Simply 90 miles of open ocean separate Andy Pages’ boyhood residence in Mantua, Cuba, from the southern tip of the Florida Keys. But the quick distance between these two factors is unbridgeable.
Politics has separated Cuba and the U.S. for many of the final 65 years, the final vestiges of a Chilly Conflict coverage that has divided households and harm folks on each side of the Straits of Florida excess of it has punished the Cuban authorities.
So when the Dodgers open the World Collection in opposition to the Toronto Blue Jays on Friday, Pages’ mother and father and his sister received’t be sitting within the stands with the opposite gamers’ households. They’ll be trying to find the sport on Cuban TV or on a spotty web hyperlink.
“Or radio,” Pages provides.
Pages, 24, already has one World Collection ring and is taking part in within the postseason for a second straight 12 months. In the course of the common season, his 27 homers trailed solely Shohei Ohtani amongst Dodgers and he ranked within the high 4 on the staff in a number of different offensive classes together with RBIs (86), batting (.272), stolen bases (14) and whole bases (268).
It was an impressive sophomore season, one which noticed him change into the primary Dodgers middle fielder in 13 years to hit higher than .250 with at the very least 23 homers. But other than his spouse, Alondra, nobody in his household has seen Pages in a Dodgers uniform apart from in photos or on a fuzzy TV display whereas contact together with his household is proscribed to 2 or three cellphone calls per week — and even that schedule is closely reliant on Cuba’s unreliable electrical infrastructure.
“There are times we can’t because the power is out or something,” Pages stated in Spanish.
“Obviously it’s hard. But we’ve learned to live with it because we’ve been like this for a long time.”
The highway Pages has traveled, in spite of everything, is one among his personal selecting. Going up within the western Cuban province of Pinar del Rio, the place poverty was widespread, he performed with bats his father Liban, a carpenter, original from scrap lumber. And he performed so effectively, by the point he turned 15 he was one of many island’s high prospects.
So he organized to be spirited off the island alongside Jairo Pomares, one other younger Cuban star. The pair traveled via Guyana, Curacao and Haiti earlier than crossing into the Dominican Republic the place Pages waited eight months earlier than signing with the Dodgers in March 2018.
The contract paid him a $300,000 bonus, greater than 1,500 instances the common annual wage in Cuba, in keeping with CiberCuba. However it additionally got here at a terrific price as a result of Pages didn’t know when he’d see his mother and father once more. Due to politics, Cuban residents face important restrictions in touring to the U.S. and defectors equivalent to Pages face limitations in making an attempt to return residence.
(Pages was in a position to make a go to residence within the winter of 2023, briefly reuniting together with his household for the primary time in seven years.)
And Cubans aren’t the one ones who’ve seen their households divided by politicians. Final June President Trump signed a proclamation severely limiting U.S. journey for a lot of Venezuelans, amongst different overseas nationals.
“It’s pretty tough,” stated Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas, a 12-year massive league veteran from Venezuela. “My father is in Venezuela. I can’t really see my sister that many times.
“But we signed up for this. We are professional baseball players. We want to kind of follow our dream and I’m pretty sure his family’s dream was for [Pages] to play in the big leagues. He’s accomplishing something that is really cool, not just for him but for his family.”
Rojas might have signed up for it however that doesn’t make it any simpler. As he completed speaking concerning the ache of separation — each his and Pages’ — his eyes started to water as he held again tears.
After every of the Dodgers’ champagne celebrations this fall, as gamers have break up off to be with their households, Pages typically lingered alone within the middle of the room, as soon as quietly providing a toast to the individuals who had been with him solely in spirit.
“There are those days when you feel like crying, yes. Because you miss them,” Pages stated. “But what you simply think afterward is that this is what it is. We have to keep going and we’re going to make them proud, right?”
