By John Manuel
March 2, 2006
http://www.baseballamerica.com/today/features/060302wbccuba3b.html
Omar Linares was a legend, in the true sense of that word.
To baseball fans who weren't lucky enough to see him play for the Cuban
national team, Linares was a player whose greatness was discovered
second-hand. The youngest player to play in Cuba's Serie Nacional (the
island nation's top-level league), he was 15 in 1985 when he led the league
with 65 RBIs, the largest total in 15 years. The next year—when he was 16—
he led the league in intentional walks.
Linares was the greatest player fans never saw, and stories of how good he
was were hard for American fans to believe. He played until 2001 for Cuba's
national teams, winning Olympic gold medals in 1992 and '96, and going out
with gold in the '01 World Cup in Taiwan.
That proved to be the swan song for many stalwarts of Cuba's national teams.
In July 2001, Cuba also won the Junior Pan Am Games with a team that included
an infielder named Yuliesky Gourriel, 17, and current Angels prospect Kendry
Morales.
Cuba won gold in the 18-and-under tournament as Gourriel batted .433 and made
the all-tournament team. Morales, considered Cuba's top young player,
homered and went the distance on the mound to earn the tournament's MVP
award.
Most assumed Morales would inherit Linares' mantle as the top hitter for
Cuba, and the next year, Cuba graduated young players such as Gourriel,
Morales and Frederich Cepeda to Cuba's senior national team. The new-look
team won gold in the 2003 World Cup in Cuba to pass its first real test.
Morales hit just .265 but cemented his place in Cuba's hierarchy with a
game-winning home run against Brazil (driving in Gourriel, who started the
rally with a triple) to avert a huge upset.
Morales could have been the heir to Linares' throne, it appeared, with
Gourriel pushing him for the honor of best player in Cuba. Instead, he
defected and signed a lucrative contract with the Angels, guaranteeing him $6
million.
It left Gourriel behind as the Cuban national team's top hitter, the player
left to try to live up Linares' legacy and to maintain the pride Cuba's
baseball team brings to the isolated Communist nation. That pride is on the
line like never before at the World Baseball Classic, as Cuba's "amateurs”
face international major leaguers, and it's up to Gourriel more than any
Cuban player to help maintain his country's unmatched track record.
Scouts who have seen Gourriel say he's up to it.
"That kid is something special," said John Kazanas, an area scout for the
White Sox who saw Gourriel in the 2004 Olympics, when Kazanas was the Greek
team's coach. "He's got such quick wrists, it's like a knife through
butter, and there's no butter on the knife.
"There were a lot of good players in Athens. I wrote him up as my No. 1, and
he was 20 years old on top of it."
First-Round Talent
Ask scouts about Gourriel, and they will talk about his tools as if he were a
first-round pick. If Gourriel were American, he would be a college junior now
and certainly a first-rounder.
The only dispute is over which position he should play. On the national team,
he has played second and third base, and for his Sancti Spiritus team in
Serie Nacional, Gourriel has been shifted more to third, though he has filled
in at shortstop. His work around the bag at second on double plays, according
to Cuba observers, led to his move to third.
"For me, he's a No. 1 guy, and he's a power hitter who fits the third base
profile," said a scout with extensive international experience. "I think he's
a championship-caliber third baseman in the big leagues. He doesn't have a
weakness.
"I had him with a 55 arm, and it seems like he has more if he needs it, and I
put him as a 55 defender, though I think he could be a 60. But he's an
offensive player."
Gourriel has a long, sinewy-strong body, comparable to a young Chipper Jones
or Ernie Banks, and he produces tremendous power with quick wrists, strong
hands and an unconventional approach at the plate that nevertheless allows
him to generate terrific bat speed. His power helped Cuba dominate the 2005
World Cup in the Netherlands, as he led the tournament with eight home runs,
including a long blast off the Devil Rays' Jason Phillips in an 11-3 rout of
Team USA.
In his last three major international tournaments—the 2003 and 2005 World
Cups and the '04 Olympics—Gourriel progressively has become more dangerous,
and more confident. He had one extra-base hit and four RBIs in 2003; last
September, he had 19 RBIs in just nine games. Combined in those tournaments,
Gourriel is hitting .342-11-36 over 29 games.
"He plays with a real air of confidence now," one scout said. "There's just
no question he's great now, and would be a great player in the States."
Another scout put it more bluntly: "After I saw him, I tried to convince my
organization that it's worth it to try and do what we can to get this guy
out of Cuba. This guy has a chance to be a big league shortstop or third
baseman and be an impact player for 10 years."
No Place Like Home
However, defecting isn't likely for Gourriel, whose profile is more like
that of Linares than Morales. His manager at Sancti Spiritus is Lourdes
Gourriel, his father, who was an impressive player in his own right. A former
stalwart of national teams in the '70s and early '80s, Lourdes Gourriel spent
20 seasons in Serie Nacional, hitting .323 with 247 home runs (Cuba used
metal bats and played 90-game seasons in the elder Gourriel's time).
He also plays on the Sancti Spiritus team with his brother Yuniesky, an
outfielder and significantly lesser player. These family factors, according
to sources familiar with baseball in Cuba, make it unlikely Gourriel would
defect, as defecting would preclude any return to communist Cuba.
"Gourriel is a player the fans talk about, and he's very consistent, but he's
not the dominating player that Linares was," said Peter Bjarkman, who has
written several books about international baseball and Cuba in particular.
"The feeling you get when you watch him, though, is that he's only going to
get better. He's not near what he's going to be."
In this way, Gourriel is not Linares, who was a dominant player instantly.
Gourriel may be Cuba's best, but it's not by a wide margin. Frederich
Cepeda is nearly his peer among younger players, a switch-hitter with pop and
speed in center field. And 16-year-old Dayan Viciedo, the MVP of the world
youth championships, was the youngest player on any Classic provisional
roster.
But now, Gourriel can do something not even Linares got to do. He can become
a real star, not just a legend, for fans in the U.S. and around the world, by
leaving his mark on the inaugural World Baseball Classic.