VIERA, Fla. |  Orlando Hernandez travels to road games now in charter buses. Private  jets, luxury hotels and four-course meals don’t exist here. Not in the minors. Games  are played in mostly empty ballparks and even a four-time World Series  champion has to carry his own equipment. Around here, “El Duque” is just  a 44-year-old pitcher trying to make it to The Show. “It could be  worse,” Hernandez says, smiling, mixing English with Spanish in that  thick Cuban accent. “In Cuba, we had 14-hour bus rides with no air  conditioning, no food, no music, no anything. “This?” he asks, chuckling. “This is nothing. This is fun. We get to play baseball in new shoes and clean uniforms.” The  Gulf Coast League for rookies is hardly a place anybody would expect to  find a pitcher of his age clamoring for one more shot in the big  leagues. Much less a man who escaped persecution in Cuba, defected to  the majors and pitched his way into New York Yankees lore. But all that seems like another lifetime ago. These  days, Hernandez is toiling around where many young hopefuls begin their  professional careers. But he was promoted Tuesday to the Washington  Nationals’ Double-A affiliate in Harrisburg, Pa. In the minors,  the ballparks are filled with gimmicks and corky music. The outfield  walls are plastered with advertisements, and the majors are only a  fantasy that players — most half his age — see on television or read  about in books. Hernandez has his own dreams. On a  minor-league deal with the Nationals, the opportunity — however slim —  to join his half brother, Livan, in Washington provides enough  motivation. He wants that chance so much he doesn’t allow himself to  imagine the possibility. Something even he realizes might be improbable. Then again, so is his life. A  phenom in his native Cuba, Hernandez was one of the best pitchers the  island ever produced. But after Livan fled in 1995, authorities on the  Communist island banned him from baseball, believing he conspired in his  half-brother’s defection and might also follow. So he escaped by  boat to the Bahamas on Christmas Day 1997, was granted a Visa to the  United States — through Costa Rica — and later signed as a free agent  with the Yankees. He won three titles in New York from 1998-2004 and  another as reliever with the Chicago White Sox in 2005. “That was a dream life,” he says. Now it’s back to basics. Again. Hernandez  struggled with his control for Triple-A Oklahoma City last year in the  Texas Rangers’ organization. He hasn’t appeared in the majors since 2007  with the Mets, then a shell of his former self after injuries and aging  took their toll. Now Hernandez is often seen at the Nationals’  workout facility before dawn, and he stills finds the energy to complete  the team’s exercise regiment afterward. “He’s in better shape than anybody in baseball,” Livan said. “It’s unbelievable.” After  feet and toe surgeries derailed his career, Hernandez has rehabilitated  and stayed in shape. He’s as healthy as he’s been in years, he says,  and has more money than he’ll ever need. So why pitch? Why live  away from his family in Miami, and in such anonymity? Why play at one of  professional baseball’s lowest levels, with only faint hope of ever  making to the majors again? “Only one reason,” he says. “I love baseball.” A game he can’t let go. Hernandez’s  fastball has lost some zip, and he no longer has pinpoint control. The  high-leg kick is gone, replaced with a quick reliever’s motion, and the  only thing that intimidates batters is his name. But he still  hides the ball as well as anyone, still has that mind-blowing movement,  still has that strong work ethic and fierce presence on the mound. “He  was one of the most intense competitors I’ve ever been around,” said  Dodgers manager Joe Torre, who was with Hernandez in New York. “He was a  guy you basically trusted with the ball out there because he never  shirked away from the competition of the game. “Even when we  played against him when he was with the Mets or something, you were  always a little skeptical out there because you knew there may have been  something up his sleeve.” Hernandez’s age isn’t unheard of for a pitcher. Phillies  pitcher Jamie Moyer is 47, Randy Johnson pitched for San Francisco at  45 last season and Roger Clemens turned 45 in his final year in the  majors in 2007. None, however, were in the rookie league then. Hernandez  has been pitching one or two innings in relief — the only role he might  have left in the majors. He is still announced as “El Duque,” a  nickname he shared with his father Arnaldo, and even players on opposing  teams are on the top steps when he pitches. The recognition goes  beyond the baseball diamond to places he frequents around the Gulf Coast  League. People often ask for autographs. Sometimes even players. “People look at me and I can see them thinking. ’Yes, no, yes, no, maybe,’” he says. “I just smile and laugh, ’Yeah, it’s me.’” Hernandez’s other task comes with helping young players. The  Nationals, for instance, optioned fellow Cuban right-hander Yunesky  Maya to Viera almost certainly to benefit from Hernandez’s guidance. And  perhaps Hernandez, too, can learn from a younger generation. The  best chance Hernandez has of pitching in the majors this season, he  figures, is when rosters expand from 25 to 40 in September. So even he  has to endure that other minor-league tradition: waiting for a call that  might not ever come. “If it was up to me, I’m ready,” he says. “I never tire. I can pitch forever, at least I’ll try.”
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