Cuban Baseball Player Uses Bat As Weapon In Wild Brawl (VIDEO)

Baseball Player Uses Bat As Weapon In Wild Brawl
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An ugly brawl broke out during a baseball game in Cuba on Monday night, in which one player rushed the field and used a bat as a weapon. According to Baseball America, Demis Valdes left his dugout with a bat and attacked the opposing pitcher in the game after two of his teammates were hit by pitches in the seventh inning.

More from the Associated Press:

HAVANA (AP) — A bench-clearing brawl in which a ballplayer hit a rival in the face with a bat disgusted sports fans and had pundits bemoaning the state of Cuba's national sport on Tuesday.

The melee between Matanzas and Villa Clara, first and second in the standings respectively, was broadcast live on national television to shocked viewers Monday night.

The trouble came in the seventh inning after Matanzas catcher Eriel Sanchez hit a solo home run off right-hander Freddy Asiel Alvarez, one of Cuba's best pitchers and a member of the national team.

Alvarez beaned the next man up at the plate, Yasiel Santoya, who was benched by manager Victor Mesa as a precaution.

Two batters later Alvarez came back in high-and-tight on Victor Victor Mesa, plunking the coach's son in the upper arm.

Video images show Matanzas' Demis Valdes charging the mound brandishing a wooden bat at Alvarez, who rips off his glove and hurls it him. Valdes takes a vicious right-handed cut, though it's not clear if he misses the ducking pitcher or deals a glancing blow.

But Valdes' backswing catches Villa Clara captain and first baseman Ramon Lunar in the face, knocking him to the ground.

"You have to put a stop to that. That can't happen," the TV announcer said, as other players tackled Valdes and wrested the bat from him.

Both dugouts emptied as coaches and players met in a scrum near the third-base line that resulted in a long delay. Lunar was hospitalized overnight for observation, but not seriously injured.

"He has no facial fractures, only lacerations to the lower and upper lips and nose, all with a favorable prognosis," Cuban journalist Yimmi Castillo said on state television.

Matanzas won 3-0 and remains atop the standings.

The following day, fans were chattering about the brawl.

"That's not even baseball. It's a shame," said Arnaldo Soler, a 23-year-old student dressed in the jersey of Havana's powerhouse team, Industriales.

"I love baseball but I'm a little disgusted. I think the Cubans aren't playing well," Soler added in allusion to recent poor performances in international tournaments. "And then incidents like this are an embarrassment."

It was not without precedent, however.

In 2010, Lisban Correa of Industriales chased a Sancti Spiritus player around the field with a bat before catching up and clubbing him. Correa earned a season-long suspension.

Sanctions against Valdes were likely to be swift and severe.

In a column published Tuesday by official media, pundit Oscar Sanchez Serra lamented that Cuban baseball is not immune to the kind of ugliness that has tarnished sports elsewhere.

"In this way, before we even play, we won't win in either the Caribbean Series or anywhere, not for lack of talent or because there's no professional sports but for lack of professionalism," said Sanchez, who is sub-director of the Communist Party daily Granma.

"Where is it going to stop? Much has been tolerated," he wrote. "What we are seeing in baseball is an assault on our very culture and a lack of respect to the audience that comes to the stadium and watches on TV."

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Anne-Marie Garcia on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AnneMarie279

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