Partly Cloudy
54°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Minnie Minoso gets his moment

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

In addition to being a premiere for the documentary, it was also a birthday celebration for the ageless Minoso, whose 89th (or 90th, depending on who you believe) natal day was Nov. 29.

The former five-tool superstar, who gave a brief, impassioned speech before the screening about how Sox and Cubs fans should "love and respect each other," presented the film with his official thumbs-up after the screening.

"It's a beautiful documentary; I just hope the fans like it," said Minoso, who was dressed in his Sox jersey (with his number "9" on the back) for the premiere, attended by about 60 people, many of whom were close family or friends.

The finished work is a thorough look at Minoso's life, with dozens of interviews, ranging from MLB Commissioner Bud Selig to Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf to former Cincinnati Reds star Tony Perez, who idolized Minnie when he was growing up in his native Cuba.

There are numerous revelations in the documentary, including one from rarely seen Sox minority owner Eddie Einhorn, who says that the team wanted to bring Minoso back for a major league at-bat in the 1990s.

"We were stopped by Major League Baseball," Einhorn said. "They wouldn't allow us to even put him in as a pinch runner. They thought he was too old, and, of course, we really don't know how old Minnie really is."

We also learn about Minoso's complex relationship with Cuban dictator Fidel Castro, who appropriated all of Minnie's property in Cuba after the revolution, yet admired the "Cuban Comet" as a player.

"Castro said Minnie wasn't a friend of the revolution," said Madison, Wis., Mayor Paul Soglin, who visited Cuba and was part of a group that met the dictator in 1975. "But Castro said he was a hero to the Cuban people, and, because of that, he was always welcome back."

The documentary also pulls no punches when looking back at the racism Minoso encountered throughout the country during his first few years with the Sox in the early '50s. Even in Chicago, Minoso wasn't allowed to stay in Hyde Park's Piccadilly Hotel, where many Sox players lived during the season, because of his race.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all