Growing up with El Tiante’s baseball cards

Growing up with El Tiante’s baseball cards: We remember the great Luis Tiant, who was born in Marianao, Cuba on this day in 1940 and died in 2024. Luis was born in a family of pitchers.  His father was Luis Eleuterio Tiant, who pitched professionally in the old Negro Leagues…
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We remember the great Luis Tiant, who was born in Marianao, Cuba on this day in 1940 and died in 2024.

Luis was born in a family of pitchers.  His father was Luis Eleuterio Tiant, who pitched professionally in the old Negro Leagues in the U.S. as well as in Mexico.  Unfortunately, he never got to the majors because of the color line, but it happened.  My father did remember Luis Senior in the Cuban leagues.  He was a nasty left-hander!

Our family came to the U.S. in 1964, and it coincided with Tiant’s debut season with what they used to call the Cleveland Indians, or “los indios,” as we called them.  It was a stellar debut: 10-4, 9 complete games, 3 shutouts, and a 2.83 ERA.  It didn’t take long for my brother and me to get his baseball card, along with Tony Oliva, who won the batting title and Rookie of the Year.  It was a good year for the Cuban rookies.

A few years later, Luis led the AL in 1968 with a 1.60 ERA!  By the late 1960s, El Tiante was one of the best pitchers in baseball.  Back then, we had very little baseball on TV, so the daily sports page kept our family updated on Tiant’s starts.  It was a thrill to have my dad open the newspaper and say that Tiant had thrown another complete game or something that pitchers used to do back then. 

Suddenly, he suffered a series of arm injuries in 1970–71 and was released and passed up by several teams who thought that he was finished.  I remember watching him start a game, leave with an arm injury, and it seemed as though our favorite, El Tiante, would never pitch again.

Everything changed when the Red Sox gave him a chance in 1972: 15 wins and an AL-leading 1.91 ERA.  Tiant won 81 games over the next 4 seasons and became the darling of Fenway Park.  I got to see a lot of Luis in those years because I was going to school in Maryland, and the Orioles-Red Sox rivalry was wonderful baseball.  Watching El Tiante go through that winding motion at the old Memorial Stadium is just a great memory.

Up in New England, they remember Tiant and the 1975 post-season.  He shut down the A’s in game 1 of the ALCS and beat the Reds in Games 1 and 4 of the World Series.  And his aforementioned father had a chance to watch him pitch.  It was a wonderful post-season for father and son.  By the way, his 10-inning, 163-pitch complete game in Game 4 was maybe the best Tiant ever.  The Red Sox needed that victory to tie the series, and El Tiante did his job.

Luis Tiant retired with 229 wins, a 3.30 ERA, and 189 complete games.  In my opinion, he should be in the Hall of Fame.  Let’s hope he goes in the next time around.

It’s a shame that he passed away and we won’t hear him give that acceptance speech.  Nevertheless, I want future generations of baseball to learn about the man with that winding motion that kept batters seeing psychiatrists.


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WORLD WAR I, part 4, WITH BARRY JACOBSEN




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1963: Jack Ruby killed Lee Harvey Oswald


On this day in 1963, millions of people watched Jack Ruby, a Dallas businessman, shoot Lee Harvey Oswald, the alleged killer of President Kennedy.    Oswald died shortly after.

It happened as the authorities were taking Oswald to another jail and about 48 hours after the assassination of the president.

To say the least, the shooting shocked the nation and opened the door to a ton of conspiracy theories about the president's assassination.  


For the record, I believe that Oswald shot President Kennedy on his own.  I came to that conclusion after reading Gerald Posner's "Case closed" in the 1990's.   

Ruby died of cancer in 1967.  As far as we know, He never changed his story about why he killed Oswald.     Apparently, Ruby did not want Jackie Kennedy to come to a trial.   He took that explanation to his grave.

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The Cuban kitchen with Marta and Sonia




The Cuban Christmas kitchen with Marta Verdes Darby & Sonia Martinez

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Birthday parties & the Cuban kitchen with Marta Verdes Darby and Sonia Martinez


Guests: Marta Verdes Darby, author and editor of 'My big fat Cuban family'......and Sonia Martinez, author of 'From soup to nuts'.............join me for a look at Cuban birthday party foods.......the cakes....the pastries...the drinks.......sandwiches.................

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The Cuban Christmas kitchen with Marta & Sonia

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Guests:  Sonia Martinez, author of "From soup to nuts" & newspaper columnist........Marta Verdes Darby, author and editor of "My big fat Cuban family".......we look at Cuban recipes for Christmas......

 P.S.  Check out my blog for posts, podcasts and videos. If you like our posts, please look for ”Donate” on the right column of the blog page.
  
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Successful Cuban American businesswomen in the US


Guest: Fernando Hernandez, author of 'The Cubans'. Our topic today is 'Successful Cuban-American businesswomen'. Some of the names include Julie Stav, Isabel Toledo, Lucila Jimenez, Aida Levitan, Maricela Presilla and Tere Zubizarreta. 

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2016 show: The Cuban Christmas kitchen with Sonia & Marta


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2013 podcast: "Cuba at 60" with Dr. Carlos Eire

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Cuba at 60 with Dr. Carlos Eire 01/02 by Silvio Canto Jr | Politics Podcasts:

Guest: Dr. Carlos Eire, author of 'Waiting for snow in Havana' and other books.........we will discuss the 60th anniversary of the Castro regime in Cuba......and other stories.............

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The poetry of Cástulo Gregorisch and Fernando Hernandez, author................


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How much "leche condensada" did you have as a Cuban kid?

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We had a great time with Marta Verdes Darby, Sonia Martinez and Frank Burke talking about Cuban food.

And we spoke about "leche condensada".....a real treat for those of us who grew up in Cuba.

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Tags: Cuban food  To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the My View by Silvio Canto, Jr. Thanks!

The Cuban kitchen with Marta and Sonia




Tersi Agra Bendiburg: A “Cubana” from Dixie who tells stories!




The Cuban American story is diverse.
 
Speaking of that, we chatted this week in 2013 with Tersi Agra Bendiburg, a "Cubana" who grew up in Georgia.   
 
Her family story is similar to mine, and perhaps yours:
"Tersi had vivid memories from her childhood in post-revolution Cuba.  She remembers soldiers walking through her house, taking inventory of everything her family owned.  A year later, when they were to leave the country with nothing --not even her parents' wedding rings, the soldiers returned to re-inventory all the contents of the house.  She also remembers her father hiding a young man in their home  (who had been shot by soldiers) until he could be passed along safely.
At age, ten, Tersi’s family moved to Mexico City where they stayed with a distant relative while her parents applied for political asylum in the United States.  That Christmas was the first time Carmen, age 3, had ever seen Christmas lights because religious celebrations had been halted after the revolution in Cuba.
It was a wonderland.  On the Dia de los Reyes, Three Kings Day, Tersi wrote to the kings to let them know Tersi and her family were no longer in Cuba, but were, instead, in Mexico City so they would know where to bring presents.  Her parents were so worried that Tersi had written a letter and they had no money to buy her a present.  It was then that she spoke with a relative from Decatur, Georgia who told Tersi that the kings had left presents for her and Carmen in Decatur, and that in the future she should direct her letters to Santa Claus because the kings said the coffee in America was too weak for men from the east and the icy streets were too much of a challenge for the camels.  Sure enough, when they arrived in Decatur, both girls had presents waiting for them.
In Decatur, the Agra family was sponsored by the First Baptist Church of Decatur.  They never needed welfare since they had a little furnished apartment and Mr. Agra began work almost immediately.  Tersi attended Oakhurst Elementary where she had the famous spinach incident, and many other adventures.
That first Halloween in the United States Tersi ran home with a pillowcase full of candy.  She dumped it out and said, “You just say trick-or-treat and they give you candy!”
“What a country!”  Her father exclaimed."
Yes, what a country indeed!   
 
Today, Tersi tells children the wonderful stories of Latin America and others.
 
What a wonderful lady!   Thanks to Fernando Hernandez for the introduction!     

We spoke with Tersi on Friday's show and learned that she was born in Florida, Camaguey or not too far from my mom's hometown of Ciego de Avila!   As my mother loves to say:  "Que mundo mas chiquito"!

Click to hear the show from 2013.

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1967: "She's A Rainbow" by The Rolling Stones

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At the end of 1967, The Rolling Stones gave us  "Their Satanic Majesties Request", a bizarre album that sounded nothing like the band that released "Satisfaction", "Ruby Tuesday" and "Paint it black".   

It was a crazy LP with a few good tracks, such as "Citadel", "2,000 man", the absolutely hysterical "On with the show" and "She's a rainbow", the only 45 released in the US.    

I like "She's a rainbow" and the piano bits plus those silly lyrics that mean actually nothing.    It was clearly a song for 1967!

The bad news is that they tell me that The Rolling Stones were trying to do their own Sgt.  Pepper with a crazy cover as well.   The good news is that they followed all of this with "Jumpin' Jack Flash" and "Honky Tonk Women".  It was nice to see the band recording great songs again.

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The Cuban kitchen with Marta Verdes Darby and Sonia Martinez


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The Cuban kitchen with Marta Verdes Darby and Sonia Martinez 05/31 by Silvio Canto Jr | Food Podcasts:

Guests: Marta Verdes Darby, author and editor of 'My big fat Cuban family'......and Sonia Martinez, author of 'From soup to nuts'.............join me for a look at Cuban birthday party foods.......the cakes....the pastries...the drinks.......sandwiches..................we also hope to hear about Marta's mom who is now 102 years old...................

The Cuban kitchen with Marta Verdes Darby and Sonia Martinez



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Guests:   Marta Verdes Darby, author and editor of "My big fat Cuban family"......and Sonia Martinez, author of "From soup to nuts".............join me for a look at Cuban birthday party foods.......the cakes....the pastries...the drinks.......sandwiches..................we also hope to hear about Marta's mom who is now 102 years old...................
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The story of Desi Arnaz with Fernando Hernandez, author

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Guest: Fernando Hernandez, author of "The Cubans", joins us for the story of Desi Arnaz, TV star and executive........

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P.S.  You can listen to my show.  If you like our posts, please look for ”Donate” on the right column of the blog page.