Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Puerto Rico edges Netherland­s in 11th

-

PUERTO RICO 4, NETHERLAND­S 3 (11)

LOS ANGELES — Carlos Correa was 17 and watching the World Baseball Classic on television four years ago, too young to participat­e.

When his chance came around this time, the Houston Astros’ star shortstop was up to the task.

Correa hit a two-run home run in the first inning and scored the winning run in the 11th to give Puerto Rico a dramatic 4-3 victory over the Netherland­s on Monday night.

Next up is a spot in the championsh­ip game.

“When I feel that I’m all excited, I try to calm down, breathe deep and concentrat­e on what we’re doing,” Correa said. “This is something that we rehearse every day, so we will be able to do it well at the end.”

Eddie Rosario, who went 0 for 4, hit a sacrifice fly to center field in the 11th that drove in Correa, triggering a massive celebratio­n on the field and in the stands from red, white and blue-clad fans pounding cow bells and tooting horns and whistles.

T.J. Rivera’s solo shot in the second put Puerto Rico ahead 3-2.

Puerto Rico will play either two-time champion Japan or the United States for the title tonight at Dodger Stadium. The Puerto Ricans also reached the final in 2013, losing to the Dominican Republic 3-0.

Puerto Rico has outscored its opponents 55-18 while going 7-0 in this year’s tournament.

“It means a lot because Puerto Ricans have gone through a very difficult situation currently and we were able to unite our country,” Correa said.

The blond Puerto Rican players, who dyed their hair in a show of unity that has caught on back home, jumped up and down after a lively, emotional and sometimes testy semifinal that included four replay reviews during the fourth and fifth innings of a game that lasted 4 hours, 19 minutes.

When it was finally over, Kike Hernandez, who plays for the Los Angeles Dodgers, and Hiram Burgos raced around the field carrying Puerto Rican flags above their heads.

Curt Smith grounded into a bases-loaded, inning-ending double play for the Netherland­s in the 11th, which began with runners on first and second for both teams under tournament rules. It was one of three double plays turned by Puerto Rico.

Gold Glove catcher Yadier Molina’s defense saved Puerto Rico from a potential grand slam in the first inning when Wladimir Balentien’s home run helped the Netherland­s to a 2-0 lead, giving orange-clad fans a reason to cheer.

“For me, that was the game,” Puerto Rico Manager Edwin Rodriguez said. “Yadier Molina came to play.”

Molina capitalize­d on two baserunnin­g blunders by the Dutch.

Jorge Lopez allowed a leadoff single to Andrelton Simmons and hit Xander Bogaerts with a pitch. Simmons later wandered off the bag toward third and Molina threw to second, but Simmons couldn’t get back in time and got caught in a rundown.

Jurickson Profar singled to right, but was slow getting back to first while celebratin­g and was picked off by Molina, who took Rosario’s relay from the outfield. Balentien followed with his mammoth, two-out shot, and celebrated with a bat flip.

“Frustratin­g for me is the mental errors that we committed,” Netherland­s Manager Hensley Meulens said. “We talked to the guys before the game about the experience of Yadier Molina behind the plate. If you get too far off, he’ll pick you off, and that’s what happened. Then Jurickson getting the base hit, celebratin­g and not getting back to the base, that’s unacceptab­le. That could have been the difference in us winning or not.”

 ?? AP/CHRIS CARLSON ?? Puerto Rico’s Carlos Correa and teammates race to join the celebratio­n after Correa scored on Eddie Rosario’s RBI single in the 11th inning to give Puerto Rico a 4-3 victory over the Netherland­s at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Puerto Rico advanced to...
AP/CHRIS CARLSON Puerto Rico’s Carlos Correa and teammates race to join the celebratio­n after Correa scored on Eddie Rosario’s RBI single in the 11th inning to give Puerto Rico a 4-3 victory over the Netherland­s at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Puerto Rico advanced to...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States