Miami Herald

WBC crowns Japan, shows Miami’s love of game for Marlins to pursue

- BY GREG COTE gcote@miamiheral­d.com

Japan won. Baseball won. Miami did, too. The Japanese national team won the World Baseball Classic championsh­ip with a 3-2 victory over the United States Tuesday night at a sold-out loanDepot park — Shohei Ohtani striking out Angels teammate Mike Trout with the final pitch in an ending right out of a Hollywood script.

The sport won, too, as the game’s internatio­nal showcase tournament continued its ascent in stature and popularity. And Miami shone as the primary host, filling the ballpark with fans and passion night after night, underlinin­g the city’s reputation for coming up big for big events ... or

parties. And this was both.

You know all of those fans who don’t show up for Marlins home games? They were out in force for this.

Tuesday’s sellout of 36,098 made it 475,269 who flocked to 15 games in Miami.

Japan and the U.S. had been among favorites in the 20nation tournament (along with the Dominican Republic) and did not disappoint in reaching the final game. It was Japan’s third championsh­ip in the fifth iteration of the WBC; the Americans were defending champs after winning the previous one in 2017.

Home runs by Munetaka Murakami and Kazuma Okamoto powered the win. The U.S. hit two homers — a record-tying fifth of the WBC by Trea Turner and another by Kyle Schwarber — but was 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position.

Major League Baseball announced Tuesday night a sixth WBC would occur in 2026, with Miami all but certain to again be a host city, its chances of again staging the final round hugely enhanced by the success of the event just past.

The tournament presented a stunning contrast in the look, sound and feel of what we have grown accustomed to in this ballpark.

The crowds and ambiance have been everything loanDepot park is not when the home team plays in its home ballpark 81 times a year. That

would be the team that finished 29th of 30 in

MLB attendance last season and could not even sell out Opening Day. A team whose ballpark was more than two-thirds empty on average.

The WBC here was a festival, a noisy party.

For Marlins games it’s a mortuary by comparison.

The crowds for this internatio­nal tournament nourish the hope that Miami can be a baseball town. But how can the Marlins unlock the mystery of why it is not for the local big-league team?

It is Caroline O’Connor’s job to find out. She is in her first season as Marlins president of business operations.

“Big part of my job. Huge part of our overall success,” she said, amplifying herself above the din around the batting cage two hours before Tuesday’s first pitch. “We want our players to play in a great atmosphere.”

Dominican, Puerto Rican and Venezuelan fans supporting their national teams here have been a big part of the WBC’s enormous success in Miami. Japanese fans here to watch Ohtani and company play for the championsh­ip were bountiful

in the park, as were the hundreds of Japanese media.

And the ballpark, of course, is in the heart of the Little Havana area of Miami brimming with baseball-loving Cubans, many of them exiles who chanted “Patria y vida” (Homeland and life), the anti-Cuban government sentiment, as the U.S. eliminated Cuba Sunday night.

But the global flavor of South Florida has not been enough to fill this place for the Marlins, or anything close.

It has to start with consistent winning. That is the only way. And the clearest path to that is big spending, a path untrod.

O’Connor must work with the constraint­s of an ownership that has spent more than last year but still well below the MLB average and fourth-most in the five-team NL East.

So O’Connor said what she must when I proposed it starts with winning.

“It’s more than that. It’s the whole experience,” she said. “Winning is great, but we can’t rely on that on the business side.”

Fifteen of the Marlins’ current 40-man roster is foreign-born. Notably, 10 of the 14 Miami players in the projected starting lineup or starting pitching rotation are from elsewhere, too, including five Dominicans, two Venezuelan­s, and one player

each from Cuba, Peru and the Bahamas.

That diversity is good, and smart for the market. But it still does not replace winning.

Having Sandy Alcantara start all 81 home games and cloning the flash and personalit­y of Jazz Chisholm Jr. might help fill the place, but reality presents a tougher task.

Crowds in Miami for the WBC prove the love of baseball here is sufficient if properly wooed, if properly earned.

For this internatio­nal tournament, it’s been easy. This was only the fifth WBC, but the players have made it a big event getting bigger.

A season-ending injury to Mets closer Edwin Diaz (Puerto Rico) and a serious injury to Astros second baseman Jose Altuve (Venezuela) have some questionin­g the value in the risk of playing in the WBC, but the participat­ing players have been as enthusiast­ic as the fans.

Mets star Francisco Lindor said Diaz’s injury “broke my heart” but made clear he “100 percent” plans to play for Puerto Rico again in the next WBC and called it “a blessing and an honor and a privilege” to represent his country.

The U.S. this year drew its best roster ever, including three-time MVP Mike Trout of the Angels. In all the American roster

had 18 MLB All-Stars representi­ng 47 All-Star appearance­s.

Japan had four majorleagu­ers led by the incomparab­le Ohtani, the twoway star. The notion of his pitching in relief against his teammate Trout Tuesday night was a delicious subplot to the title game ... and came true as if scripted.

(How an Angels team with Ohtani and Trout can be so lousy is one of life’s great mysteries, but that’s for another column.)

Japanese flags were waving in the outfield bleachers like bull’s-eyes Tuesday as Ohtani took batting practice. Venerable Joe Torre, 82, came out to watch. Fox baseball reporter Ken Rosenthal and his bowtie were there. U.S. hitting coach Ken Griffey Jr. chatted in the American dugout with Pedro Martinez. Trout ambled to the batting cage as the Japanese finished.

The ballpark was beginning to fill up, and fill it would.

I asked O’Connor, the Marlins’ business-side president, if it was frustratin­g to see the stadium full, but not for her team. What she saw was a stadium full but a glass halffull.

“I see it as an opportunit­y,” she said.

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani and catcher Yuhei Nakamura celebrate as teammates converge after Ohtani struck out Mike Trout and clinched Japan’s third World Baseball Classic championsh­ip on Tuesday night at loanDepot park.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Japanese superstar Shohei Ohtani and catcher Yuhei Nakamura celebrate as teammates converge after Ohtani struck out Mike Trout and clinched Japan’s third World Baseball Classic championsh­ip on Tuesday night at loanDepot park.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? The silver medal was a disappoint­ment for Trea Turner (8) and the U.S. team, which was seeking a second consecutiv­e WBC title.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com The silver medal was a disappoint­ment for Trea Turner (8) and the U.S. team, which was seeking a second consecutiv­e WBC title.
 ?? ??
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Kawanabe Shota , Ricky McShane, Gail Rowe and Shinjiro Suzuki strike winning poses outside of loanDepot Park before the WBC final Tuesday. The Japanese fans later celebrated their team’s third WBC title.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Kawanabe Shota , Ricky McShane, Gail Rowe and Shinjiro Suzuki strike winning poses outside of loanDepot Park before the WBC final Tuesday. The Japanese fans later celebrated their team’s third WBC title.

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