Baseball Flourishes in Colombia’s Capital. But Not Because of Colombians.
Baseball shouldn’t be standard in Colombia. Except on the Caribbean coast, soccer dominates. In Bogotá, the capital, many know little or no about “béisbol.” And the town has solely two public baseball fields.
But swing by Hermes Barros Cabas baseball stadium on any weekend, and it doesn’t really feel that means. On a current Sunday, 5 teams of youngsters dressed of their crew uniforms crammed each nook of the primary subject.
Coaches threw batting apply, whereas kids snagged floor balls or pop flies. Parents shouted phrases of encouragement or instruction. The scent of espresso and fried snacks wafted behind the bleachers.
Most of the folks there, although, weren’t Colombian.
The overwhelming majority of the five hundred gamers within the Bogotá baseball league are from neighboring Venezuela, the place baseball is the preferred sport. As Venezuelans usually say, it’s of their blood.
“No matter what country I went to, I’d bring my umpiring equipment,” stated the league’s head umpire, Pastor Colmenares, 50. When he left Venezuela for Colombia seeking larger paying work in 2017, Mr. Colmenares’s solely suitcase was crammed along with his baseball gear.
Venezuela’s financial collapse and political repression has created the biggest refugee disaster within the Western Hemisphere, and no nation in Latin America has seen a much bigger inflow of Venezuelan migrants than Colombia (an estimated 2.9 million in a rustic of 52 million). And no Colombian metropolis has been a extra standard vacation spot than Bogotá (an estimated 600,000 in a metropolis of practically 8 million).
For many Venezuelans, whose lives have been upended of their homeland, they’re now going through an unsure future — and, in some instances, they’ve been met with a hostile reception by Colombians. For them, the league affords a measure of refuge.
“To me, it means hope,” stated Félix Ortega, 51, a software program marketing consultant who moved to Colombia from Venezuela in 2018, and whose sons, Sebastián, 13, and Rodrigo, 8, play within the league.
“My kids maintain that contact with our culture,’’ he continued. “But it’s also a meeting place for all of us. It’s like having a piece of Venezuela here.”
The league, in varied types, has been round since 1945 and was principally made up of Colombians. But that modified in recent times, as extra Venezuelans arrived.
“We’ve opened the door for them,” stated the league’s president, José Francisco Martínez Petro, who’s Colombian, including that the newcomers carry established baseball know-how and have raised the league’s degree.
Of the novice league’s 9 golf equipment, every of which fields a number of groups throughout completely different age teams, beginning at 3 years previous, there may be one that’s distinctly Venezuelan: the Leones. Unlike different groups which can be named after Major League Baseball golf equipment within the United States, the Leones are a nod to essentially the most profitable Venezuelan skilled crew, which not each Venezuelan in Bogotá was a fan of again dwelling.
“Once you’re here, it doesn’t matter,” stated Gabriel Arcos, a methods engineer who grew up cheering for a Leones’ rival in Venezuela and moved to Bogotá in 2016. “Maybe you don’t like the Leones of Caracas, but like I always say, these are the Leones of Bogotá.”
Four years in the past, when Iraida Acosta took over as president of the Leones, she stated there have been solely six Venezuelan kids. Now, she stated, most of its 64 gamers are Venezuelan.
Ms. Acosta, 54, stated that in 2017, she and her 9-year-old son left their Venezuelan hometown close to the Caribbean coast to go to her husband, who had come to Bogotá six months earlier to seek out work. They ended up staying as a result of the financial alternatives have been higher.
Still, it wasn’t simple.
“The culture, although being brother countries, is totally different,” she stated, including later, “I cried a lot when I came here.”
When Ms. Acosta rode Bogotá’s public buses, she stated she averted talking so folks wouldn’t hear her accent. She stated folks would use a disrespectful time period for Venezuelans in Colombia and mutter, “Go back to your country.”
She found the baseball league on Facebook, enrolled her son and located a group. She grew to become buddies with the Colombians who have been working the Leones membership, they usually turned it over to her when household well being issues arose.
Other Colombians Ms. Acosta met by baseball have made her really feel welcome. The sport, she stated, has supplied a standard floor.
“Without all of the immigration — forced or desired or whatever — we wouldn’t have the quality here that we have now in players and coaches,” stated Hernán Vasquez, 36, a Colombian who’s an assistant Leones coach and whose 7-year-old son performs within the league.
Mr. Vasquez, who joked that he’s now Venezuelan by affiliation given what number of he spends time with, is angered that many Colombians have singled out Venezuelans because the supply of their nation’s issues, like rising crime charges.
“The majority — 99 percent of the Venezuelans that I know — are professionals who came to work,” he stated.
Mr. Colmenares left Barquisimeto, a metropolis in northwestern Venezuela, six years in the past as a result of he stated his three jobs — metallic employee, umpire and infrequently building employee — nonetheless didn’t present sufficient cash to adequately feed his household. “When I arrived, my skin was practically stuck to my bones,” he stated.
At first, Mr. Colmenares stated he struggled to discover a job, going from business to business, providing to do something. “There was a lot of us looking for work,” he stated. “You’d see a lot of, ‘Oh, you’re Venezuelan. No, no, no, we don’t want anything to do with the Venezuelans.’”
After lastly discovering work as a metallic employee, Mr. Colmenares slowly constructed a life in Bogotá. His spouse and daughter later joined him in Colombia, whereas one other daughter and his son stay in Chile. (He hasn’t met his 6-year previous granddaughter who was born in Chile.)
Mr. Colmenares additionally discovered his footing in his true ardour: umpiring. When he joined the league, he stated just one different umpire was Venezuelan. Today, 11 of the 12 are.
“The league represents everything for me,” he stated by tears. “After my family, it’s umpiring.”
Others have discovered an analogous haven. When Mr. Arcos left Caracas seven years in the past due to dwindling alternatives, he arrived in Bogotá by himself. He began working, discovered an condo, and his spouse and 4-year-old son arrived three months later.
They spent their first New Year’s within the metropolis alone. For over two years, they principally stayed dwelling or explored Bogotá on their very own.
But sooner or later, en path to play soccer with co-workers, Mr. Arcos came across the league’s baseball subject and signed up his son the next week. His household was quickly spending each weekend there. Guests for his or her kids’s birthday events all come from the league.
“It completely changed our lives,” Mr. Arcos, 34, stated.
Still, baseball hasn’t been fairly the identical as again dwelling. Parents have complained that the competitors for his or her kids isn’t nearly as good as in Venezuela. The league can’t at all times subject a crew for nationwide tournaments, officers stated, as a result of Colombian baseball federation guidelines cap the variety of international gamers at 20 % of a roster.
And in contrast to in Venezuela the place baseball fields are in all places, the Bogotá league’s stadium is within the middle of the traffic-clogged metropolis, and reaching it will possibly take greater than an hour every means.
When Suleibi Romero Gonzalez can’t get her son Darvish, 11, to apply or video games as a result of she is busy working her Venezuelan restaurant, she and one other mom take turns taking their kids to the sector.
Ms. Romero, 37, a separated mom of three, got here to Bogotá alone in 2017, after which introduced her household. She and her husband on the time each beloved baseball and needed their oldest son to proceed taking part in.
“It’s beneficial because it’s the same group he’s been playing with since they were 5 years old,” she stated.
Even as many Venezuelans go away Colombia for the United States, the baseball league stays a nexus for the Venezuelan diaspora. Ms. Acosta stated households who haven’t even left Venezuela but attain out commonly on social media.
The messages, she stated, sometimes say, “‘Hi, I need information. I’m coming to Colombia soon and I want my son to register to play over there.’”