The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WBC will thin spring roster

Five major leaguers among 10 Braves committed to play in tournament.

- By David O’Brien dobrien@ajc.com

Never before has the World Baseball Classic taken such a big bite out of the Braves’ spring training roster.

The Braves will have five major league players in the March 6-22 internatio­nal tournament including their best hitter (Freddie Freeman), their leadoff man (Ender Inciarte) and three-fifths of their starting rotation ( Julio Teheran, Bartolo Colon, Jaime Garcia).

All will play for their home countries except Freeman, who’ll play first base for Canada to honor his

late mother, Rosemary, a native Canadian who died from melanoma in 2000.

Freeman was born and raised in Southern California, but both his parents were from Canada.

Inciarte will play for a loaded Venezuela squad, Teheran for Colombia, Garcia for Mexico and Colon for defending champion Dominican Republic.

Colon is designated to join the Dominican team if it advances past the first round.

Five Braves minor leaguers are also on WBC rosters: outfielder Mel Rojas Jr. (Dominican Republic) and pitchers Andrew Albers (Canada), Steve Kent (Australia), Jon Kennedy (Australia) and Andres Avila (Mexico).

Games will be played in Korea, Japan, Mexico, Miami, San Diego and Los Angeles, which hosts the semifinals and championsh­ip game March 20-22 at Dodger Stadium.

Pool play is March 6-12 and eight teams advance to the second round March 12-19.

Colombia, Canada and the Dominican Republic join Team USA in a Miami first-round pool March 9-12 at Marlins Park.

Teheran is joined by White Sox All-Star Jose Quintana on Colombia’s roster.

One of those pitchers likely will start Colombia’s March 10 opener vs. the United States, and the other would presumably face Freeman and Canada on March 11.

Freeman said two years ago that he hoped to play in a tournament for Canada someday as a tribute to his mother.

The opportunit­y was there after Reds first baseman Joey Votto, a Canadian, decided not to play in this year’s WBC.

Truth be told, major league team officials would prefer that their players not participat­e in the WBC.

Not only can it interfere with spring training for the major league team that employs the players and pays their salaries, it also potentiall­y puts the players at greater risk of injury.

“I don’t want to speak for the Braves or John Hart, but I would rather not have (Teheran) pitch in it,” Braves general manager John Coppolella said in December, when Teheran was the only Braves pitcher committed to the tournament.

“It’s a great event and we fully support MLB, but you worry about guys getting hurt. I mean, just being honest.”

Said Hart, Braves president of baseball operations: “For a pitcher, if you give him his program and you give him his marching orders, what he can and can’t do (while with his WBC team) ... Julio’s a veteran. He knows what to do. He’ll kind of be with us back and forth” between Miami and Braves camp outside Orlando.

The injury possibilit­y is a particular concern with pitchers, who can get caught up in the adrenaline rush of pitching for their home country and push themselves too hard in March, at a time when they would usually be building arm strength while pitching in low-key spring training games in Florida or Arizona.

But since Major League Baseball is heavily involved with presenting the WBC and sees it as a means of growing the game worldwide, team officials are measured in their public criticism of the tournament.

It’s viewed as something of a necessary evil by MLB teams, who’d just as soon the rosters be filled out by players from teams other than their own.

Braves who’ve participat­ed in past World Baseball Classics included Chipper Jones, Brian McCann and, in the most recent one in 2013, Craig Kimbrel and Andrelton Simmons.

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