Cuba has accomplished a remarkable feat in sports recognition by securing all three major categories in the prestigious Prensa Latina Latin American Sports Survey for only the second time in history. The island nation’s athletes dominated the 61st edition of the annual poll, capturing honors in individual and team competitions against strong regional competitors.
Triple jump sensation Leyanis Pérez emerged as the undisputed favorite in the female athlete category, commanding an impressive 73 votes from the outset of polling that began November 21. The track and field star outperformed 16 other nominated female athletes who each received at least one nomination.
In a groundbreaking achievement, left-handed pitcher Livan Moinelo made history by becoming the first Cuban baseball player to claim the Latin American Male Athlete of the Year title. The Japanese league champion secured 42 votes, decisively outpacing Argentine football legend Lionel Messi, who trailed with 19 votes.
The Cuban National Baseball 5 team provided the most dramatic victory, mounting a last-minute surge to claim the team award with 37 votes. The youth champions from the Nayarit World Championship edged out their Argentine rivals by a narrow four-vote margin following an intensive campaign supported by national media outlets.
This triple victory marks only the second time Cuba has achieved such comprehensive recognition since 1989, when high jumper Javier Sotomayor, runner Ana Fidelia Quirot, and the women’s volleyball team simultaneously topped their categories.
The 2023 survey carried special significance, commemorating two major sporting milestones: the centenary of Commander Fidel Castro’s birth, recognized as the architect of Cuba’s sports movement, and the fifth anniversary of Argentine football icon Diego Armando Maradona’s passing. Maradona himself had won the Sports Survey in 1986.
This year’s edition demonstrated extensive international participation with 70 foreign media organizations and 43 Cuban outlets contributing to the voting process, reflecting the continued importance of these awards in Latin American sports journalism.
