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Minnie Minoso gets his moment

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"There were times when we weren't accepted in hotels and had to live in different places," recalled his son, Orestes Minoso-Arietta Jr. "But one of the things I appreciated about my father is that he understood the times that he was living in."

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the documentary, however, is Minoso's resolute belief that he belongs in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. During the uber-competitive pre-expansion days of the 1950s, when there were only eight teams in each league, Minoso was one of the American League's top players. He was ranked second in the league in hits, runs scored, extra-base hits and total bases, and fifth in batting average in the AL during the decade, which places him among the likes of the New York Yankees' Mickey Mantle and Yogi Berra (both Hall of Famers) and teammate Nellie Fox (also in the Hall of Fame).

When you factor in his pioneering status as the first great black Latin player in the majors, his time spent in the Negro Leagues (where he also was an All-Star) and the Cuban Leagues, his career spanning seven decades (although his appearances with the Sox in 1976 and 1980 were publicity stunts) and his continued work as an ambassador with the White Sox, his legitimacy as a Hall of Famer seems valid.

So he is seen being understandably distressed in the documentary when the Hall of Fame Golden Era Committee selects former Cub Ron Santo and not Minoso into Cooperstown in late 2011.

"My heart feels it, but I don't show it to the people," says a disappointed Minoso after hearing that he wasn't selected for the Hall. "Baseball, what have I done wrong to you to make those people who have the decision push me out."

Despite Minoso's full cooperation, it wasn't an easy project for the 68-year-old Weinberg and Cohen to finish. The exorbitant cost to license the vintage Major League Baseball film and archival photos in the documentary forced Weinberg to use the fundraising website Kickstarter to help raise the $20,000 to complete post-production.

Weinberg auctioned off Minoso-related memorabilia on the site, ranging from autographed baseball cards to jerseys, in order to raise the funds.

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