Well, Pool 1 of Round 2 of the World Baseball Classic is all set. Go below the jump for a preview of the pool, and also consider looking back at my predictions for Pool A and Pool B of the first round, which include a good amount of other information, such as the history and culture of the nations.
Tag Archives: WBC
Early WBC News for March 6, 2013
Go below the jump for the latest WBC News:
Late WBC News for March 5, 2013
Go below the jump for today’s WBC news:
Early WBC News for March 5th, 2013
Not much news today, merely one late pull-out due to injury as well as a replacement of somebody who had been injured. In fact, both of today’s news item is in the form of an embedded tweet:
Canada adds free agent LHP RJ Swindle of Vancouver to WBC roster in place of the injured Jesse Crain.
— Shi Davidi (@ShiDavidi) March 5, 2013
Jeff Bianchi (left groin) is off Team Italy. #Brewers down to a paltry 12 players in the World Baseball Classic.
— Adam McCalvy (@AdamMcCalvy) March 5, 2013
There you go. More WBC news later today, as well as a preview tomorrow of Pool 1 of the Second Round and an article as to why the doomsaying about the WBC is (probably) overblown. Spoiler alert: The numbers show that the WBC is more popular than many people perceive it to be.
Late WBC News for March 4, 2013
Go below the jump for the latest WBC news:
Early WBC News for March 4, 2013
Not much news due to the fact the Western players are arriving and having initial workouts, but there is some:
Jesse Crain of the White Sox has had to pull out of Team Canada due to a shoulder injury (apparently some type of strain). But, have no fear Canada, because Joey Votto will be playing for you.
And, also, here are the possibilities for the Asian Pools as to how tiebreakers will work. I won’t go into super detail, but it’s like this:
Japan and Cuba have already advanced. Remaining games in Pool A are just for seeding and pride, and, for Brazil and China, likely a chance to avoid getting relegated back to qualifiers.
In Pool B, it’s more complicated. But, in essence, it’s like this:
If Taipei wins against Korea, and the Netherlands beats Australia, then CT and the Dutch advance.
If Korea wins and the Netherlands lose, then CT and Korea advance.
Basically, if CT wins, they’re in.
If the Netherlands beats Australia by 8 or more runs, then they advance basically no matter what.
If Korea beats Taipei by 4 or more runs, they advance basically no matter what.
But what if there’s a 3-way tie at the top and one of the above things doesn’t happen? Then it gets complicated… quoting Pat Lackey from The Outside Corner:
That means that — deep breath — Chinese Taipei will advance with a win, with a loss to South Korea by four runs or less, or a loss to South Korea by four runs or more coupled with a Netherlands loss to Australia or a Netherlands victory over Australia that doesn’t make up the run differential between the two sides. South Korea will advance with a win over Chinese Taipei by four runs or more or a win over Chinese Taipei by three runs or less, so long as Netherlands doesn’t beat Australia by one run more than they (meaning South Korea) beat Chinese Taipei by. Netherlands advances by beating Australia by at least eight runs or by beating Australia by at least one more run than by which South Korea beats Chinese Taipei. This holds true even if Korea beats Chinese Taipei by four runs, because in that case a five-run win by Netherlands will give them a better differential by Chinese Taipei by one run. There is a caveat here: if Korea beats Chinese Taipei by nine runs or more, all Netherlands has to do is win. Got it?
It is also technically possible for Australia to advance if they beat Netherlands and Chinese Taipei beats South Korea because that would result in Netherlands, Korea, and Australia all sitting at 1-2. Unfortunately for Australia, their run differential is currently -9, so either they’d have to crush Netherlands or they’d have to narrowly beat Netherlands while Chinese Taipei crushes South Korea. Neither of those results seems terribly likely.
Got all of that? Okay, come back later for more WBC news.
WBC News for March 3, 2013
In case you didn’t notice, there wasn’t any early World Baseball Classic news today. There are two reasons for this:
A) Catching up on sleep deprivation from watching some of the Asian WBC games
B) There really wasn’t much news, as most of the western players were traveling to their camps.
So, really, the only news is this: Yovani Gallardo will be able to (probably) play in the WBC, although there is a question as to if he will have to throw another inning as a warmup, which could mess up his pitching schedule.
So, yeah, see you tomorrow.
Late WBC News for March 2, 2013
Some final WBC news before tonight’s games (go here for news from earlier in the day)… after jump.
Mid-Day WBC News for March 2, 2013
Just a few bits of WBC news before tonight:
The replacement for Chris Perez is David Hernandez of the Diamondbacks. Earlier reports had him switching from Mexico to Team USA (bringing the hackles from the WBC’s critics), but it turns out he had already had to drop out from Team Mexico due to a lack of documentation to prove he fit the eligibility criteria for them. Brad Ziegler, a Diamondbacks teammate and member of the 2009 WBC team, was the one who broke this story, of all people.
A groin strain has put Yovani Gallardo in doubt for the WBC. This could be huge, as Gallardo was would likely be starting against Team USA for Mexico. If he doesn’t play- or if he plays with a decreased capacity- then Team USA will have caught a break and Mexico dealt a blow.
Melky Mesa sees an opportunity in Yankees camp and is skipping the WBC to try and win the starting job that has come open with Granderson’s injury.
Efrain Nieves will replace the injured Javier Vazquez for Puerto Rico.
And, hey, remember that Mexican NASCAR vehicle that was going to be in a WBC get-up? Well, it won.
On Day 1 of the WBC
Some thoughts on Day 1 of the WBC….
…The Brazilians aren’t screwing around. They very easily could have won that game against Japan had a few plays turned out different, perhaps even had a single play gone differently. This is Brazil’s big coming out party for baseball, and based on the fact that words like “Japao” (Japan) were trending in Brazil, I’d say that they baseball could be seeing the emergence of a new market.
…Korea is in trouble. The Netherlands is good, and may have won their game against Korea even if the Koreans could hit a lick or didn’t have four errors. But the fact that Korea was so impotent at the plate and inept in the field made it a game that was far more of a blowout than the score suggested. So now, Korea is a loss away from near-certain elimination and due to face two tough teams: Taipei and Australia. Neither are close to a guaranteed win, especially if Korea plays like they did against the Honkballers.
…Chien-Ming Wang still has it. Well, not the speed on his pitches, but certainly the sinker and it’s patented ability to get a double-play at the right time. Whatever rallies that Australia was able to have against the Taiwanese starter were quickly destroyed by the twin killings. While I don’t think Wang has the stuff for a MLB starter anymore, he could probably find a good niche as a reliever and spot-starter.