Tuesday, March 28, 2006

The Globalist: A True World Series

A True World Series

The inaugural World Baseball Classic, the first true world championship, is now history and, to most observers, it was an instant success. The competitive games, fan enthusiasm and high media ratings show that there is a rapidly growing global market for baseball. What was more surprising were some of the outcomes....Read on at:

http://www.theglobalist.com/dbweb/StoryId.aspx?StoryId=5212

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Postscript

Best handmade sign at the championship final, held up by a fan wearing USA:

"I am here for my country--but where are they?"

Tuesday, March 21, 2006

San Diego's Grand Finale

A final apology to my handful of readers for falling down on the blog in the Classic’s climactic weekend. The easiest excuse is that I was traveling on business all week and using my few spare moments to catch up with my brother in Los Angeles and San Diego. In truth, I may have run out of blogging steam, far preferring to pore over every printed detail about the final weekend rather than spend valuable time in southern California online.

 

One of the reasons I had so much to read was the extensive coverage published by Tim Sullivan and others at the San Diego Union Tribune sports desk. They devoted at least four wrap-around pages in each day’s sports section in addition to several front page photos and at least one front page story on the championship.

 

My brother Zach and I drove from L.A. to San Diego on Saturday in time to catch the much-anticipated semi-final game between the Dominican Republic and Cuba. We opted out of the Japan-Korea semi (a little cold and haggard after four hours of Cuban pitching procrastination), but returned to Petco Park for the Japan-Cuba finale.

 

Rather than repeat so much of the enthusiastic national and international coverage, let me offer a few eyewitness details and a few final observations.

 

While all three final games managed to draw larger-than-expected crowds (mid to high 30’s is my guess and I have not seen official gate figures), there is no doubt that many ticket holders like myself sort of expected a U.S. appearance in the final weekend. Much of the scalping action we saw had the appearance of U.S. fans unloading tickets at or below face value. This was not because there was a serious shortage of Cuban, DR, Japanese, or Korean fans. There were about as many in southern California as one would expect for this event with Koreans representing the most and driving up tickets for Saturday’s second game. Those U.S. fans that decided to use their tickets to see what would happen were richly rewarded—and quickly drawn into the enthusiasm created by the other team’s fans.

 

Despite all that was written about ethnic music and cheers, face-paint, and flag-waving, the passionate pockets of fans were not as striking to me as some of the other atmospherics within the stadium. Hearing a variety of national anthems played inside a very American (and very pleasant) new stadium conjured up an Olympic ambience. Seeing all of the flag displays, as well as the WBC video montages for each team, and hearing three simultaneous P.A. translations was also striking. On Saturday afternoon, Spanish was definitely the first language of the stadium. On Monday night, the pleasant voice of the Japanese translator confirmed the global significance of this single game. Add to that the player music between each at-bat--an international mix of Latin salsa and meringue and Asian pop—and it was hard even for white, rhythmically-challenged American fans to avoid swaying in the aisles.

 

Major League Baseball did a terrific job with the pre- and post-game ceremonies, honoring all of the participating countries and teams and combining streamers, confetti, fireworks, and pageantry to validate the passion and excitement displayed by players on the field. Watching Sadaharu Oh escort Hank Aaron to throw out the finale’s first pitch and Ichiro carrying the Japanese flag in post-game triumph were among the visual highlights.

 

Between these moments (and during most of Saturday’s semifinal), the actual baseball games were excellent. It would be an overstatement to say they were great ballgames that rank among history’s classics. There was too much sloppy play (nerves?) and too much delay to sustain a dramatic narrative. But each game featured several innings of tight, suspenseful moments, outstanding fielding, clutch hits, and above-average drama. I became a Japan fan when I began to appreciate how well they execute every aspect of the game from double-steal, hit-and-runs, to drag bunts, perfect cutoffs, and nifty double-plays. Cuba’s third baseman and Japan’s shortstop each made several standout plays even though both committed costly errors as well. Cuba’s situational hitting continued to come through and they created the most dramatic moment of the weekend drawing to within one-run in the bottom of the eighth inning last night. But Japan’s combination of contact hitting, patience, superb bunting, clutch hits, and superior D ensured that Cuba could not pull off the big comeback. Japan was just too well-rounded and a very deserving world champion.

 

Despite the aggravating pace of Cuban pitching, which made some innings tedious and others (with multiple pitching changes) seem endless, fans remained extremely engaged in games that only a minority had a vested interest in watching. The combination of curiosity, novelty, normal enjoyment, and commitment to the Classic’s ambitions produced a fan experience that was extremely satisfying. What truly united the spectators of this inaugural world championship of baseball was an appreciation of baseball pure and simple and a willingness to share this experience with an odd mix of spectators and an unprecedented assemblage of the world’s best talent.  This may be a self-validating observation, but my brother, who would never indulge undeserved flattery, summed it up well on another chilly March night in San Diego: “This is a crowd of baseball fans. There’s no doubt about that.” Amen brother. Thanks for sharing and see you in three years!

 

Postgame notes:

 

Watching the Cuban-Japan handshakes afterward was a nice reminder that sportsmanship at all levels is always worth seeing.

 

It is surely a function of my station in life, but I noticed an awful lot of fathers and young sons at the games. We were all united in a belief that this was one for the ages and I am quite confident that history will prove us right.

 

Caps from New York, Boston, and Chicago almost equaled those from San Diego. I think David Ortiz easily had the largest fan following and that would have been the case even if Jeter or Matsui has made it to the final weekend.

 

Watching Cuba’s ace Lazo put down Albert Pujols, David Ortiz, and Alphonso Soriano—in stituations where all three could have tied the game—was memorable. Ichiro (the lone MLB starter in the final) represented major leaguers well when he delivered when most needed. He hit safely in every Classic game.

 

The Korean team made no errors in the tournament. Japan pitchers issued only 11 walks in 7 games. Cuban DH Garlobo hit over .500 for the tournament.

 

Amidst rumors of a Cuban defection, Zach and I joked that Castro had strict orders for the Cuban coaches: Be sure to bring every pitcher in from the bullpen (using frequent substitutions) by the last out. We wondered if the distance from the home dugout to the bullpen was the furthest some of the Cuban players got from their teammates all wee.

We also wondered if the reason Cuban pitchers slow the game down so much is because they have little else to do and no television breaks to get to.

 

For historical posterity: second tier tickets to the inaugural semi-final (behind third base) cost $55. The same seats at the championship game cost $60.

 

Friday, March 17, 2006

Justice for Japan

Apologies to my readers. This was filed late Thursday night, but technical difficulties prevented its timely posting...

Mexico wins, Japanese are in! It's fitting really--the two best Asian
teams and the two best Caribbean teams. A world baseball finale to make
the (non-U.S.) world proud.

This may be a short-term blow to ratings (see today's NY Times for a
great piece on the tv success), but it should ignite good old American
pride. Clearly we did not field the best team and despite every
advantage and break, they lost four, count-em, four times: Canada,
Korea, Mexico, and yes, they should have lost to Japan.

Team USA's only convincing win was against a team of teenagers from
South Africa. It's a good thing they were spared the Dominican Republic
line-up, or Cuba's pitching--the game probably would not have lived up
to the billing.

Good luck next triennial Uncle Sam. You've got three years to assemble a
team.

Thursday, March 16, 2006

Final Four?

Technical difficulties with the blog, but Korea is in and if the US plays as it should tonight, we'll have a dramatic set of matchups in San Diego...the Caribbean battle everyone wanted and a Korea-U.S. rematch with American pride on the line this time.

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Cub-ilation in San Juan


Bernie Williams goes down valiantly after a tough at-bat, but what a tournament he has had.

The svelte and improved I-Rod goes down swinging...Cuba wins, avenges their drubbing by PR.

Well, one part of my bracket has come to pass: D.R.-Cuba, Saturday morning.

World baseball fan lost in America

Where is a traveler to catch world baseball action when the U.S. Is off?

ESPN? No. Reserved for 30-point NBA blowouts.

The Deuce? No. Heaven forbid we pre-empt early round College SOFTball World Series action.

Network TV? Come on, Luke, you're dreaming.

The answer is online or nowhere. This must be how NASCAR fans feel without SPEED channel.

Wait, wait---thank god for ESPNNews and the Live In-Game Extra feature:

Cuba-P.R. elimination game. Bth inning, bases jammed, 1-run game. John Bracken writes that I-Rod was thrown out of the plate in a previous inning. I just saw a cutaway highlight of Koreans throwing a Team Japan player out at the plate.

Is this the best sporting event anywhere in the world right now? You betcha. So why has ESPNNews just switched back to press conferences with No. 16 NCAA seeds?

Still 4-3 Cuba, I think, but what do I know in my unplugged hotel room?

Preliminary conclusions about the Classic...

...before I lose three out of my four readers to the NCAA's.

1. If you want to imagine a return to baseball without steroids, all you have to do is watch this tournament. Double steals, safety squeezes, all-purpose bunting, hit-and-runs, quick fielding...the rest of the world still plays the full game of baseball. We reward the homerun derby. (Incidentally, who's that skinny guy for Puerto Rico named I. Rodriguez?)

2. If Korea and Japan have proved their right to host Classic games, the next Classic needs to split games evenly between the US, DR, Venezuela, and dare I say Cuba? And what better way to boost Mexico's competitiveness than to put a major league team there?

3. If shortstops were the first Dominican wave in MLB, Daniel Cabrera and Francisco Liriano proved last night that pitchers are the future. Another amazing March game--and a pitching duel at that.

4. Tight games, clutch play, stunning upsets, frenzied crowds, great ratings proved the Classic a great success the first time out. I can't for the life of me understand how spring training exhibitions can get as much press...if not more.

More on that to come...

A pickle of their own making

With Japan's defeat of Mexico, the US needs help (and they've already had plenty) to get to San Diego.

If Japan defeats Korea tomorrow night (and they have a Korea loss to avenge and an officiating wrong to right), the US is eliminated. (But only if Japan scores 7 runs or fewer...got that?)

If Korea (still undefeated) beats Japan again, the US would advance if Clemens can beat Mexico on Thursday.

On the other side of the bracket, the DR took Venezuela down in dramatic fashion (2-1). Tough loss for Luis, Luis Sojo, but form held.

Cuba-P.R. should be wild...I'm rooting for Cuba, Korea, and the U.S. of course to join DR in the semis.

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

What's with ESPN?

Korea, one of two undefeated teams, plays Team USA in a 10pm game that could get either into the semifinals, and ESPN can't allocate one of its four U.S. channels to cover it live? Die-hards must avoid seeing the scoreticker until 1am and then stay up into the dead of night--for a game on U.S. soil? What gives?

Big wins for DR and Venezuela today. All four teams in that pool are 1-1 with a much-anticipated DR-VEN rematch tomorrow.

Monday, March 13, 2006

Headline of the day.

It might be about the dramatic U.S. victory over Japan with a two-out bases-loaded single by Alex Rodriguez who finally proved he can deliver a big hit (although he admitted afterward that he was merely trying to "survive" against a pitcher who the U.S. had not. scouted.) That pitcher almost changed Japanese baseball history by striking out Griffey Jr. with a full-count fastball and the bases loaded.

But today's headline is not about the US, Cuba, or Japan--nor the atrocious call that erased Japan's lead--rather it's the decisive Puerto Rico victory over the Dominican Republic. If the Mexico team can edge past Korea tonight, the PR team will be the only undefeated team left in the tourney. It's no surprise when you look at the quality of their line-up and their clutch team play led by Mr. Clutch, Pudge Rodriguez. The oddsmakers would do well to Keep an eye on the PR.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

To the bottom of the 9th!


Electric moment number 2:

Brad Lidge strikes out Hitoshi Tamura, a bigtime slugger with 2 homeruns in 3 games, with the bases loaded to preserve a 3-3 tie. Anaheim crowd is frenzied!

WBC's First Snafu


MInor league (American) umpires take the go-ahead Japanese run off the board by overturning a sacrifice tag call. Replay shows that the Japanese runner did NOT leave early. Unfortunate call for all concerned.

A-Rod sucks!


Despite batting .500 for the tourney, you know this Classic really counts for something, because A-Rod just struck out with the go-ahead run at 3rd and two outs. A familar scene from Anaheim...

Electricity!


U.S. electric moment Number One:

Derek Lee homers to left center to tie Japan at 3-3. US players from the Yankees and Red Sox, Dodgers and Giants hug in jubilation.

Japan 3, USA 1, 6th


Spectacular Japanese defense. Two, nearly 3 double-plays--now a Jeteresque grab of Griffey's blooper. Talk about honoring baseball.

This game features all four two-hundred hit players last season...

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Favorite typo of the tournament

"Pronounciation (sic) guide for World Baseball Classic"

He built it--and they came


Bud Selig has love-hate relationships around the baseball world--George Steinbrenner included--but he was onto something with the Classic.

He said the fans would follow if the players did..and the first round ratings confirm it. Canada's upset of the USA was seen by almost 2 million viewers, a number Simon Cowell can scoff at, but the most watched telecast on ESPN 2 this year and the third most watched non-playoff baseball game in ESPN history. Let's not forget it was an afternoon game.

While I'm praising Selig's vision here, let's dispense with another bit of nonsense. To those who point to March Madness and decry what a terrible time March is to schedule the Classic, let's hear one decent alternative?

April--and mess with opening day traditions while eating into the regular season?

Midsummer--baseball owners peak revenue period and awfully humid in Latin America?

September--pennant season?

Or November--a month after most sore ballplayers have already hit the golf courses?

March really is the only time to play it and those who take it seriously have months to put in some extra work. (Roger sure looked sharp.)

As for college basketball, baseball fans craving opening day can pay attention to both. And it was smart of MLB to schedule an off-day tonight with all the conference finals.

As for me, I'll focus on brackets on Monday. Tomorrow we could have four great games:

CUB-VEN at 1 EST
US-JPN at 4
DR-PR at 8
MEX-KOR at 11

My bet is that one, if not two, of these is a semi-final preview.

Is this the end for Rocket?


...Asks one of my blog faithful. I think it just might be if he wins the world championship final. If not--and there's something left for him to do after the All-Star break--I think he will be back. What else is Roger going to do?

Friday, March 10, 2006

Yanks Win, Cubans Lose


Interesting day. Team USA had a decent live action batting practice...and Puerto Rico--behind BER-NIE Williams (another HR) and Beltran (ditto)--made Cuba's squad look like BP pitchers.

How good is the P.R.? About as good as Bernie, Beltran, Pudge and an under-rated pitching staff.

How good is Cuba? Probably not as good as 19 straight international amateur victories suggested. Latin pro ball has clearly encroached on their historic dominance. But everything broke for PR tonight in San Juan. I think Cuba will still make Round 2 interesting.

How good are the Dominicans?

Adam, from Chicago--the best World Cup soccer analyst I know--asks whether the D.R. is the best team in this thing.
 
It certainly looks that way right now. My guess is that the scare Cuba got from Panama was something of a fluke and the Cuba team will get better with each round. At their best, they appear to have more weapons than the D.R., but Dominican power is producing--seven homeruns through Thursday--and they may just overpower most of these pitching staffs.
 
Will the US get better with playing time? Almost certainly, but how much is a real question. A-Rod and Griffey still look tight and they need to produce to keep pace with the Latin teams. Canada exposed a middle relief problem if Willis has another poor start. It seems absurd that U.S. chances are falling on the shoulders of Jake Peavy, however talented, and Roger Clemens. I'm as impressed with Rocket as the next guy, but everyone knows it takes him some time to get his hydraulics going. The D.R. could put up seven runs before he breaks a sweat. The round of 8 should be very interesting.
 
Sidenote Adam: When I was in B.A. last month, Maradona pronounced Lionel Messi "the next Maradona." Nothing like absurb expectations to destroy a young talent, right? Most Argentine aficionados I talked to say the roster is as talented as any for 2006, but few were confident that it could come together as a team.

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Mexico Advances

Mexico pitching has been very impressive. Where was this Esteban Loaiza when he wore Yankee pinstripes?

My semi-final predictions for March 18th

Dominican Republic v. Cuba, 12pm (PCT)

United States-Japan, 7pm (PCT)

I need to see Cuba against a team that has won a game before I will handicap the semis.

Handicapping Round 2

Assuming the U.S. team does beat a South African team they have no business losing to, it will have the extra advantage of meeting two Asian teams that will not have played tournament ball in more than a week...and a Mexico team that the U.S. knows it can beat.

It remains to be seen whether they will get the competitive games and tune-up they may need to face four well-oiled teams from Latin America...assuming, of course, that Team USA isn't blind-sided by the Korean pitching staff or a very competitive Japanese team...even without Hideki Matsui.

I have believed since last night that a U.S. loss would be a good thing for the tourney as long as the team eventually advanced. Why? Because it should fire the Americans up and bring them together. And it should give U.S. superstars who opted out a chance to see how they would feel if the U.S. lost the first true world championship.

At this point the D.R. has to be the clear favorite, followed close behind by Venezuela (who played them tough), and the winner of tomorrow's Cuba-Puerto Rico game. It will be very interesting to see if Cuba has another gear in Round 2.

Round 2 Picture Taking Shape

With Mexico's 8-run margin over Canada (9th inning) and Venezuela's lead over a much weaker Dutch team, Round 2 is shaping up as follows:

Pool 1
Dominican Republic
Venezuela
Cuba
Puerto Rico

Pool 2
Korea
Japan
Mexico
...and...United States of America, assuming 7-time Cy Young winner Roger Clemens can find enough spring gas to shutdown South Africa and give the U.S. a chance to win.

Shocking as it may seem, the U.S. will be the last of 8 teams to clinch a Round 2 birth.

If they were even the slightest bit over-confident going in, they certainly can't take anything
for granted now.

Given the easiest bracket to advance from, Team USA is making it look way too hard.

Why we're all Canadian baseball fans tonight...

Team USA advances if Mexico loses to Canada tonight and Roger Clemens would face one less must-win situation in the waning moments of his career.

The U.S. could be eliminated, however, if Mexico beats Canada by scores of 1-0-, 2-0, or 2-1. The U.S. all-stars would be done...back to their spring training locker rooms and in the Yankees case, their curmudgeonly owner.

If Mexico defeats Canada by scoring three runs or more, Canada is eliminated. The math seems peculiar, but such are the vagaries of pool play, as many a World Cup soccer team has discovered. (This is a very similar format.)

Interesting factoid from Kevin.Kernan@nypost.com:

Wayne Gretzky tried to tell Derek Jeter over dinner earlier this week that Team Canada would be a difficult opponent...

Said Alex Rodriguez, "We're cheering for Canada, right? What's the spread? It's almost like an NCAA bracket. You have to win every game and there's no room for error."

Almost A-Rod, except it's not single-elimination until you get to the semis. And the number one seed never has to pray that a 3-seed beats a 2 just to advance to the second round.

Gohh, Canada, eh?

Birth of the latest Beantown Yankee Killer?

David Ortiz is definitely using the Classic to sharpen his knives a little earlier. He's batting .667 with 2HR and a 2.667 slugging PCT against formidable pitching.

Damon's move to NY and Canada's win over USA has paved the way for Adam Stern. As Todd Devlin details, yesterday's game should have given the 26 year old centerfielder the confidence he needs to break through in Boston. (3-for-4, 4RBI, a triple, an inside the park home run, and two game-saving catches in center to foil the 6-run U.S. comeback.) The performance couldn't have been missed by USA Catcher and Boston captain Jason Varitek.
http://todddevlin.mlblogs.com/

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Miracle on Grass?

Murray Chass' piece posted minutes ago is the first mainstream comment on the upset that I have found in an hour of surfing...

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/03/09/sports/sportsspecial/09usa.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Comparing a single win to a Devil Ray world championship seems a bit extreme. Every baseball fan knows that anything can happen on any single day...especially when a starter has a bad day and you get into the bullpen. Al Leiter's selection to the team was clearly a sentimental mistake on the part of Buck Martinez. Even Rick Sutcliffe on ESPN remarked that he had a woeful workout a couple of days ago. Why take that risk when your bullpen is stocked full of fresh closers?

Still...all credit to Team Canada. They outplayed the U.S. in every aspect of the game. Particularly bad...America got six walks and left five of them on base...

Team USA Press Blog

Dave Fanucchi, Director of Communications for USA Baseball, shares his insights and views on the World Baseball Classic.
http://usa.mlblogs.com/

Random report of the day:

I was making some copies in the home clubhouse office this morning, and I caught Clemens on the internet trying to look up where the movie "Crash" was being shown tonight somewhere near our hotel. He asked me if I knew if it was still in theaters, and neither of us were sure. He also mentioned that he heard it won the Academy Award for best picture....

Canada Shocks, Cuba-Panama game rocks

Where to begin tonight's reactions?

The continuing testimonials* from big leaguers on all sides that this thing is the most exciting thing they've ever experienced?

"This was bigger than any World Series win I've ever had," said reliever Mike Timlin, who picked up the win. "This is my All-Star game, my Olympics, it's just awesome. I was watching Jake [Peavy] those first few innings, and my hands were sweating like I had dipped them in a bucket of water."

"I wanted to win this game with every single thing I had in me,"
Peavy said. "You don't understand -- you just don't understand what it's like when you put that uniform on. I've never had a better feeling in my life. It's the coolest thing I've ever done as a baseball player."

Canada's Adam Stern going "inside the yard" and robbing Team USA of a dramatic come-from-behind win?

The fact that USA found themselves down 8-0 and needing a 6-run inning (behind Varitek's mammoth slam) to get back in it?

The fact that Roger Clemens needs to come through against South Africa and the run differential may determine whether US or Mexico advance?

Close, well-executed, see-saw ballgames in every pool?

Or, perhaps, one of the most exciting games played in North America in a year: Panama's feisty battle with Cuba--a game chock full of twists--determined in the 10th inning to Cuba's satisfaction.

For a great piece on the atmosphere in the ballparks and fan enthusiasm, see:
http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/worldclassic2006/columns/story?columnist=stark_jayson&id=2358876

Post-game notes on the U.S., D.R., P.R., and Cuba

'Classic within the classic'

There's no doubt that Cuba is gunning for a showdown with the U.S. team. Team spokesman Pedro Cabrera said it would be "a classic within the classic" and wondered if Bush would invite Castro to the game.

Notes & Quotes

Operating efficiently under tight pitch counts, U.S. pitchers threw 75% of their pitches for strikes--a remarkable ratio. Starter Jake Peavy, who would love to pitch an elimination game in his hometown of San Diego, threw 19 of 23 pitches for strikes in his three complete innings.

"I probably had more butterflies today than any playoff game." -- Chipper Jones

"I feel like I was playing the World Series in March. It was a great feeling. There's something very special about playing in my country, my hometown, people chanting my name. It's a special thing." -- Bernie Williams, who had an RBI to put P.R. ahead over Panama (Final 2-1).

Tuesday, March 07, 2006

The U.S. Debut

After catching some of the weekend match-ups in Asia...including the dramatic finale of Korea's upset of Japan (with the Japanese Emperor in attendance), I was hoping to catch both the D.R.-Venezuela and U.S.-Mexico games today. I had to settle for WBC's gameday webcast for the former, but caught most of the U.S. debut.

A few observations:

If the U.S. gets knocked out early, it may be symbolic that the first ball put in play against an American caught him (Utley, 2B) off-guard and knocked him on his ass...

So much for the critique that these guys will be out of shape and full of cobwebs. The U.S. turned crisp doublep-lays all night. Chipper Jones stepped off the bench and drove the first pitch for an opposite field homerun. The defense was sharp. If anything, Jeter's first couple throws, forcing Lee to stretch, showed a few (dare I say it?) nerves--and how seriously he takes this competition.

How serious does Griff Jr. take it? He took an extra hour and a half of batting practice. His Dad donated a few weeks in March to serve as U.S. 1B coach.

And Chipper? He said the homerun with a USA on his chest was an instant "career highlight."

I don't know if it's the pitch limit or other factors, but U.S. pitchers are really going after the hitters.

The upbeat tempo [final gametime: "a very manageable" 2:06], crisp D, and U.S. players running off the field show that this team is there to play. This is no lark for these millionaires...what a refreshing energy in contrast to lethargic April ball or deadslow August ball.

At first I wondered about some of the U.S. names, mostly NL players, I had never seen. All of them have impressive stats or real specialties and it's a pleasure to learn about NL stars in a way that the All-Star game would never inspire me to do.

My wife and her Cubs fan posse is quick to point out that the first U.S. run was not generated by Damon, Jeter, or A-Rod, but Chicago 1Bman Derek Lee. Hey, they're all red, white, and blue to me. Go D-Lee.

It may be mostly spring training tourists, but the crowd seems pretty electric from ESPN's tv coverage. Same energy in the DR-VZ game I was told.

What an opportunity this tournament is for international scouts...and international players stuck in the lower minor leagues to perform on a big stage...

Ouch...a classic Jeter foul ball into his ankle. Selig's heart skipped a beat. But someone tell me why would it be any worse for Jeter to injure himself here than in a meaningless split squad game in Florida?

A sure sign that A-Rod takes this mighty serious: He's picked up right where he left off in Anaheim last fall...pressing and failing. Still, kudos for playing. I didn't expect it, waffle or not.

Final: 2-0 U.S. shoutout. Deep pitching staff. A couple of bombs. They'll need to generate more runs to keep pace with the D.R. and who knows about Cuba? Can't wait to get a glimpse of that squad.

Game on.

Baseball and Global Diplomacy

On a late night return flight from Argentina last Friday I decided to share my excitement about the inaugural World Baseball Classic. The following piece ran in The Globalist e-zine this morning:

http://www.theglobalist.com/StoryId.aspx?StoryId=5173