Chapman recounts defection

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NEW YORK – Aroldis Chapman left his room at the Domina Hotel in Rotterdam in July and went down to the lobby.

The Cuban pitcher’s defection during a tournament in the Netherlands lacked any of the drama a movie script writer would want.

“It was pretty straightforward,” he recalled. “I just walked out of the hotel, got in the car and left.”

Separated from his parents, sisters, girlfriend and an infant daughter he never has seen, the 21-year-old left-hander with a 100 mph fastball embarked on a career in the major leagues.

He is being courted by the New York Yankees and Mets, the Boston Red Sox and likely other clubs. Team executives say figures of $15 million to $50 million have been mentioned, but no one is sure how to price a pitcher who never has been on a U.S. professional team.

“He’s a once-every-40-years player,” says Chapman’s agent, Edwin Mejia.

Chapman was all blinged out during a 45-minute interview Thursday at the office of The Associated Press, wearing a large, shiny watch and gleaming earrings.

He gained attention during the World Baseball Classic in March, when he pitched well against Australia and badly against Japan.

Then he contacted a friend from Cuba before the World Port Tournament, an event that included the national teams of Cuba and the Netherlands, and Japanese and Taiwanese teams that mixed minor leaguers and industrial players.

Afraid of leaks, he didn’t tell any of his family members – not even pregnant girlfriend Raidelmis Mendosa Santiestelas – that he intended to defect.

“I only spent one hour at the hotel thinking about what to do. I made the decision, stepped away from the hotel and got into the car,” he said. “Everything was planned from a few months before the tournament. I discussed the idea with a friend and made the decision to do it. Never thought about doing it during the Classic. It was something that I was seeking before the Classic, but I didn’t want to do it in the Classic.”

He spoke by telephone with his family within a day of his defection, and he’s spoken with them frequently. His daughter, Ashanti Brianna, was born a few days before he walked out of the Rotterdam hotel and started a journey that led him through Spain and to tiny Andorra in the Pyrenees, where Chapman established the residency that allowed him to become a free agent under baseball’s rules. If he had become a U.S. resident, he would have been subject to the amateur draft.

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