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Henry Blanco's Brother Murdered in Venezuela

Kidnap, ransom, and murder.

The harsh and sad reality of becoming a major league baseball player for a few Latin American players is the target put on the collective backs of their family members in their poverty-stricken home countries.

The details are still sketchy at this point, but the body of Carlos Blanco -- brother of Cubs' catcher Henry Blanco -- was discovered Tuesday in Venezuela. He was the victim of an apparent murder.

According to reports, Carlos was being held ransom and his brother was in negotiations to pay off the kidnappers.

This is just heinous. A man makes an affluent life for himself in another country, and his family is faced with significant risk back home.

I saw a personally maddening comment on a message board somewhere, saying Blanco should have simply moved his brother to the United States with him. It's easy to say, but is it really that easy to do? What about all the logistics involved on bringing multiple people over to a new country just because you can play baseball? Many of these players aren't even U.S. citizens, they are just granted work visas.

Lou Piniella Loves His Catchers

Lou Piniella is a lot of fun. Sometimes I don't think he can even remotely think about the words that come out of his mouth before he says them. Today, in the Chicago Sun-Times, he's asked about his catchers. He gives this response:
''They've all done a nice job -- all of them who have been here,'' Piniella said of Michael Barrett and Rob Bowen (traded), Koyie Hill, Henry Blanco (disabled list), Geovany Soto (returned to Class AAA Iowa) and Jason Kendall.
Holy cow. Barrett punched their ace in the face and was so irritable that he was traded for Bowen, who was so terrible that he was traded for Kendall, who's caught in a whole three games for the Cubs (and gone 0-for-8). Of course, all of this juggling of starting catchers has been necessary because the backups are Hill (OPS is under .600), Blanco (under .500 before his injury), and Soto (who they've only trusted enough to start in two games this year).

Nice. That's definitely the first word that comes to mind when I think of how the Cubs' catchers have performed this year.

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