Maybe the least surprising detail about Yasiel Puig's incredible life and precocious baseball career is that a Hollywood biopic already is in the works, with studios interested and a director on board. The question is, will moviegoers believe all the outlandish plot twists?
Puig arrives at Target Field with the Dodgers on Tuesday, not yet two years removed from his defection from Cuba and explosion onto the major league consciousness. His persona on the diamond already has made him perhaps the game's most polarizing star since Barry Bonds: To Dodger Stadium crowds — jazzed by his frenetic play, raw talent and emotional style — he is probably the team's most popular player, but to opponents he is one of baseball's biggest villains, portrayed as imperious and insolent.
"He plays, " Arizona pitcher Ian Kennedy told the Los Angeles Times last summer, "with a lot of arrogance."
And that's not even the riveting part of Puig's story.
Over the past two weeks, investigative articles in Los Angeles magazine and ESPN the Magazine revealed the frightening back story of Puig's escape from his homeland, a spy novel of a tale that includes Mexican drug cartels; human trafficking; death threats and ransom demands; possible extortion and torture; and even, rumor has it, the murder of a smuggler.
So yeah, there's plenty for a screenwriter to work with.
"When you give a kid $40 million, " said Tony Oliva, the forerunner of today's Cuban superstars, "some dangerous people come around."
An incredible escape
According to Jesse Katz's Los Angeles magazine story, Puig was considered dangerous himself in Cuba, where he had a reputation for informing government officials about people who approached him to propose helping him defect. According to a lawsuit filed in Florida by one such potential intermediary, Puig's testimony against him resulted in a seven-year sentence in Cuban jails, where he was tortured by guards.