Photos: Baseball in the Dominican
Epi Guerrero speaks during a interview while at his baseball academy in Villa Mella,
The anabolic steroid know as “Anabolex” is displayed by a journalist outside of a pharmacy where it was purchased on Aug. 21. Use of performance-enhancing drugs in the Dominican Republic is common and jeopardizes the game in a nation that produces more major leaguers than any foreign country. (Kena Betancur / For The Times)
Epi Guerrero, right, watches a young pitcher throw at Guerrero’s academy in Villa Mella,
Angels players leave the baseball camp on a motorcycle at the end of the season in San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic. Twenty-nine of the 30 major league teams operate elaborate training academies on the island, signing prospects for millions of dollars, and pouring an estimated $100 million annually into the crippled economy. (Kena Betancur / For The Times)
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Players use a log bench to put on gear as they prepare to practice at Epi Guerrero’s baseball academy in Villa Mella,
The anabolic steroid know as “Anabolex” is displayed by a journalist outside of a pharmacy where it was purchased. Over the last season and a half, 59% (81 of 137) of the minor league players who tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs were from the Dominican, home to a quarter of all minor leaguers. (Kena Betancur / For The Times)
A player takes batting practice at Epi Guerrero’s baseball academy in Villa Mella,
Motorcycle is the preferred method of travel for many of the aspiring professional players, including these Angels prospects who are leaving the teams training academy in San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic. The academy is located between an orphanage and a convent. (Kena Betancur / For The Times)
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Epi Guerrero, right, talks while a player takes batting practice at Guerrero’s academy in Villa Mella,
Dominican fans watch a game between the New York
Members of the