The Riverside Press-Enterprise

More stars come out as event returns after six-year absence

- By Ronald Blum

Nolan Arenado wants the World Baseball Classic to grow into a global event with stature approachin­g soccer’s World Cup.

“I feel like the hype is a little bit higher this time around than it was in 2017. There’s more guys that want to do it,” the St. Louis third baseman said ahead of this year’s tournament. “I know it’s not the World Cup, but just watching the World Cup and how awesome that was just to represent your country ... I don’t know if it will get quite there, but get it close at least.”

Baseball’s top internatio­nal championsh­ip opened Wednesday at Taichung, Taiwan, which is hosting games in Group A, which includes Cuba, Italy, Netherland­s, Panama and Taiwan.

Group B of the expanded 20-nation field starts today in Tokyo, with Australia, China, the Czech Republic, Japan and South Korea competing for two quarterfin­al berths. Group C, which begins play Saturday in Phoenix, includes the defending champion United States, Canada, Colombia, Great Britain and Mexico, Group D starts the same day in Miami, where the Dominican Republic, Israel, Nicaragua, Puerto Rico and Venezuela compete.

“Last WBC, I was kind of on the fence of doing it and not doing it, and when I decided not to do it, watching the games, I kind of regretted I didn’t do it,” said Angels outfielder Mike Trout, a three-time MVP who leads the U.S. roster. “It looked like they were having so much fun.”

Mookie Betts, Shohei Ohtani of Japan, and Miguel Cabrera and Jose Altuve, both from Venezuela, are among seven Major League Baseball MVPS on 30-man rosters. There are 63 All-stars, after Nestor Cortes, Nathan Eovaldi, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Clayton Kershaw, Alejandro Kirk and German Márquez dropped out and Alex Colomé and Gregory Soto were added.

First- and second-place teams in each group advance to the knockout stage, with quarterfin­als to be played in Tokyo on March 15 and 16, and in Miami and March 17 and 18. The semifinals will be in Miami on March 19 and 20, and the championsh­ip is at Marlins Park on March 21 — nine days before opening day of the MLB season.

Nations play up to seven games. “A lot of players, not every single one, but a lot of players place tremendous

The Associated Press

value on an opportunit­y to play with their country’s name on their chest,” Major League Baseball Commission­er Rob Manfred said. “I think that the change this year is we have seen less resistance from clubs in terms of making players available and actually meaning it in terms of their availabili­ty to play. And I think a big piece of that is a credit to the profession­alism of the staffs of the various countries and you can actually work with the WBC staff in a way that allows the player to get ready.”

Japan won the first two WBCS in 2006 and 2009, followed by the Dominican Republic in 2013. The United States’ 8-0 win over Puerto Rico in the 2017 championsh­ip game was seen by 2.3 million on MLB Network plus an additional 800,000 on ESPN Deportes and a Spanish-language simulcast on ESPN2.

Fox and its related networks have U.S. television rights this year, a tournament delayed two years because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Dominicans are considered the favorite with a roster that includes Julio Rodríguez, Juan Soto, Manny Machado, Rafael Devers, Wander Franco, Willy Adames and Jeremy Peña, along with pitchers Sandy Alcantara, Cristian Javier, Luis Garcia and Johnny Cueto.

Trout is joined on the U.S. roster by Arenado, Paul Goldschmid­t, Mookie Betts, Pete Alonso, J.T. Realmuto, Trea Turner and Tim Anderson, along with pitchers Adam Wainwright, Lance Lynn, Daniel Bard and Ryan Pressly.

“It’s pretty cool to have the USA across your chest,” Trout said.

Managers include former big leaguers Mike Piazza (Italy), Yadier Molina (Puerto Rico), Ian Kinsler (Israel), Mark Derosa (U.S.), Ernie Whitt (Canada), Hensley Meulens (Netherland­s) and Benji Gil (Mexico).

Trout is looking forward to a possible matchup against Angels teammate Ohtani in the semifinals or final. The Angels’ two-way player could pitch against Trout.

“Every person I talk to that faces him says they don’t want to be in the box,” Trout said.

NETHERLAND­S 4, CUBA 2 >> Former MLB player Yoenis Céspedes, playing as the DH, was hitless and walked twice as Cuba managed only three hits. The game was a matchup between the two favorites in the group, giving the Dutch a big lift right out of the gate.

Cuba went ahead 1-0 in the second on a double by Yadil Mujica to score Yoelkis Guibert.

Gregorius singled home Roger Bernadina to tie it 1-1 in the third. The Netherland­s took a 4-1 lead in the sixth when Josh Palacios singled home Gregorius, and Chadwick Tromp added a two-run single. PANAMA 12, TAIWAN 5 >> Panama won after going 0-5 in its first two WBC appearance­s in 2006 and 2009.

Taiwan was down 12-2 in the bottom of the seventh and faced a loss under the 10-run mercy rule after seven innings. But Nien-ting Wu hit a two-run homer and pushed the game to the full nine innings.

Taiwan got another run in the eighth to make it 12-5.

Panama had 14 hits, led by Jonathan Arauz with two hits and three RBIS. The Central Americans were also issued eight walks.

 ?? ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
ROSS D. FRANKLIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States