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Edgy DC
Jan 27 2007 05:57 PM

Ghana!

NEW YORK (AP) -- New York Mets general manager Omar Minaya will be among a delegation of baseball officials going to Accra, Ghana, next week to hold a clinic and promote baseball. Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, former San Francisco and Chicago Cubs manager Dusty Baker also will be on the trip along with Dave Stewart, Bob Watson and Reggie Smith. The group is scheduled to leave New York on Feb. 1, spend four days in Ghana and return Feb. 6.

MFS62
Jan 28 2007 10:52 AM

I'm just waiting for the related story - that Omar has been having dinner with the parents of the best 14 year old outfield prospect in Ghana for the last two years.

Later

Edgy DC
Feb 02 2007 10:07 AM

I'd be surprised if Minaya didn't consider it a working trip. It'd be foolish not to look at Africa --- particularly a relatively stable nation like Ghana --- as a potential market and source of talent.

Important Ghana facts: The country is celebrating its fiftieth anniversary of independence this year. It was the first nation in sub-Saharan Africa to gain independence from colonial rule.

MLB group on goodwill tour to Ghana
Hall of Famer Winfield to embark on humanitarian mission
By Barry M. Bloom / MLB.com


NEW YORK -- A contingent of former Major League stars and current management personnel left on a four-day baseball goodwill tour to the African nation of Ghana on Thursday.

The group includes Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, Mets general manager Omar Minaya, Dusty Baker, Reggie Smith, Al Jackson and Bob Watson, Major League Baseball's vice president of on-field operations.

The tour, sponsored by the African Development Foundation, is earmarked at delivering baseball equipment and spreading the ethos of the sport to the children of the northeastern African nation. But Winfield, a vice president of the Padres, has a more far-reaching task. After the main group leaves, Winfield will travel into villages on a humanitarian mission along with John Moores, San Diego's majority owner, and President Jimmy Carter.

"At 6-foot-7, Winfield will be the most visible American on the trip," Moores said when reached by phone on Thursday. "And that includes Carter. He'll stick out like a sore thumb, but it will be great to have him along."

The core baseball tour was the brainchild of George Ntim, founder and president of the ADF.

Moores and Carter plan on making Ghana their first stop on a nearly three-week, four-country trip, during which their group will deliver medicine and educational materials to local villages. In Ghana, Moores said, his group is tracing the eradication of the Guinea Worm from the population of some 21 million that inhabit the country.

"We're checking the water supply and making sure that it's filtered," said Moores of a Guinea Worm parasite that is largely carried through drinking water. "Then we want to be sure people aren't drinking from the wrong source."

Winfield, who was elected to the Hall in 2001 and played the first eight of his 22 seasons with the Padres, initially jumped at the chance to join his colleagues on the baseball portion of the trip. But, he said, the chance to do some humanitarian work while he's over there was too important to pass up.

"We're going to be bringing some medicine into the rural areas of Ghana," Winfield said on Thursday after a bon voyage press conference at the SNY-TV studios in Rockefeller Center. "So after we finish this baseball end of the trip, I'm just going to stay over for a few more days and go with them. It'll be a great thing. It's a great opportunity to do something like that: to provide high-level humanitarian services to that part of the world. I'm very excited about it."

Moores is the director of the Atlanta-based Carter Center and is providing his personally-owned plane to ferry the former president from Georgia to Africa and all other points.

The day's proceedings were emotional enough what with Ntim, a native of Ghana now working in the U.S. for the Marriott Corp., choking up while describing his relationship with Minaya, who called the Mets' participation in the baseball tour an extension of his club's "world vision."

"When you're talking about the New York Mets, this is part of our global plan," Minaya said in an interview after the main presentation. "We have a global plan that not only includes Ghana, but it is not restricted to only one country or one continent. We'll be in Latin America, we'll be in Africa and we'll be in Asia.

"When I was hired [two years ago] as general manager, it was important to me that we would be an organization about giving back. I want to have that capacity as a GM and this is about giving back."

MLB's previous commitment to the African continent centered on the development of baseball in South Africa, the now apartheid-free state to the south, which was one of 16 countries or territories to send a team to the first World Baseball Classic last March.

But the Ghana trip is the beginning of a grass-roots effort to introduce baseball into that culture.

The four-day excursion is scheduled to include a minicamp, an equipment giveaway, a visit to local schools to promote Tee-Ball and various social functions with the top politicians of a country that achieved independence from the United Kingdom in 1957 and has since employed a thriving two-party system.

metirish
Feb 02 2007 10:26 AM

I worked with a Doctor from Ghana,his Father was President of Ghana from 1979 until he was deposed in 1981.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hilla_Limann

Edgy DC
Feb 02 2007 10:31 AM

Hank Aaron was president of Ghana?

Willets Point
Feb 02 2007 10:39 AM

Yep. Around the same time Frederick Douglass was Secretary of State.

metirish
Feb 02 2007 10:47 AM

I should call Baba and see if there are any prospects in Ghana,I know people over there....

Edgy DC
Feb 02 2007 10:52 AM

Willets Point wrote:
Yep. Around the same time Frederick Douglass was Secretary of State.


You laugh, but Second-Hand US History with metirish is one of the most downloaded podcasts.

seawolf17
Feb 02 2007 10:54 AM

Willets Point wrote:
Yep. Around the same time Frederick Douglass was Secretary of State.

And Ben Franklin was president, for all those fans of "The Office."

cooby
Feb 02 2007 10:55 AM

metirish wrote:
I worked with a Doctor from Ghana,his Father was President of Ghana from 1979 until he was deposed in 1981.



Metirish, that sounds like the guy who wants to give millions of dollars to whoever will deposit his money into their US bank account.

Yancy Street Gang
Feb 02 2007 10:56 AM

Cooby, I was thinking the exact same thing!

metirish
Feb 02 2007 11:02 AM

I think that's Nigeria,he did just marry a girl from there though.....I tried to tell my landlord that Douglass was not secertary of state....he's won't hear of it,said only a very few people would know that bit of history,apparently now he wants to teach me all about US history,claims that the Kennedy family own all the whiskey Distillery's in Ireland.

Edgy DC
Feb 02 2007 11:21 AM

I think that if it keeps good relations with the man who keeps the rain out to let him think that George Washington discovered the moon, by all means, indulge him.

Please keep reporting. I thnk a Ken Burns documentary of US history as reported by your landlord would be great. I can hear John Tuturro now: "In 1971, the FBI was closing in on an indictment of Dinah Shore in the Kennedy murders."

metirish
Feb 02 2007 11:28 AM

I should tell you that he worked for the US Postal service for over thirty years.

Willets Point
Feb 02 2007 11:42 AM

I just notice that I'm propagating the misinformation by promoting Douglass from Secretary of the Interior to Secretary of State.

Edgy DC
Feb 02 2007 11:55 PM

The participants listed in the first article: Omar Minaya, Dave Winfield, Dusty Baker, Dave Stewart, Bob Watson and Reggie Smith.

The participants listed in the second article: Omar Minaya, Dave Winfield, Dusty Baker, Al Jackson, Bob Watson, and Reggie Smith.

I don't know what transpired to get Al Jackson to replace Dave Stewart, but I'm starting to think that Al Jackson is a remarkable baseball man and the Mets have been lucky to have him.

metirish
Feb 03 2007 12:03 AM

How many years has Al Jackson been with the Mets....years right?

Edgy DC
Feb 03 2007 12:55 AM

If he serves with the Mets this year, I believe it'll be his 40th, out of 47 years in professional baseball.

Not a bad draft choice.

Frayed Knot
Feb 04 2007 10:18 AM

[url=http://www.newsday.com/sports/ny-spghana0204,0,6573993.story?coll=ny-sports-headlines]Ghana play some ball[/url]

More from the Africa trip

Yancy Street Gang
Feb 04 2007 10:33 AM

A UMDB visitor from Ghana reports on his meeting with Omar Minaya:

http://ultimatemets.com/profile.php?PlayerCode=6600

metirish
Feb 04 2007 10:59 AM

That's really cool Yancy...Omar can have all the coconuts he wants if he keeps his proimise.

Frayed Knot
Feb 04 2007 11:11 AM

Insta-international feedback!!

Yancy Street Gang
Feb 04 2007 12:18 PM

I didn't know there was a Ghana Baseball Association. It would be nice if Ghana could have a team in the WBC next time around.

Edgy DC
Feb 04 2007 01:08 PM

We also now know the trick with Minaya is to offer him fresh coconut.

Johnny Dickshot
Feb 04 2007 08:21 PM

You go, Hugo.

patona314
Feb 04 2007 11:21 PM

Edgy DC wrote:
We also now know the trick with Minaya is to offer him fresh coconut.


does omar put the lime in the coconut?

http://www.mediafire.com/?6zznzjjd25n

Edgy DC
Feb 05 2007 10:33 AM


New York Mets General manager Omar Minaya, left, walks together with other delegates inside the Cape Coast Castle in Cape Coast, Ghana, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007.

New York Mets General manager Omar Minaya, looks at the sea from the former slave point of no return gate inside the Cape Coast Castle in Cape Coast, Ghana, Sunday, Feb. 4, 2007.

New York Mets General manager Omar Minaya, centre poses for a photograph with an unidentified boy in Tema about 30km from Accra, Ghana, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.

Pamela Bridgewater,US ambassador to Ghana in front,New York Mets General manager Omar Minaya, middle and Dave Winfield, San Diego Padres Vice President left all listen to journalist in Tema about 30km from Accra, Ghana, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.

New York Mets General manager Omar Minaya, centre speaks to Dave Winfield, San Diego Padres Vice President right and former San Francisco Giants manager Dusty Baker, far left in Tema about 30km from Accra, Ghana, Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.

MFS62
Feb 05 2007 10:46 AM

How cool is it that a US Ambassador is wearing a baseball cap and jersey, and that she looks comfortable in them, like she's worn them before? (i. e. - not just for a photo op)

Later

Johnny Dickshot
Feb 05 2007 11:12 AM

Note the ugly ear-side adornment they've added to the BP caps this year.

seawolf17
Feb 05 2007 11:25 AM

I was going to say something about the hats. Can't just effing leave the hats and colors alone, can they? Bleh.

Johnny Dickshot
Feb 05 2007 11:29 AM

I think it's a trubute to Beltran's mole

Edgy DC
Feb 05 2007 12:27 PM

T.J. Quinn of The Daily News is on the trip and is keeping me up-to-date with his slow-loading blog.

metirish
Feb 05 2007 12:37 PM

Those hats are truely awful.....from the Quinn blog....

]

Some important tips, thanks to the good people from the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. Embassy: a "thumbs up" sign is considered obscene. One should keep one's left hand to oneself because it is considered unclean. Give and receive items and, most important, handle food, with the right hand only. And touching a woman's nose, chin or ear is considered an act of intimacy, and if the woman is married her husband may demand an adultery fee.

Yancy Street Gang
Feb 05 2007 01:21 PM

If I have to pay an "adultery fee" I'm going to want to touch more than her chin, ear, and nose.

It's funny that they have to give that warning. It's not like American men are always walking around touching the ears, chins, and noses of women they have just met.

Is it okay to touch the married woman's forehead? How much would that cost me?

metirish
Feb 05 2007 01:25 PM

Doing that Yancy might cost you an arm and a leg.

Yancy Street Gang
Feb 05 2007 03:44 PM

Pornography in Ghana:


This is how women masturbate in Ghana.



Now it really gets kinky. Fasten your seatbelts!




This guy is getting jiggy with a bust of Abraham Lincoln!



Pope John Paul II! Holy crap! I hope he never tried this stunt in Ghana!

metirish
Feb 05 2007 03:54 PM

Brilliant......

metirish
Feb 05 2007 03:55 PM

Brilliant......I'll be giving my friend from Ghana some stick over this.

Willets Point
Feb 05 2007 05:00 PM

metirish wrote:
Brilliant......I'll be giving my friend from Ghana some stick over this.


As long as the stick is not to the ears, chin, or nose.

Edgy DC
Feb 05 2007 08:14 PM

A Ghanaian paper picks up Karen Palmer's article and affixes a most unpleasant title to it.

Willets Point
Feb 05 2007 08:36 PM

Yikes! What did she say to earn the title "racist journalist"?

Edgy DC
Feb 06 2007 07:48 AM

Wifey Watch material in today's blog entry:

Fighting Our Way Through Accra's Marketplace

Traveling on GMT – Ghana Maybe Time, as locals call it – finally caught up with us this morning. The bus driver who has been shuttling us all over Ghana was so exhausted from his 6:30 am to 2:30 am workday on Sunday that he overslept today. He arrived at the hotel too late to take the delegation to the schools that were waiting for them, so the demonstration clinics were cancelled. The equipment the group brought will still be distributed, but officials were upset that the children wouldn’t meet the famous men they’ve never heard of.

Instead, the gang went straight to the University of Ghana where a four or five-acre patch of hardscrabble shrub and man-sized termite hills will become the nation’s premier baseball field and teaching academy.

We began the day moving with the familiarity of travelers who have spent weeks together. After visiting the art center, an open market in Accra, it was like everyone had spent six weeks in basic training. From the moment we unloaded from our bus, merchants surrounded the group, grabbing, pulling, pushing, tapping shoulders, shoving us into stalls to show their intentionally overpriced wares where they wanted to bargain. Nadine Jackson, the wife of former Pirates and Mets pitcher Al Jackson, was a machine moving through the bazaar. “No, no, that’s ugly,” she said when a young man tried shoving small brass masks into her hands.

And when others tried crowding her, “You are standing TOO close. I do not like that.”

Big Mike, the Yankee security officer on the trip and the only person in Accra who can look Dave Winfield in the eye, was seen standing over a half-dozen ragamuffin merchants and shouting, “In New York City, I am police, and you all are being TOO LOUD.” They thought he was funny. The salesmen and women were clever about listening to the names we called each other. “C.J.! I want to show you something! Please come here!” I asked the Chicago Tribune’s Phil Rogers to start calling me “Bob.” When we finally got back on the bus we had to push people back through the door so we could shut it and leave. Big Mike was handy to have around.

Edgy DC
Feb 06 2007 07:52 AM

A local coach gets the boys ready with a chant of "It's all about... baseball!"... Dave Winfield enjoys the action... Coach Cephus Adonoo explains the Ghanaian connection to baseball.

He also throws down a gauntlet at the end.

Edgy DC
Feb 08 2007 11:20 AM

TJ Quinn steals my lousy pun for his headline.

Edgy DC
Feb 16 2007 07:29 AM

This one is long, but a good read.



Ghanaian players exhibit enthusiasm for baseball
Members on baseball's goodwill trip to the country see the potential for the growth of the game in Africa
By Phil Rogers
CHICAGO TRIBUNE


TEMA, Ghana - Many staples of life are in short supply in West Africa, but not sunny, clear days. Like poverty and a hope that at times defies understanding, they exist in abundance, at least in the part of the year considered the dry season.

On a clear day along Africa's Gold Coast, you can imagine as much as your mind can process. It was on such a Saturday morning in early February that 19-year-old Daniel "Iron" Atiemo caught the eye of Omar Minaya, the general manager of the New York Mets.

Playing shortstop on a crude dirt field used most often for soccer, Ghana's national sport, Atiemo ranged to his right and left to field ground balls. Once he had gloved them, he fired the ball across the infield to first base, displaying arm strength worthy of a professional infielder.

Minaya, who long ago spotted Sammy Sosa at a tryout in the Dominican Republic, was drawn to Atiemo's quick hands and feet. Then Atiemo took his turn at bat.

The first pitch he saw was a fastball, over the plate. From the right-handed batter's box, Atiemo drove it high and far. The ball kept going and going, like the dreams of these first Ghanaians to embrace baseball. It landed far beyond the orange cones positioned in the open field to represent the outfield boundary.

"How old is that guy?" Minaya asked, beginning an immediate background check.

Atiemo floated around the bases, wearing one of the biggest smiles of his life. He said later he was "not often a home-run hitter," making it even more remarkable that he had seized the moment and made it his own in the most important at-bat of his life.

"That felt great," Atiemo said.

Spreading the news

Along with Minaya, the crowd applauding Atiemo included Hall of Famer Dave Winfield, a vice president with the San Diego Padres; Dusty Baker, former Cubs and Giants manager; Bob Watson, Major League Baseball's vice president of on-field operations; and former big-leaguers Reggie Smith and Al Jackson.

They were part of a 22-person delegation on a goodwill trip to nearby Accra, Ghana's capital city. The mission was organized by the New York-based African Development Foundation and blessed by MLB and Little League Baseball, with the goal of helping baseball gain a true foothold on a fifth continent.

Baseball has spread from North America to Asia, Europe and parts of South America. Teams from Mexico, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Venezuela and Curacao have beaten Americans to win Little League titles, and Japan defeated Cuba in the World Baseball Classic last March. The favored Americans watched from the sidelines after being eliminated in a preliminary round.

But in Africa there are few baseball diamonds outside South Africa, a country markedly different from others on the continent because of its mineral wealth and immigration from Europe. A passion for the game lives in unlikely places.

This quickly became evident as the Americans watched teams of Little Leaguers and older players compete. Their skills were a revelation to the visitors.

"This is so exciting," Atiemo said. "It is great for Ghana. I've been waiting for this day my whole life. ... It is a true blessing from God."

There are great athletes in West Africa. Michael Essien, a midfielder with Chelsea in England's FA Premier League, helped lead Ghana's Black Stars to the round of 16 in soccer's 2006 World Cup. Ignatius Gaisah won a gold medal in the long jump at last year's world indoor track championships. Maggie Simpson was ranked third in the world in the heptathlon before taking 2006 off to have a baby.

Samuel Kuffour, then 15, became the youngest player to win a medal on an Olympic soccer team when Ghana took bronze at Barcelona in 1992. Clement Quartey and Eddie Blay won Olympic medals in boxing in the 1960s.

Minaya and others in MLB regard Africa as an untapped resource for producing baseball talent.

"We know there are athletes here, great athletes," Minaya said. "We want to help them grow as baseball players. There is a passion here, but they don't have a way to express it. They need equipment. They need fields. They need coaching.

"I don't know when it's going to happen, but there is going to be a first person from here to go to the (United) States and play baseball, and then there will be a second and a third, then a lot more. I don't have any doubt about that."

Still in infancy

Baseball is known to have been played in Ghana only since the 1970s, when it was the exclusive property of Americans working at the U.S. Embassy in Accra. It spread slowly, almost by word of mouth, from Brynn Park into the neighborhoods around the capital during the next 30 years, weaving a rich history that at times reads like a Shakespearean tragedy.

Partly through the efforts of Albert Frimpong, a Ghanaian who first saw baseball while stationed in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, a baseball association was started in Ghana in 1992. But the association never has had the funding to provide bats and gloves to players.

Through Tomonari Shinya, a Japanese citizen working in Ghana in the late 1990s, a baseball pipeline of sorts began between the Far East and West Africa.

Upon returning to Japan, Shinya formed the Association for Friends of African Baseball, which provided Ghana with some bats and gloves and some outdated uniforms from the Yokohama BayStars of the Japanese Central League. Those were the uniforms Atiemo and his friends were wearing in the game they played for Minaya and the American visitors.

With Shinya's encouragement and some funding from the Ghanaian government, a national baseball team was started in 1999, with the dream of sending a team to Sydney for the 2000 Olympics. National uniforms were created for the occasion -- red jerseys emblazoned with the name "Rising Stars."

Joshua "Stone" Amponsah, the shortstop and an occasional pitcher, was the star of that team. He and his teammates, including cleanup-hitting catcher Paul Manome and George Mawuli Adjanor, traveled to Johannesburg, South Africa, for the All-Africa Games, which would serve as the Olympic qualifier.

There was little doubt South Africa would win the gold medal -- baseball has been played there for almost a century, and there is organized competition at the high school level. There are South Africans playing in the U.S., though not yet in the major leagues. But the Rising Stars provided a major surprise, winning a bronze medal.

Amponsah had a two-homer game to help Ghana advance through its pool. The Rising Stars scored three runs in their loss to South Africa in the knockout round, the only runs the South Africans allowed in the tournament.

"We were so happy after that tournament," said Adjanor, who is now 25 and a coach as well as a player. "We lost to South Africa, but they knew we were there."

Amponsah, Manome and Adjanor were eager for another chance in 2003. This time they were taking along some younger players they had helped train, including Atiemo and pitcher Emmanuel Boafo. If they could upset South Africa, they would go to Greece for the Olympics.

The Rising Stars played in an All-Africa qualifier, winning enough games to earn their spot in the field. But when it came time for the tournament in Abuja, Nigeria, they were not invited to travel with Ghana's delegation of boxers, runners and soccer players. They were told that the Sports Ministry did not have enough money to send them.

Twenty-three players and coaches made the two-day drive from Accra to Abuja believing they could play if they got themselves there. But tournament officials sent them home, saying Ghana had forfeited its spot because it had not paid the entrance fee.

Frustrating moment

Almost four years later, Adjanor can barely speak of the disappointment. Atiemo reminds himself of it by looking at a wide, horizontal scar on his right shin.

"I did that to him in a community game when we had returned from Abuja," Adjanor said, sounding apologetic. "I was so angry. I was playing with my anger. There was a tag play at second base. Iron had the ball, but I slid into him like I wanted to hurt him. I did not want to hurt him -- he is my friend. But I was mad at baseball, and I was playing with madness."

Atiemo understood.

"We were all so disappointed when we couldn't play in Nigeria," he said. "Many of our players, some very good players, gave up baseball. They said there is no future in baseball."

Since that All-Africa qualifier in 2003, Atiemo and his teammates have had few occasions to wear their red Rising Stars uniforms. One was for Amponsah's funeral.

He died of a bleeding ulcer at 25 in November 2005, about 14 months after he and Manome had spent two weeks in Japan training with the Hiroshima Toyo Carp on a visit arranged by Shinya.

"He is the player I want to be like," Atiemo said of Amponsah. "Every game I play, I dedicate to him. We want to honor him, to play the game to the credit of him."

The greatest play Adjanor has ever seen is a triple play Amponsah started with a throw from shortstop to first base and ended with a tag at third base.

"He was a star," Mawuli said. "When we would go on the field with him, we would have confidence. He was just a great, great player."

Taking to the game

Understand this about the Ghanaian players: While the undersized Boafo says Randy Johnson is his role model -- quite a statement for a right-handed pitcher who stands perhaps 5-foot-7 and throws about 80 mph -- few have ever seen a nine-inning game from the United States, not even on television.

Atiemo says it has been his dream to play baseball since he was 7, after he saw the sport "on the telly." He was watching game highlights, not a real game, but it was enough for him to decide that he wanted to swim upstream.

"I play football (soccer) for stamina, but I love baseball," the 5-8, 170-pound Atiemo said. "That's my goal. It is my dream to play in professional leagues, maybe to be a coach, maybe to represent Ghana."

In both games played for the benefit of Minaya's entourage on the dirt field just outside Accra, one for preteens and one for older players, the level of play was in line with midlevel development leagues in the U.S.

Players stepped into the batter's box as if they had been watching big-leaguers do it all their lives. In the field, they did a good job catching the ball and generally threw it to the right bases.

"This has been a real treat for me," said Reggie Smith, a former Los Angeles Dodgers and Boston Red Sox slugger who runs two baseball academies and helped MLB design and equip its new academy for inner-city youngsters in Compton.

"I've been very pleasantly surprised at the athleticism, the instinctual ability of these kids, especially the younger kids.

"It says a lot for the universal nature of the game. ... These kids are learning on their own. That's the beauty of the thing. It tells us that we just have to put the bats and the balls out there, and they'll figure out what to do with them."

MLB helped lay the groundwork for this trip by sending longtime minor-league manager Tony Torchia to Ghana in the fall of 2006. He delivered equipment and conducted clinics at some schools. (Education is provided only through sixth grade by the government; students wanting to attend the equivalent of junior or senior high school must pay for tuition, uniforms and books, which is not possible for most.)

But it was men like Frimpong and Shinya who planted the earliest seeds.

Providing the tools

It is the hope of men like Minaya and George Ntim, a Ghanaian who runs the African Development Foundation, that the pace of progress is about to pick up.

With the Mets and other teams providing equipment, elementary schools will begin teaching baseball as part of their physical education programs. Little League Baseball, which sanctioned teams in Ghana for the first time in 2006, expects an increase in participation in 2007 with a chance for international competition.

Dan Velte, the director of league development for Little League Baseball, was with the American delegation to Ghana. He foresees an African champion participating in qualifying rounds for this year's Little League World Series, with champions from the leagues in Uganda and Ghana meeting to see which country will join the European qualifier scheduled for Poland.

The University of Ghana, a school of about 24,000 students just outside Accra, has donated land to build a baseball stadium that will be a joint project of Ghana's baseball association and the African Development Foundation. Major League Baseball might participate as well. At a ceremony to formalize the school's commitment, one of the Ghanaian players asked Minaya when the field would be ready for play.

"These things take time," Minaya said. "We wish it would be tomorrow, but we know that's not how it works. It will take a lot of work and some time. But the important thing is that you will have a field, the right kind of field, to play baseball."

Minaya admires the potential of some of Ghana's current players, Atiemo and Boafo in particular. But time is not on the side of those who are already in their prime. It slows for no one.

Already the 2007 All-Africa Games approach. They're scheduled for July in Algiers, the capital of Algeria, and the Rising Stars do not know if Ghana's Ministry of Sport will make the arrangements for them to participate.

Efforts of groups like the ADF could make a difference. Ntim has made tentative plans to hold a fundraising dinner for Ghanaian baseball June 16 in New York, after one of the Mets-Yankees interleague games. He believes this will be a significant event, in part because of the testimony of men like Winfield.

"When you have been here and seen these people, these kids, you will do everything you can to help them," Winfield said. "They have the skills and the desire to produce good baseball players, great baseball players. You can see their hunger. You can almost taste their hunger. Great things will happen here."

While the men playing the game now dream of opportunity, they understand that their passion may benefit future generations more than this one. Many among them are in their late teens or early 20s but already spend more time coaching the game than playing it.

"There are many really good players among the little ones," Adjanor said. "It is our duty, and our privilege, to help them. They will be better than we are."

According to Adjanor, one child in particular shows up frequently at baseball games and practices. He is only 6, but he zips the ball around and looks comfortable holding a bat, even though there are few his size.

The boy is Joshua Amponsah Jr., son of the local legend.

Will he be the one?