Why so many baseball players are Dominican

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  • Опубліковано 23 вер 2024
  • And why so many players are among the best in Major League Baseball.
    Subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 so you don't miss any videos: goo.gl/0bsAjO
    Baseball has a long history in the United States, but it also has strong roots in the Caribbean and Latin America, particularly in the Dominican Republic. Cubans were the first to bring the game from the US to their country in the 19th century, and later, wealthy Cubans introduced it to the Dominican Republic. Over the following decades, the sport became deeply ingrained in Dominican culture, while in the United States, baseball evolved into a multi-million dollar industry.
    Eventually, the United States began to seek out Cuban baseball talent. But when diplomatic relations between the two countries deteriorated, the Dominican Republic emerged as the primary focus of Major League Baseball's talent pipeline.
    As Dominicans demonstrated their skill and success as baseball players, the MLB started establishing academies in the Dominican Republic, which were affiliated with MLB teams in the United States. This system facilitated the influx of numerous talented Dominican players into MLB teams. Currently, Dominicans dominate Major League Baseball in the United States, making up more than 10 percent of all players in the league. They significantly outnumber players from other foreign-born countries.
    To gain a deeper understanding of how baseball spread throughout the Dominican Republic and why the island produces so many MLB players, watch the latest episode of Vox Atlas.
    Sources:
    Dominican Baseball: New Pride, Old Prejudice by Alan Klein
    www.amazon.com...
    Sugarball: The American Game, the Dominican Dream by Alan Klein
    www.amazon.com...
    Pitching Democracy: Baseball and Politics in the Dominican Republic by April Yoder
    www.amazon.com...
    Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos and the Color Line by Adrian Burgos
    www.amazon.com...
    Further reading/watching:
    MLB’s International Draft would Affect Dominican Republic
    www.nytimes.co...
    ‘A failed system’: A corrupt process exploits Dominican baseball prospects. Is an international draft really the answer?
    theathletic.co...
    Inside Baseball’s Dominican Sweatshop System
    www.typeinvest...
    Baseball Is A Field Of Dreams - And Dashed Hopes - For Dominicans
    www.npr.org/se...
    MLB’s neo colonial practices in the Dominican Republic Academy system
    journals.sagep...
    Vox is an explanatory newsroom on a mission to help everyone understand our weird, wonderful, complicated world, so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: www.vox.com/giv...
    Watch our full video catalog: goo.gl/IZONyE
    Follow Vox on TikTok: / voxdotcom
    Check out our articles: www.vox.com/
    Listen to our podcasts: www.vox.com/po...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @hendrx
    @hendrx Рік тому +1986

    I grew up in the Dominican Republic and something particular about the country is that baseball is so far integrated into the culture that you just "grow into it". Playing baseball as a kid was just like eating and breathing to me. Something else that's particular is the fact that women like the sport as well. I've yet to find a date that doesn't watch baseball one way or another.

    • @jesusvinamoreno5080
      @jesusvinamoreno5080 Рік тому +62

      Don't forget about vitilla.

    • @busyrand
      @busyrand Рік тому +42

      Wow... I'd love to have a girlfriend who was into Baseball... I can't imagine that...

    • @TheKNIGHTELFMOHAWK
      @TheKNIGHTELFMOHAWK Рік тому +43

      I feel like it’s the same for Japan. Like baseball is huge in Japan

    • @clarkesmith.
      @clarkesmith. Рік тому +55

      @@TheKNIGHTELFMOHAWK But in Japan there's other sports where they thrive in as well, and have a huge following. Soccer is huge there, sumo is huge there, volleyball is huge there. It feels like DRC only has baseball.

    • @gueits8586
      @gueits8586 Рік тому +34

      Dominicans born in the states are big on baseball too. My mother in law is Dominican and a RBI baseball coach in NJ. Most players are Dominican, and they even fly kids from DR to play with and against.

  • @lazywallstreetnews7234
    @lazywallstreetnews7234 Рік тому +338

    I'm Puerto Rican and have been lucky enough to go and play baseball in the DR and watch a winter ball game there too. The environment was electric! This was back in the day when Miguel Tejada had won AL MVP in Oakland, so we're talking almost 25 years ago. But the fans were amazing, so into the game, knew every player's name, the women were into it, I mean it was amazing I'd never seen anything like it. The closest thing I can compare it to is going to a soccer game in Brazil.

    • @DCampusano1
      @DCampusano1 Рік тому +7

      Facts

    • @ricardogarcia6453
      @ricardogarcia6453 Рік тому +13

      This is a real comment that add value to the conversation

    • @Marjorie321
      @Marjorie321 Рік тому

      Miguel tejada won the MVP in 2002. But you are right, l used to know the names of each player of each team.

    • @lazywallstreetnews7234
      @lazywallstreetnews7234 Рік тому +3

      @@Marjorie321 that sounds about right to me, it was around that year or maybe the year after we saw him. I still remember he hit a double to the CF-RF gap that sounded like a firecracker when he made contact. Got lucky enough to see Vladimir Guerrero Sr. when he was still young with the Montreal Expos too. That guy could hit anything, never seen anything like it either before or since

    • @noeltorres9175
      @noeltorres9175 7 місяців тому

      🇵🇷👍

  • @gueits8586
    @gueits8586 Рік тому +505

    I went to DR back in 2014. As the plane landed, I looked out the window and saw nothing but baseball fields.😂

    • @danmarkespejo5498
      @danmarkespejo5498 Рік тому +6

      Literally

    • @hendrx
      @hendrx Рік тому +10

      😂😂 I was thinking about that as well. Must be fun asf to have the stadium be available to everybody

    • @FIXTREME
      @FIXTREME Рік тому +5

      Sounds like heaven

    • @ec3840
      @ec3840 11 місяців тому

      😂

    • @drkid4l220
      @drkid4l220 9 місяців тому

      I can confirm that🤣🤣

  • @hectormorales8471
    @hectormorales8471 Рік тому +240

    This is amazing! As a Dominican kid who grew up playing baseball in the DR I appreciate you guys doing this. To put it simply our parents care more about us doing well on the baseball field than at school. It’s part of our culture and probably one of the first thing you do as a kid after learning how to stand on your feet.

    • @JD-ny3vz
      @JD-ny3vz Рік тому +3

      It's like basketball and football in America depending on where you live for Black Americans.

  • @montantico
    @montantico Рік тому +281

    Great job, great video. As a Dominican, and as a fan of the sport, thanks for showcasing our country. There is much more to talk about, but this video is part of the spark of those conversations.

  • @cam-asherbond5316
    @cam-asherbond5316 Рік тому +488

    Julio Rodriguez is arguably the most important player to join the Seattle Mariners since Ichiro did from Japan, 23 years ago. Julio has a position of power and respect as one of the most exciting young stars in baseball -I hope he'll join in the effort for fair treatment and pay to his Dominican brothers.

    • @aidanlawrnce5451
      @aidanlawrnce5451 Рік тому +20

      He definitely will. I mean he bought his hometowns first ambulances

    • @rokrV
      @rokrV Рік тому +9

      Julio!!! should’ve made this cut, cmon! Superstar. GO M’s

    • @tke7749
      @tke7749 Рік тому +1

      a big reason why there is so many DR players is because how cheap they can pay them.. fair pay = less DR players, sorry to say

    • @matttomo15
      @matttomo15 Рік тому +3

      @@tke7749 nah, these owners bring in millions in revenue with every game that's played. they can DEFINITELY afford to pay the Dominican players fairly. fair pay = less yacht parties for the owners. that's it. they're just greedy.

    • @NYCHeavyHitz212
      @NYCHeavyHitz212 Рік тому +1

      @@matttomo15obody said the owners “can’t” pay them, though. Everything is competitive, so if they can invest cheaper for a greater return, that’ll always be the case whether we like it or not. It’s easy to exploit humans in dire situations.(like offering them anything that sounds life changing to the desperate)

  • @Jaxck77
    @Jaxck77 Рік тому +2465

    Kind of shocking you didn’t talk about the biggest issue with the academy system. It’s treated as a replacement for school, not just higher education like in the US but grade school too. The only reason the system works is because DR is so poor that it’s better to get an education in baseball than anything academic. That’s the real tragedy of the situation.
    EDIT: “so poor” includes a lot of the US too guys. It’s the same relationship that DR has with baseball as Mississippi & Alabama have with football. The baseball academy system is a damnation of the state of education across North & Central America, not an opportunity to express the superiority of the US. If anything the state of American sports shows just how bad life & opportunity really is stateside.

    • @rebecca5303
      @rebecca5303 Рік тому +29

      Interesting 🤔

    • @2552legoboy
      @2552legoboy Рік тому +167

      vox act like they really know it all and leave out crucial stuff classic

    • @kielamaral1909
      @kielamaral1909 Рік тому +80

      I mean every country except for the US and Canada treat there sports like that. Soccer/football, eu basketball and cricket is the same

    • @shoutucker3726
      @shoutucker3726 Рік тому +5

      Americans.

    • @dosantosbojan
      @dosantosbojan Рік тому +50

      D.R. so poor?
      Don't even look to Haiti, the country Next to D.R...

  • @dcrijo
    @dcrijo Рік тому +51

    For a lot of Dominican families, its a way out of poverty & a way to support their extended family & communities. You're born into it and the love for the game runs in the family for decades. The way players train from the moment they can walk is amazing...which produces these amazing athletes into the pros.

  • @cenq9093
    @cenq9093 Рік тому +101

    I love that my latino people get the respect and acknowledge they deserve. I’m Mexican and we also love baseball in our country. But it is true that Cubans,and Dominicans are on another level when it comes to baseball.

    • @AlejandroDaniel531
      @AlejandroDaniel531 11 місяців тому

      No hablamos latín y no somo del Lacio Italia, así que no somos latinos y no necesitamos la aprobación estadounidense para ser alguien.

    • @vj7994
      @vj7994 10 місяців тому +4

      ​@@AlejandroDaniel531???hablas español que es una lengua romance así que eres latino.

    • @mannyrodriguez5453
      @mannyrodriguez5453 10 місяців тому

      @@vj7994 El nombre Latin o Latino en el nuevo mundo de America fue dado por el frances Napoleon y Michel Chavelier que llego a America del sur y se encontro con los europeos yl se sentia que estaba en europa, el fue el primero de llamar la parte del Caribe, Centro y Sur, Latino America. Aunque el espanol esta conciderado un lenguaje romance no significa que el que habla espanol es considerado Latino, para nada, somos hispanos de habla espanol y de de varias razas. El verdadero latino existe solo en ADN en Italia y mayorment el Romano de Roma.

    • @Stoicsaiyan
      @Stoicsaiyan 8 місяців тому +1

      @@mannyrodriguez5453no importa nosotros hablamos un idioma de romance. Un idioma derivado por el latín de los romanos

  • @frankalmanzar3492
    @frankalmanzar3492 Рік тому +231

    This came out at a perfect time because the home run derby last night was Cuban players vs Dominican players. A Dominican won, Vladimir Guerrero Jr. 🇩🇴

    • @TrojanLube69
      @TrojanLube69 Рік тому +17

      Plátano power 💪🏼

    • @uliseshernandez3163
      @uliseshernandez3163 Рік тому +1

      Correction: Dominican Vs Mexican player, ✅

    • @yungxancash1459
      @yungxancash1459 Рік тому +33

      @@uliseshernandez3163Randy was born in Cuba. He escaped to Mexico and became a citizen because he enjoyed it there and they treated him well, but he’s Cuban. Born in Cuba

    • @uliseshernandez3163
      @uliseshernandez3163 Рік тому +3

      He is a Mexican national treasure

    • @uliseshernandez3163
      @uliseshernandez3163 Рік тому

      Hey did you guys know Mexico was in the final four on the baseball world championship beating out other countries like the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico

  • @Fromros
    @Fromros Рік тому +66

    I grew up in DR, and raise in the Heights, my brother was born in DR and play minor league for the Marlins, all I want is for him to earn what he deserve for all the hard work and training they do to be the best at the sport

  • @Kxji
    @Kxji Рік тому +46

    Baseball is a lifestyle in DR, believe or not I'm half Japanese and half Dominican that's all we did as kids.

    • @DekaiDekaiDekai
      @DekaiDekaiDekai 9 місяців тому +5

      Bro, if you have that mixture and you aren't into Baseball, I'm pretty sure the fabric of time itself would rip.

    • @Kxji
      @Kxji 9 місяців тому

      Well I played for about 2 years when I was a kid and got bored of it, last time I watched baseball was in 2013 when the Red Sox won@@DekaiDekaiDekai

    • @JuanBernardoContrerasCastillo
      @JuanBernardoContrerasCastillo 29 днів тому

      ​@@DekaiDekaiDekaijajaja

  • @IsaacPel
    @IsaacPel Рік тому +101

    "This is the Major Leagues Rafi, we are all from the Dominican Republic."

    • @octaviousharper3873
      @octaviousharper3873 Рік тому +14

      😂 A man of culture I see.

    • @makatron
      @makatron Рік тому +9

      Just watch out for the celebration slapassss

    • @zezeison
      @zezeison 5 місяців тому

      😂😂😂😂😂

  • @ricardogerman2265
    @ricardogerman2265 Рік тому +20

    Thank you Vox for this beautiful and well-documented video, as a Dominican American living in the USA, I played baseball as a young kid, I feel very proud of what Dominicans bring to the table to the MLB business.

  • @stephenmiller2337
    @stephenmiller2337 Рік тому +31

    So happy that Epy Guerrero got his due. He signed so many great Dominican Blue Jays players. The Jays had 3 starting Dominican players in 1985, and set a record for having 6 starting Dominican players in 2013. Tony Fernandez, one of the greatest shortstops of all time, was signed by Epy Guerrero.

  • @ancelcole4404
    @ancelcole4404 Рік тому +8

    American born however I played against cuban, Venezuelan, Puerto rican, and Dominican over my 20+ years of playing baseball. I must say those boys know how to play. They truly made Me become a great player.

  • @MariposaRising
    @MariposaRising Рік тому +67

    I loved this perspective on how the sport made it's way to Cuba and the Dominican Republic but it was worth mentioning that the indigenous people of the Caribbean, Tainos, had a sport that was similar to baseball 'Batu', 'Batey', 'Batos'. Although, it was not the same it had a similar structure.

    • @arturob5306
      @arturob5306 11 місяців тому

      It was not similar at all. The only comparison you can make is that it’s a sport that uses a ball. That’s it. Nothing else was like the sport of baseball
      Not to mention many say that Batéy was just a simplified version of the Mayan game pok ta pok

    • @JERSEYBOYPLAY2HARD
      @JERSEYBOYPLAY2HARD 10 місяців тому

      Should put football in Dominican Republic

    • @Tonyconstanza
      @Tonyconstanza 8 місяців тому

      @@JERSEYBOYPLAY2HARDnah they’re not big enough baseball rules

  • @arpitavora2369
    @arpitavora2369 Рік тому +45

    Thank you for connecting the dots of this incredibly interesting history! Great video!

  • @ecx007
    @ecx007 Рік тому +13

    As a Dominican, I say the MLB and American People Always Welcome in DR :) ; Baseball is our passion

    • @ykJvacano
      @ykJvacano Рік тому +2

      Some of them don’t like us so don’t bother inviting

  • @davidgodoy826
    @davidgodoy826 Рік тому +4

    We went to Dominican Republic 🇩🇴 for a mission trip and WOW they love baseball like Argentina 🇦🇷 loves soccer ⚽️…. Kids play baseball there all day everyday they have a passion for the sport. Kids play in all conditions there. Now I see why they are so good they love❤baseball

  • @Polo9794
    @Polo9794 Рік тому +167

    That was a great video! I'd be curious to know also how the sport made it to Japan and became so big.

    • @chagrined4days
      @chagrined4days Рік тому +10

      Read "You gotta have wa" by Robert Whiting

    • @pramanabudiman9761
      @pramanabudiman9761 Рік тому +50

      It's a easy explaination. Baseball was introduced to Japan in 1872 by American english professor named Horace Wilson at Kaisel Academy. This was during meiji period where the Japan government appointed American foreigners to help modernization. America's baseball culture got spread to Japan and became popular.

    • @alistairlee7604
      @alistairlee7604 Рік тому +33

      Even in South Korea, baseball is as popular as soccer there drawing thousands and thousands of fans.

    • @Ramboost007
      @Ramboost007 Рік тому +11

      The 30 for 30 podcast of the the ESPN show has a great episode on how Japanese players finally got a shot in the MLB after decades of being shackled by the gatekeeping contracts of the Japanese league.
      The interesting part is you'd expect the episode to highlight Ichiro, but the main character of their story is Hideo Nomo

    • @ianhomerpura8937
      @ianhomerpura8937 Рік тому +10

      Now I am curious as well why it wasn't the case in the Philippines. Here, basketball and boxing became way more popular than baseball starting in the 1970s.

  • @JSL-ru1cq
    @JSL-ru1cq Рік тому +33

    I would like to see them explain and talk about the history of baseball for the other mayor Latino Country's in baseball like Puerto Rico and Venezuela

  • @JorgeRodriguez-ih8ub
    @JorgeRodriguez-ih8ub Рік тому +8

    As a Dominican baseball fan who knew all these Information, this video is an excellent recopilation, it can even be shown in schools if someone adds subtitles

  • @jimmygomtor
    @jimmygomtor Рік тому +12

    In spanish we usually call baseball “El Rey de los Deportes”, “The King of Sports”.
    The legend says spanish once asked cubans why didn’t the like fútbol, if it was “The sport of the king”, to what the cubans answered “Mi hermano, fútbol might be the sport of the king, but baseball is The King of Sports”. Or so the legend says…

    • @neyou6940
      @neyou6940 Рік тому +6

      No one call baseball the king of sports, liar

    • @jimmygomtor
      @jimmygomtor Рік тому

      @@neyou6940 Are you mexican? I don't think so. Here it is commonly referred as it. So until you come to Mexico, shut up.

  • @CaraMarie13
    @CaraMarie13 Рік тому +23

    When I moved to this country and started going to school, I remember being surprised that there were so many different sports that were offered. In DR, I only ever did baseball and running and the running was mostly for the baseball lol. I started playing baseball for as long as I remember before moving to the US. Till this day, I can still throw a mean curve ball

  • @SanDiego_VDubLife
    @SanDiego_VDubLife Рік тому +24

    Pretty sweet. Wow I watched this within 24 hours of being released. This episode was so important at such a crucial time. I love the class perspective that was woven in. I'm a Padres fan and a Chicano and pay attention to issues concerning race and class. I love seeing the Dominican players and the city loves them too. I think Machado is Dominican too. I thought it was interesting when I see ARod, Soto, Big Papi and Guerrero all talking Spanish on the national stage during the All Star game. Thanks Vox!!!

    • @WanerPena
      @WanerPena Рік тому +2

      Of course, Machado is Dominican, ex Yankees fan here and San Diego fans right now. Lol

  • @doragon18
    @doragon18 Рік тому +35

    Genial, two things I love, baseball and my culture :)

  • @Kikusin22
    @Kikusin22 9 місяців тому +2

    República Dominicana es un paraíso hermoso, vi un libro de fotografías en Amazon sobre este país lleno de preciosas fotos!

  • @ThaNiceMeme
    @ThaNiceMeme Рік тому +34

    You forgot Mauricio Dubon (Honduras) and Martin Maldonado (Puerto Rico) in the latino breakdown graphic of the Houston Astros.

    • @josh_richards
      @josh_richards Рік тому

      are you surprised? vox knows nothing about sports which is why i click on their sports videos to see what they butcher like how they have the charlotte knights (white sox AAA) linked to the rangers, like just the first 30 seconds of the video was tell tale for "we are just quoting wikipedia"

    • @estilhernandez2705
      @estilhernandez2705 Рік тому +4

      You are right, but the topic is why there so many DR players in mlb not Latin player as a whole…

    • @Puruvian
      @Puruvian 9 місяців тому

      @@estilhernandez2705 if they higlight urquidy and altuve, then they should highlight them too, they also forgot yainer diaz

  • @AlexReyes
    @AlexReyes Рік тому +13

    Proud Dominican over here!

  • @realbaron5714
    @realbaron5714 Рік тому +4

    We are proud of our players, baseball is the most popular sport in the country. Gracias a esos jugadores por poner nuestra bandera en alto 🇩🇴🇩🇴💪💪

  • @wilber2k06
    @wilber2k06 Рік тому +5

    Some historical inaccuracies in this video. The ambassador of the United States, James Mark Sullivan (1873 - 1935), was the one that brought baseball to the Dominican Republic. The first game was played in Monte Cristi. Also, there's no way Cuban plantation owners relocated to DR because slavery was already outlawed there and the only few places that slavery still existed to name a few at the time (1860) was in the United States, Cuba, Puerto Rico, or Brazil.

  • @toneriggz
    @toneriggz Рік тому +32

    US army also brought baseball with them with they occupied DR in the early 1900s. Dominicans took to baseball and it eventually became an opportunity to get out of poverty. I’ve known and am related to a few Dominican baseball players. One made it, the rest only got as far as the minor leagues. The way basketball and football are popular in poor areas in the US, that’s baseball in DR. Basketball is the 2nd popular sport.
    There’s two good movies about the journey Dominican players have to make to get to the US. One is called Sugar and the other is a documentary called Pelotero.

    • @ulisesjorge
      @ulisesjorge Рік тому +3

      The Cubans brought it; did you even watch the video? Our oldest professional baseball team (Licey) was founded years before the Americans invaded.

    • @toneriggz
      @toneriggz Рік тому +1

      @@ulisesjorge Did you? She also mentions the US occupation.

    • @diddypablo2006
      @diddypablo2006 Рік тому +2

      @@toneriggz yes but you missed the point, the Cubans brought it way before.

    • @toneriggz
      @toneriggz Рік тому

      @@diddypablo2006 I didn’t miss any point. Hence why I used the word “also”. You missed “also”.

    • @ulisesjorge
      @ulisesjorge Рік тому +3

      @@toneriggz They didn't; how can they bring something that was already here? Because that's what you're implying with your comment, which doesn't make sense at all.

  • @camilofuentespena7348
    @camilofuentespena7348 10 місяців тому +1

    Is so refreshing and so nice to watch your work guys, that even an unexpected topic can become super enjoyable.

  • @Rfpenab
    @Rfpenab Рік тому +49

    I liked the neo-colonial comparison of Dominican players to natural resources waiting to be extracted and manufactured. Truly brilliant.

    • @NAT-turners-Revenge
      @NAT-turners-Revenge Рік тому +3

      I like the way they ignored african genetics

    • @Rfpenab
      @Rfpenab Рік тому +8

      @@NAT-turners-Revenge what do you mean?

    • @Krepo4
      @Krepo4 Рік тому +8

      @@NAT-turners-Revengewhat are you talking about

    • @jodh-cx1zd
      @jodh-cx1zd Рік тому +18

      @@NAT-turners-RevengeJapan is way better than us Dominicans at baseball? Do they have African genes?

    • @arturob5306
      @arturob5306 11 місяців тому

      @@Krepo4he can’t even explain what he meant. What a moronic statement

  • @eddiemonesti5671
    @eddiemonesti5671 Рік тому +14

    From the late 1800 hundreds when Cubans brought baseball to the Dominican republic to early 2000, baseball used to be a truly passionate sport for Dominicans, Growing up in the 90s even men with wife a kids working 6 days a week, Monday to Saturday 10 to 12 hours a day, Used to play baseball on Sunday. Playing like They were trying win a world series'ring. Now is more like a business.

  • @1990Thunderbolt
    @1990Thunderbolt Рік тому +25

    Japan to baseball is like Brazil to football and Dominican Republic to baseball is like France to football. High end quality talent playing in the big leagues!

    • @noliturs
      @noliturs Рік тому +2

      😂Without a doubt, the Dominican Republic is the Brazil of baseball, Japan could be Germany. The magic and joy of Dominican baseball, with all due respect, is above that of Japan.

    • @1990Thunderbolt
      @1990Thunderbolt Рік тому

      @@noliturs no the japanese baseball are like brazilian football. most wbc and world cup wins with high quality talents. the domincan republic are like france because they to have endless high quality talents all over baseball just like japan but the only difference is that japan has won more than the dom rep. as for the german's baseball quivalent, i'd say umm puerto rico? 🤷‍♂ usa is england, south korea is mexico and the rests are whatever....

    • @Tonyconstanza
      @Tonyconstanza 8 місяців тому

      @@1990Thunderboltthe Japanese have never faced the Dominicans and the closest they got to that was losing to Puerto Rico in the semi final and PR advanced to face DR in the final. If the Japanese go head to head with the DR they would lose

  • @liamcol09
    @liamcol09 Рік тому +22

    "OWED A LOT OF MONEY TO EUROPE" HMM WONDER HOW THAT HAPPENED

    • @sinewedbastion
      @sinewedbastion Рік тому

      Whities be whiting everywhere they go

    • @dno718
      @dno718 Рік тому

      Im BANKing on you getting a response to this inquiry

    • @Tonyconstanza
      @Tonyconstanza 8 місяців тому

      Loans weren’t paid back

  • @albertogarciab.2088
    @albertogarciab.2088 Рік тому +15

    Loved this episode! Is it possible to know more about the history of baseball in other Latin American countries like Colombia or Venezuela?

  • @ryansheridan6845
    @ryansheridan6845 Рік тому +17

    29 American teams + 1 Canadian

  • @ricardodiazcollado813
    @ricardodiazcollado813 Рік тому +7

    The second half of the century, Puerto Rico was the country that really picked up in terms of sending players to the majors. Dominican players have absolutely exploded since the 1990s however.

    • @PBH964
      @PBH964 Рік тому +1

      Roberto Clemente

    • @noliturs
      @noliturs Рік тому

      Get over it lloricua.

  • @availablity3173
    @availablity3173 Рік тому +15

    As a baseball fan now I get it!!
    Anyway they are so talented

  • @ウエストライフ-n8e
    @ウエストライフ-n8e Рік тому +31

    As a Japanese, I can say that baseball is part of life in Japan too. When the Japanese national team won the WBC, the whole of Japan went into a big fever. I think Ichiro and Otani are famous in America. However, many players who have reached the major league level want to play in the Japanese league. This is because the Japanese league is the highest peak for the Japanese people, and the passion and support of the fans is greater in Japan than in the United States.

    • @NAT-turners-Revenge
      @NAT-turners-Revenge Рік тому +1

      True

    • @kem1233
      @kem1233 Рік тому

      JAPAN IS NOT COOL OR HIP PLACE

    • @rickc.9664
      @rickc.9664 11 місяців тому +1

      The DR is too poor and small to have a league as enticing as the US or Japan.

    • @arturob5306
      @arturob5306 11 місяців тому +1

      I agree that Japanese baseball fans take baseball way more seriously and way more enthusiastic about it. They’re better and bigger fans than Americans are

    • @Atentoamusicamedianews1
      @Atentoamusicamedianews1 9 місяців тому

      ​@@rickc.9664we got a League for years its call lidom

  • @laloma333
    @laloma333 Рік тому +7

    Shoutout to Vox for the piece. Luis Aloma was my abuelo. An absolute baller on and off the field

  • @ramonturbi8514
    @ramonturbi8514 9 місяців тому +1

    Baseball in DR isn't only a sport is a feeling, we love Baseball

  • @jova32790
    @jova32790 Рік тому +9

    One thing I spotted that they forgot to include on the Astro’s team picture is mentioning one específico player… Mauricio dubon which he’s Honduran and idk how vox missed it!

    • @Tonyconstanza
      @Tonyconstanza 8 місяців тому

      Well he’s not Dominican so he’s irrelevant to this video

  • @spiritualwisdomsabiduriaes3337

    Because we are very talented 🇩🇴 and thanks to the major leagues for giving my Dominicans and open door to shine!

  • @leeweesquee
    @leeweesquee Рік тому +39

    The US imports success

    • @Jaxck77
      @Jaxck77 Рік тому +6

      Success it generates by replacing education with baseball.

    • @potatopower5253
      @potatopower5253 Рік тому +7

      Imports success and exports terror 😂

  • @MEPEREZ8
    @MEPEREZ8 9 місяців тому +1

    Because baseball is our favorite sport. We played for the love of the game.

  • @laurengrady3757
    @laurengrady3757 Рік тому +3

    Very interesting video. It would have been nice to hear directly from experts on the topic who are actually Dominican.

    • @wilber2k06
      @wilber2k06 Рік тому +1

      Agreed; some historical inaccuracies in this video. The ambassador of the United States, James Mark Sullivan (1873 - 1935), was the one that brought baseball to the Dominican Republic. The first game was played in Monte Cristi. Also, there's no way Cuban plantation owners relocated to DR because slavery was already outlawed there and the only few places that slavery still existed to name a few at the time (1860) was in the United States, Cuba, Puerto Rico, or Brazil.

  • @youmefull9
    @youmefull9 Рік тому +2

    Fernando Tatis Jr said "If you're a boy, If you don't play baseball I don't know where you're from" For me that's DR baseball culture is consist of passion and pride, and for me the special ability especially from the Caribbean continent like DR and others is the "Reflexes" I mean the reflexes of of baseball player especially from DR and other country in Caribbean is unbelievable

    • @Shel230
      @Shel230 Рік тому

      No they really only got into the mlb cause black people quit playing why u think Latinos only have a presence in baseball and basketball and football are majority black

  • @SanctusFammae
    @SanctusFammae Рік тому +8

    Dominicana y Liceísta hasta la tambora, que viva el Béisbol Dominicano y que viva la República Dominicana 🇩🇴

  • @ritabenkhalti8809
    @ritabenkhalti8809 10 місяців тому +1

    What a beautifully made video. Thank you for sharing this information and the history of it.

  • @chriszenko3598
    @chriszenko3598 Рік тому +3

    Probably for the same reason many MLB players come from California and Florida. They have good weather 12 months a year

  • @leguleyo69
    @leguleyo69 11 місяців тому +1

    I am very familiar with the baseball industry in DR and this video is 100% accurate.

  • @aanchaallllllll
    @aanchaallllllll Рік тому +3

    2:53: ⚾ Baseball became a national entity in Cuba and the Dominican Republic, rooted in the working class.
    5:24: 🇨🇺 The video discusses the impact of US-Cuba relations on Major League Baseball and the shift to recruiting talent from the Dominican Republic.
    8:26: ⚾ Major League Baseball turned its attention to the Dominican Republic in the late 1950s, signing talented players and expanding quickly.
    10:32: 💰 The MLB profits from signing Dominican players for cheaper contracts while making millions off of them.
    Recap by Tammy AI

  • @Ya-gu
    @Ya-gu 10 місяців тому +1

    ⚾First of all, I'm so glad to be able to meet and watch this video. I've always wanted to know more about baseball in Latin American countries🌎🇵🇷🇦🇷🇨🇱🇻🇪🇨🇴(also Mexico🇲🇽), such as Cuba🇨🇺, Nicaragua🇳🇮, Panamá🇵🇦 and the Dominican Republic🇩🇴. Basically, how they play it, its history there, their minds of ball-game , play-style, teams, players, stadiums🏟️, academies of the big league and cultures of it are really attractive and an interesting for me. And, in this year, Latin american baseball players play it very well dramatically. The national team of Cuba went to the semifinal of World Baseball Classic2023, and many Major Leaguers from there spend an awesome season, Mr. Camilo Doval🇩🇴, Mr. Adolis Garcia🇨🇺 Mr. Ronald Acuña Jr.🇻🇪, Mr. Luis Robert Jr.🇨🇺, Mr. Yordan Álvarez🇨🇺, Mr. Luis Arráez🇻🇪, Mr. Yandy Días🇨🇺, Mr. Julio Rodríguez🇩🇴, and other superstars.⚾🤩 So, I appreciate you for your video, anyway.❤️⚾👍🤩📱THE ALMENDARES BSEBALL TEAM⚾🇨🇺❤️ Saludos desde Japón⚾🎌

  • @dominicanknives9206
    @dominicanknives9206 Рік тому +10

    It makes me happy to see Dominicans in the spotlight for a bit😊

  • @ryanho5432
    @ryanho5432 Рік тому +10

    A dominant country indeed

  • @lucaswhat6486
    @lucaswhat6486 Рік тому +3

    It’s just that we’re always on top 🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴

  • @Charles-o3n
    @Charles-o3n Рік тому +1

    It’s called dedication and commitment ✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿✊🏿

  • @Sarah-uw7wb
    @Sarah-uw7wb Рік тому +22

    Another well researched and beautiful video by rajaa & the Vox team!

  • @joemckim1183
    @joemckim1183 Рік тому +9

    To things in proper perspective, Dominican Republic has 18K square miles and West Virginia has 24K square miles. So DR is only 3/4 as big as WV but produces 11% of all major leaguers.

    • @Shel230
      @Shel230 Рік тому

      Yes now cause black people quit playing

    • @Shel230
      @Shel230 Рік тому

      They didn't start to really get Latin players intill most black people quit playing

    • @ericgonzalez3641
      @ericgonzalez3641 Рік тому +3

      You have to consider that the DR has 11 million people and West Virginia doesn’t reach 2 million people

    • @NAT-turners-Revenge
      @NAT-turners-Revenge Рік тому

      @@Shel230 Most of them have african genetics 😁

    • @victormitrell2989
      @victormitrell2989 Рік тому +3

      @@NAT-turners-Revenge is that information relevant in this conversation?

  • @savagepro9060
    @savagepro9060 Рік тому +68

    'Dominican' is also the term used to describe people from The Commonwealth of Dominica, in the lower Caribbean region [Windward Islands]. It's known simply as Dominica. No baseball here, just cricket!

    • @ulisesjorge
      @ulisesjorge Рік тому +12

      The word "Dominican" while spelled the same in English is pronounced differently to distinguish between the two.
      Dominican (rom the Commonwealth of Dominica): This is pronounced as doh−mih−NIH−Kuhn with the stress on the second syllable from the end, which is typical of English pronunciation. Dominican (from the Dominican Republic): This is pronounced as doh−MIH−nih−kuh with the stress on the middle syllable.
      EDIT: Fixed it, had it backwards

    • @savagepro9060
      @savagepro9060 Рік тому +2

      @@ulisesjorge my point was not on the pronunciation of the COUNTRIES, but the PEOPLE from the countries. They are BOTH called DOMINICANS!

    • @diddypablo2006
      @diddypablo2006 Рік тому +9

      @@ulisesjorge you got those pronunciations exactly backwards.

    • @Eibarwoman
      @Eibarwoman Рік тому +1

      The other thing is baseball and cricket batting skills are convertable enough that a pair of Jamaican cricket players became MLB outfielders in the 1980s in Rolando Roomes and Devon White.

    • @CristianmrWuno
      @CristianmrWuno Рік тому +5

      They are also less than 100k people, nobody cares

  • @MrMlbfan6
    @MrMlbfan6 Рік тому +2

    As a country baseball means the world to us is more than just a sport .

  • @muhisya
    @muhisya Рік тому +4

    Please make a video why in Japan and South Korea baseball is so big too

  • @FV-gn7ce
    @FV-gn7ce Рік тому +2

    My kid ain’t going to school he gonna practice baseball his whole life like these guys

  • @harboco
    @harboco Рік тому +5

    10:05 per your graphic it would actually be 29* US teams and 1 Canadian team (Toronto). Kinda small but also kinda big mistake to make lol

  • @morenocharade
    @morenocharade 10 місяців тому

    Thank you for this support to The Dominican Republic..

  • @vigilante7
    @vigilante7 Рік тому +15

    Fantastic! Please more sports on Vox Atlas!
    The one on France’s soccer stars in the banlieus and Gazprom on soccer shirts we’re both very good 🎉

  • @juniorcabrera1789
    @juniorcabrera1789 Рік тому +2

    Cause we them boys 🇩🇴

  • @WakeUp-xb8ze
    @WakeUp-xb8ze Рік тому +10

    Steroids are a problem on the DR. I am not exaggerating when I say 90% of MLB players from the Dominican have taken steroids at some point in their lives. Most likely from ages 10-13, and a lot of them don’t even realize what they are taken, a coach just tells them to take it. The reason they take it so young is that these are key developing years. They have roids to make you taller, stronger etc. I don’t think people realize how great of an advantage PED’s are, any high level athlete rlly knows tho. There is a reason that over 70% OF ALL steroid use in the mlb in the past 10 years has been from Dominican born players. Look it up if you don’t believe me………………..

    • @jodh-cx1zd
      @jodh-cx1zd Рік тому +5

      I should have took steroids smh

    • @BigLund
      @BigLund Рік тому +2

      Me too!!! When I was in college we had guys that told me everyone at their academy were given “vitamins” daily. That kid had a man’s body at 18. I wonder why. SMH

    • @joel8692
      @joel8692 Рік тому

      ​@@jodh-cx1zdyup lol I went to the Dominican republic at 16 from New York looking to get singed along with a few other guys who played with me in the states . We witnessed the trainer inject prospects with testosterone and tell them it was B complex . They did it to prospects who were about to go on a tryout

    • @hectorguerrero4080
      @hectorguerrero4080 9 місяців тому

      USA players are the Kings of Steroids so MLB is hiding something. Just saying.

    • @Tonyconstanza
      @Tonyconstanza 8 місяців тому

      It’s still discredits the majority who are clean you can’t take a few who juiced and use them to represent the majority

  • @Alex-sj6fq
    @Alex-sj6fq Рік тому +2

    Pretty solid video. Just two notes, it’s not the MLB, it’s just MLB. The other small mistake is that the Charlotte Knights and Texas Rangers have never been affiliated with each other

  • @CesarHernandez-gr4jm
    @CesarHernandez-gr4jm Рік тому +4

    "This is the MLB, we are all from the Dominican Republic"

  • @BXDudeRD2007
    @BXDudeRD2007 Рік тому +1

    I love this video and point it out the passion we have for baseball in DR 🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴 and a shout out to lose tigueres de licey 🐯🐯💙💙

  • @ArashiKageTaro
    @ArashiKageTaro Рік тому +6

    Now do one on Japan please!

  • @feco729
    @feco729 11 місяців тому +1

    Just one comment.. The picture that identifies Trujillo as the owner of the team is not accurate. That was not him. He did own the team but the man in the picture is not Trujillo.

  • @lilshawonjawn1465
    @lilshawonjawn1465 Рік тому +3

    Shout out to all of the Dominicans
    De Lo Mio

  • @4ugayster
    @4ugayster Рік тому +2

    I can't believe it. I have been thinking about this over last 2 weeks, and now you make a new video about it. How can it be true?)

  • @eoghankenny5248
    @eoghankenny5248 Рік тому +3

    The picture at 6:23 is not from the 1916-1924 occupation

  • @StudyYourself
    @StudyYourself Рік тому

    beautiful to see this, thank you.

  • @MorningThief_
    @MorningThief_ Рік тому +13

    the baseball appreciation & integration into Dominican culture seems very much the same as basketball is in the Philippines. former colony, one sport gets really big & ingrained into the culture. the difference being there are hardly (if any) any Filipinos in the NBA (those who grew up in the Philippines & have their skills developed at home). although we do have mixed heritage players like Jalen Green & Jordan Clarkson...

    • @Lime-uu4qj
      @Lime-uu4qj Рік тому +4

      How i wish our fellow Filipinos see baseball same with DR. Its more fun to watch and play baseball than basketball though its a matter of opinion.

    • @MorningThief_
      @MorningThief_ Рік тому +4

      @@Lime-uu4qj I can see myself getting into baseball, but right now, I prefer cricket. Living in Australia for more than 2 decades will do that.

    • @Lime-uu4qj
      @Lime-uu4qj Рік тому

      @@MorningThief_ yeah ive heard cricket is popular in Australia and i have some idea of the sport due to jomboy hehe. I do support any sport except basketball

    • @jodh-cx1zd
      @jodh-cx1zd Рік тому +2

      The difference is that Filipinos never make it to the NBA for the most part. They are just big fans.

    • @romelimmense
      @romelimmense Рік тому +1

      The Philippines used to be good in baseball but basketball surpassed it. The reason is probably because the equipment use in baseball are expensive.

  • @fibra64
    @fibra64 9 місяців тому +1

    Magnífico❤👏Excelente Biografía De la Más Grande Historia Del Béisbol ⚾️, Ahora Quisiera Saber Como llego a PR Que También Practica El Béisbol Profesional y es Su Deporte Oficial ✔️.

  • @matttheking1655
    @matttheking1655 Рік тому +4

    This reminds me of the the key and Peele skit ..🤣🤣🤣

  • @ummuser
    @ummuser Рік тому +1

    If you fly over the DR you’ll see it. Baseball fields everywhere

  • @jacksonhenninge6830
    @jacksonhenninge6830 Рік тому +3

    Dominican born players definitely bring in more than $400 million a year. DR players are half the league and they’re more than half the talent in the league.

  • @og3932
    @og3932 Рік тому +8

    🇨🇺🫱🏻‍🫲🏽🇩🇴 we have to say thank you to our Cubans brothers for the game of baseball ⚾️

    • @Stoicsaiyan
      @Stoicsaiyan 8 місяців тому

      Brotherhood to the end

  • @allaboutiran1142
    @allaboutiran1142 Рік тому +3

    Vox talking about important real world topics!

  • @mosijahi3096
    @mosijahi3096 Рік тому +8

    Great job guys in covering sports in this way?

  • @spiritualwisdomsabiduriaes3337

    The first Dominican player reached the major leagues in 1954...❤ so we Dominicans are a established household name in the majors league!

  • @JorMPrez
    @JorMPrez Рік тому +4

    One mistake you guys made, the Charlotte Knights are affiliated to the Chicago White Sox, not the Texas Rangers.

    • @anthonygallo2938
      @anthonygallo2938 Рік тому +2

      Yeah, they've been affiliated with the Orioles, Marlins and Cleveland as well. Never Texas.

  • @MrSanchez
    @MrSanchez Рік тому +2

    And we’re soo damm good at it 😌🇩🇴

  • @fastlanegaming
    @fastlanegaming Рік тому +13

    Proud to be 🇩🇴❤️‍🔥

  • @metaforically
    @metaforically Рік тому +1

    Why is there no bg music for the Spanish audio?

  • @carlosfuertes6356
    @carlosfuertes6356 Рік тому +10

    As a Dominican, I find this video very good. However, although Baseball brings an important amount of dollars to the country, it is by no means one of the major drivers of the economy, neither is agriculture.

    • @ericmoralesfishing
      @ericmoralesfishing Рік тому

      tourism outweighs everything haha

    • @kem1233
      @kem1233 Рік тому +1

      ​​@@ericmoralesfishingOOO. NOT TOURISM SORRY. NUMBER ONE SOURCE IS TRADE ZONE. NUMBER 2 IS REMITTANCE. THEN 3 AGRICULTURE, THEN 4 IS TOURISM.

  • @mjhout
    @mjhout Рік тому +2

    I love baseball

  • @elmascavidal1797
    @elmascavidal1797 Рік тому +2

    De lo Mio …. 💪🏻🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴

  • @upinsm0ke400
    @upinsm0ke400 Рік тому +1

    0:40 Max Kepler representing for Germany ❤😂

  • @DavidWoods255
    @DavidWoods255 Рік тому +5

    My usual comment: Atlas is the best thing Vox produces. Looks like you've taken over from Sam and you're doing a fantastic job

  • @urielvelezb
    @urielvelezb 2 місяці тому

    7:45 That is not Trujillo, that is Jose Enrique Aybar the person in charge.