With his toned forearms and close-cropped hair, Javier A. Lopez '02 looks like a ballplayer--and the thick gold chain doesn't hurt. He's 5-foot-10, 185 pounds, but those figures belie an impressively muscled form, one that comes from an entire lifetime of batting and fielding and training.
"When I was two and a half my dad was teaching me to play baseball," he says. "I'd always have the glove in my hand."
Lopez is one of Harvard's top baseball recruits this year, an outfielder from Westminster Christian in Miami, a school known for its powerhouse players. Last year his skill at the plate helped lead the Warriors to their second national championship. This spring he may start for Harvard, already a strong team and last year's Ivy League champs.
"He's a good-looking ballplayer , Lopez plays all kinds of ball. A running backon the Westminster football team for all fouryears of high school, he intends to join Harvard'sprogram next year after getting settled in. Anddespite all the time spent on the field and in theweight room training, like many Harvard athletesLopez managed to maintain a highly competitive(4.2) grade point average in high school. But even he is doubtful about fitting inacademically at Harvard, a huge change from thetiny Catholic high school back home. Theadjustment to college is tricky to begin with, butfor Lopez, the son of working-class Cubanimmigrants, Harvard poses a special culture shock. His mother works as a secretary, and his fatherowns a gas station. The family speaks both Englishand Spanish at home. "Most people here have a lot of money, but Ijust try to get by with whatever I can," Lopezsays. "It's hard because people will say, 'Let'sgo out,' and you spend 15 or 20 dollars. For themthat's pocket change, but for me, I feel it." Only seven of 80 graduating seniors at his highschool are going to college out of state, and heis the first student from Westminster Christian toattend Harvard, he says. In addition, he is one ofthe few Cuban-American players recruited byHarvard. "I really do feel like I'm the mistake," Lopezsays. "I don't know how the administration let mein." His recent workload doesn't inspire muchconfidence. "Right now I've got five hours of work forExpos," he sighs. "I've never had that before." Out of the Park He may be struggling with Expos, but Lopez isno stranger to buckling down. As fellow studentswere doing homework or relaxing at home last year,Lopez practiced with the Warriors "from 3:09 untilit got dark," Afterwards he would put in anadditional two hours with his hitting instructoror at the batting cage. And weekends were noexception. On Saturdays, he trained from 9 a.m.until evening. "It was baseball all day, all week,everything," Lopez says. "[Westminster Christian]is like a little baseball factory." But despite the long hours, he never got tiredof playing. Read more in News