UPDATE (August 5, 2025 2:45 p.m. ET): The Athletic reported Tuesday that players on Venezuela’s Little League team (who are younger than the members of the Senior League team) have been granted a “national exemption” and will be allowed to play in this month’s Little League World Series.
The Trump administration’s decision to block a team of teenage Venezuelan baseball players from competing in the U.S. was a performative act of cruelty. It’s the kind of stunt the administration wouldn’t dare pull when the U.S. hosts the World Cup next year or the Olympic Games in Los Angeles in 2028. With billions of dollars and diplomatic clout on the line, the U.S. wouldn’t arbitrarily deny entry to world-class adult athletes in the most-watched sporting events on the planet. But for competitions like this week’s Senior League Baseball World Series, the stakes are low enough that the administration feels comfortable enough punishing kids who earned their shot. All to reinforce Donald Trump’s authoritarian claim that he alone controls who enters this country.
It’s the kind of stunt the administration wouldn’t dare pull when the U.S. hosts the World Cup or the Olympic Games.
Again, these are kids we’re talking about. Kendrick Gutiérrez, the league’s president in Venezuela, told The Associated Press that the situation “hasn’t been easy,” noting that the team “earned the right to represent Latin America in the World Championship.”
Of course, the Venezuelan baseball visa denial is far from an isolated case. The Trump administration will always seek examples to showcase its cruelty. Just weeks earlier, the Cuban women’s national volleyball team faced a similar fate. They were set to compete in Puerto Rico but were denied visas as well. Cuba’s storied history in international sports didn’t matter. They were not welcome anywhere under U.S. jurisdiction.
If there’s one thing to take from these two cases, it’s that Trump is singling out certain groups under the guise of protecting American security and safety. But the administration’s hypocrisy is on full display. The very rules that stopped Venezuelan kids from playing baseball in South Carolina and Cuban women from playing volleyball in Puerto Rico somehow don’t apply to athletes in leagues and events that generate far more American money.
A Venezuelan baseball team was denied visas into the United States and will miss this year's Senior Baseball World Series, Little League International confirmed Friday.https://t.co/GoN2hUdQA4
— NBC New York (@NBCNewYork) July 26, 2025
Take the case of Major League Baseball, which generated $12.1 billion in revenue last year, smashing records. The league depends heavily on foreign talent, with about 28% of active players born outside the U.S. Of that group, there are 63 players of Venezuelan descent and 26 Cubans. Many of these players, including Red Sox closer Aroldis Chapman (Cuba), Astros legend José Altuve (Venezuela), and Royals catcher Salvador Pérez (Venezuela), are among the league’s most visible stars, likely the same stars that Venezuelan kids with baseball dreams look up to.
The players’ union has advised foreign-born athletes to keep all their visa and immigration documents on hand at all times, a clear sign of the ongoing uncertainties they face, but Commissioner Rob Manfred has reportedly received personal assurances from U.S. authorities that these players will not be targeted or denied entry. Big money has its protections. Billions and billions of dollars buy you access and safety in this system.
The argument, of course, isn’t that MLB players should be banned like the Venezuelan kids were, but that the Venezuelan kids should be allow to play.
Big money has its protections. Billions and billions of dollars buy you access and safety in this system.
Manfred said the Trump administration had assured MLB that players would be protected going back and forth between Canada and that “Beyond that, it’s all speculation.”









