GUARACARUMBO, Venezuela (AP) — The wind picks up dirt as clouds roll over an abandoned baseball stadium at the foot of the mountain range that separates Venezuela’s coastal communities from the capital, Caracas. Young players exchange high fives and hugs, regardless of the uniforms they wear, as well as tears for the friends who are able to train and those who cannot.

The soft face of shortstop Yeferson Seijas hardens when he catches a ball and throws it with the speed and precision for which he is known. He does it again, and again, and again, creating a near rhythmic pop-whoosh, pop-whoosh, as the ball hits his mitted left hand and his right immediately sends it back in the air. No hesitation betrays the emotional storm he is confronting after two powerful earthquakes on June 24 wiped out his home state of La Guaira.

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