Texarkana Gazette

McGwire, Strasburg among future stars who played in Olympics

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Baseball is returning to the Olympics in 2020. The question now is who will be playing.

With the Summer Games falling in the middle of the major league season, the sport has never been able to produce the kind of best-against-best spectacle that Olympic hockey and basketball have. But even if that remains the case, there will undoubtedl­y be some big names taking the field at the Tokyo Games.

Baseball was a full medal event at the Olympics from 1992-2008, and it was a demonstrat­ion sport before that. In 1984, Japan won the gold medal game, beating a U.S. team that included Mark McGwire and Will Clark—both of whom were a couple years away from their big league debuts. At the Seoul Olympics in 1988, the Americans avenged that loss when Jim Abbott beat Japan in the title game.

BARCELONA (1992): Jason Giambi and Nomar Garciaparr­a were part of this U.S. team, but the Americans were drubbed by Japan and Cuba and failed to win a medal. The Omar Linares-led Cubans took the gold.

ATLANTA (1996): Home-field advantage only meant so much for the U.S., which lost 11-2 to Japan in the semifinals and had to settle for bronze. Cuba beat Japan 13-9 for the gold, with Linares hitting three homers in the title game.

SYDNEY (2000): Cuba’s Olympic dynasty was finally upended when the U.S. knocked off the two-time defending champions 4-0 to win the gold. Profession­als were allowed in the Olympic tournament for the first time, but the conflict with the major league schedule meant the Americans still had a relatively unheralded roster. With Tommy Lasorda managing, Ben Sheets allowed one earned run in 22 innings, and his three-hitter in the final gave the U.S. the title.

ATHENS (2004): The U.S. didn’t even make it to the Olympics to defend its title. The Americans were eliminated in qualifying, and the gold medal went back to Cuba, which beat upstart Australia in the final. The Aussies had upset Daisuke Matsuzaka and Japan in the semifinals.

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