U.S. Allows Cuba Into Baseball Classic
By RONALD BLUM (AP Baseball Writer)
From Associated Press
January 20, 2006 11:34 AM EST
NEW YORK - Cuba will be allowed to play in the World Baseball Classic, after
all. The U.S. Treasury Department issued a license Friday allowing the
Cubans to participate in the 16-team tournament.

Baseball's first application was denied in mid-December by the Treasury
Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control, but the commissioner's office
and the players' association reapplied after Cuba said it would donate any
profits it receives to victims of Hurricane Katrina.

U.S. laws aimed at punishing Fidel Castro's communist government prohibit
certain commercial transactions with Cuba, generally attempting to deny
money.

"Working closely with World Baseball Inc. and the State Department, we were
able to reach a licensable agreement that upholds both the legal scope and
the spirit of the sanctions," Treasury spokeswoman Molly Millerwise said.

"This agreement ensures that no funding will make its way into the hands of
the Castro regime. The Treasury is pleased to now be able to issue this
license and looks forward to seeing all of the teams showcase their talents
on the international stage."

After the initial rejection, the International Baseball Federation
threatened to withdraw its sanction of the tournament if Cuba was not
allowed to participate. In addition, Puerto Rico threatened to withdraw as a
host.

"We were always positive," said Antonio Munoz, the promoter who paid
millions of dollars to stage the first two rounds in Puerto Rico. "There
were some negative people, but they were wrong in the end."

Initial reaction among Cuban fans was positive.

"Oh, magnificent! Tremendous!" exclaimed Osvaldo Herrera, who was standing
on a street corner in Havana with three other sports lovers discussing Cuban
baseball.

The tournament, the first in which the world's top players will participate
on national teams, runs from March 3-20. The other 15 teams submitted their
60-man preliminary rosters earlier this week.

Cuba won the Olympic gold medal in 1992, 1996 and 2004, and the United
States won in 2000. Olympic baseball was initially limited to amateur
players, but even after professionals were allowed in for the 2000 Sydney
Games, major leaguers didn't participate because baseball doesn't stop its
regular season for the Olympics.

Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez and Roger Clemens are among the big-name players
on the U.S. roster, and Manny Ramirez, Albert Pujols and Vladimir Guerrero
are on the Dominican team. Puerto Rico and Japan also are expected to be
among the top teams at the tournament.

---

Reply via email to