By: Courtney Walsh
March is a GREAT month for sports fans, new and old, with the list of events we have jumping off from March Madness to the start of the MLB season, every day, something exciting to watch. I say add one more event to that list, the World Baseball Classic! Starting in 2006, this is a baseball lover’s dream, from group play to naming a winner overall. Starting March 3rd and ending on March 17th, we get 20 countries going at it, representing their nations’ colors as well as showcasing the sport. A mix of MLB superstars, rising prospects, and international talent. Japan took down the USA last time around, so revenge or a repeat is coming down the pipe. So why should you care about this? Let me explain.
The global flavor is off the charts. This isn’t the MLB, where players are all scattered around the WBC unites them under national flags. You get rare dream matchups, American pitchers facing bats from the Dominican or Japanese phenoms going up against Korean standouts. Jammed packed staduims in Tokyo, Houston, San Juan, and Miami. Don’t sleep on teams like Czech Republic and Nicaragua get a shot on a big stage to show how much the game has grown. It’s four pools of five teams each, with the top two advancing to the knockout stage. We get short series and ZERO room for errors, every pitch counts, of course, insurance issues have some guys watching from the sidelines like Francisco Lindor or Carlos Correa, but don’t think these rosters still aren’t loaded. With MVP’s and Cy Young winners all over the place.
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Who are the favorites? Team USA, with player manager Bryce Harper, is stacked with names like Aaron Judge, Tarik Skubal (One start only), Bobby Witt Jr, Gunner Henderson, and Paul Skenes. Defending champs Japan get Ohtani bat only this go around. Yoshinobu Yamamoto, White Sox’s new star Munetaka Murakami, join a very talented team top to bottom. Pool D is where we find the Dominican Republic. This team is DEEP: Manny Machado, Juan Soto, and more. Venezuela could make some noise with Ronald Acuna Jr., Jose Altuve, and blanced lineup. Some names to peep are Nolan McLean of the Mets for Team USA, Owen Cassie of the Florida Marlins for team Canadaand Travis Bazzana from Australia.
In a month with so much to watch, the WBC stands out because of the passion and purity. It is not just games; it’s cultural clashes and career-defining plays. Grab some snacks and your favorite beverage, can Team USA redeem itself, will Japan repeat, or will an underdog shock the baseball world? This tournament WILL deliver. Tune in, you won’t regret it. PLAY BALL!