How one Philippine community built their own ‘Field of Dreams’ atop Manila landfill
Baseball has deep roots in the Philippines, a US colony for nearly 50 years before winning independence in 1946

Teenager Piolo Perez swings his bat on a baseball field built atop the Philippines’ most notorious trash heap, sending home run balls crashing through the shanties mushrooming on the outfield.
Inspired by a Hollywood film starring Kevin Costner about a farmer who builds a baseball diamond on his cornfield, Manila’s huge landfill nicknamed Smokey Mountain has its own “Field of Dreams” to stop its youth going astray.
“If it weren’t for baseball, I’d still be picking trash,” Perez, a scrawny 15-year-old catcher, said in between swinging at pitches in Sunday training.
Like his 60-plus teammates, Perez, used to collect recyclable materials from the truckloads of rubbish from around the nation’s capital of 12 million people that is dumped on the seafront district.
But he now has a sporting scholarship thanks to a baseball and softball programme, run by a charity group and local business people.
Poverty is widespread in the Philippines, with one in four Filipinos earning a mere US$1.30 a day, but the conditions at the Smokey Mountain squatter colony are especially dire.