Montreal Gazette

Baseball and softball make joint pitch for Games spots

Single federation battles wrestling, squash for 2020 Olympics’ berth

- ANDREW DAMPF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ROME — After striking out twice, baseball and softball officials are counting on a combined bid to get back into the Olympics.

Following IOC vote defeats in 2005 and 2009 as separate sports, baseball and softball have merged into a single confederat­ion as it competes against wrestling and squash for a single spot on the 2020 Olympic program, which will be decided by a Sept. 8 vote in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

“We wanted a partnershi­p that could work together and use the attributes of both of our sports,” said Don Porter, the American copresiden­t of the World Baseball Softball Confederat­ion.

“We’ve got an awful lot of young female athletes all over the world that are playing our sport and there’s a commercial side that baseball has that really strengthen­s our bid,” Porter added. “So if we put it together it’s a very strong added value to the Olympic program.”

The biggest obstacle to the bid is its failure to guarantee the presence of Major League Baseball players. MLB commission­er Bud Selig has said the season won’t be stopped to free players for the Olympics, but the confederat­ion points out that there is plenty of room for negotiatio­ns — seven years — if it makes the cut.

“We never asked MLB to stop the season,” said Riccardo Fraccari, the Italian co-president of the confederat­ion.

The bid proposes separate men’s baseball and women’s softball events of eight teams each, played as back-to-back six-day tournament­s.

That’s a slightly different format from when baseball and softball were last played at the Olympics, at the 2008 Beijing Games. Baseball gained full medal status at the 1992 Barcelona Games and softball followed four years later in Atlanta. But both were dropped from the 2012 program in a 2005 vote.

As things stand now, Fraccari ishoping some MLB players would come even if MLB doesn’t stop.

“That’s precisely why we chose such a short program — to permit all pros who want to come to do so,” Fraccari said. “And that doesn’t apply only to MLB players but to players in all the major profession­al leagues around the world.”

But as New York Yankees outfielder Ichiro Suzuki — who recently passed the 4,000-hit mark in a career split between Japan and MLB — pointed out, baseball already has a successful internatio­nal tournament for pros with the World Baseball Classic.

While supporting the Olympic bid, he suggested it should be strictly for amateurs.

“They really need to make that division of amateurs to profession­als,” Suzuki said through an interprete­r. “Some countries are going to have all amateurs, some countries are going to have few. Some teams can then say, ‘Well, we lost because we didn’t have any of our profession­als in that game.’ So they just need to make it clear: amateurs are going to be here, profession­als play in the WBC.”

Pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu, who is in the middle of a breakout season with the Los Angeles Dodgers and helped South Korea to gold in Bei- jing, favours a more open approach.

“Each country should decide on that,” Ryu said of the pros vs. amateurs debate.

And there are plenty of countries to decide, with baseball a top sport in the Americas and throughout much of Asia. It’s growing in Europe, too, as evidenced by strong performanc­es from the Netherland­s and Italy at this year’s Classic.

And while softball’s epicentre remains the United States, which swept gold at the first three Olympic tournament­s, Japan won in Beijing and Australia took home medals from all four Olympic tournament­s.

“The one thing that baseball and softball brings to the table and where it can help out the Olympic Games is the sheer size of the market and the sheer size of the number of boys and girls at the youth level that play the sport,” said Michele Smith, who played on two of the American teams that won softball gold and also pitched profession­ally in Japan for 16 years.

Another obstacle for previous bids was baseball’s failure to crack down on doping.

That changed earlier this month when 13 players, including four All-Stars, were suspended for their involvemen­t in the Biogenesis drug case.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Japan’s Megu Hirose scores during the 2008 Olympics. Softball and baseball are hoping to be included in the 2020 Olympic Games.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Japan’s Megu Hirose scores during the 2008 Olympics. Softball and baseball are hoping to be included in the 2020 Olympic Games.

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