Mike Cuellar, and Luis Tiant, Cuban excellence enriched Major League Baseball. This golden era ended abruptly when Fidel Castro abolished professional baseball after the 1961 season, replacing it with a state-run amateur system. Yet he could not erase the memory of Cuba’s storied teams or the deep emotional bond between the Cuban people and their professional baseball heritage—one that many hope may one day return in a free Cuba. #history #nothingimposibleinthisworld #g20leaders