Quantcast The Guilfordian
College Media Network

The Guilfordian

United States: empty-handed in the World Baseball Classic

Will Cornelius

Issue date: 3/27/09 Section: Sports
  • Print
  • Email
  • Page 1 of 1
In case you missed it, the World Baseball Classic was back in 2009, with 16 countries from around the globe vying to wear the next WBC crown.

For many, baseball doesn't exist outside the limits of Major League Baseball, where birthplace and ethnicity have become secondary statistics.

So if the greatest players from baseball's greatest stage compete at the international level, then the United States must be number one, right?

Wrong.

Baseball remains the most diverse major sport in the world, with over 30 percent of Major Leaguers born outside of the United States, and foreign-born minor league players hovering at an astonishing 50 percent.

As baseball continues to grow globally, foreign-born players have flooded Major League markets, leaving the United States a limited selection with which to finalize their roster.

Despite their hot start to the '09 WBC, the United States team found themselves just short of bringing home international hardware. Although U.S. Olympic teams sport one gold and two bronzes, baseball at the Olympic level is typically sub par to that of our friends from the Far East and Latino neighbors from the south.

This year, team USA's incredible march through the WBC ended in Los Angeles when Japan eliminated them for the second time in as many Classics. It's a shame to be outplayed in our game, on our turf, in what was unfolding to be our year.

Maybe baseball isn't just America's national pastime anymore, as countries from around the world have transformed the game, inserting their own culture and swagger to emerge as legitimate contenders.

But perhaps the real enemy is Major League Baseball itself, encouraging many American players to choose their professional affiliate over the World Baseball Classic. What happened to pride and patriotism? Where did playing for your country lose its integrity? Does no one remember the Dream Team? How about the Miracle on Ice?

As pathetic as it sounds, maybe the United States should take a page out of the international book and play for the name on the front of the jersey, not the back.

The United States is as responsible as anyone for sparking baseball interest worldwide, but consistently falls short of international domination, and remains desperate for a World Baseball Classic title.

Armed with Phiten necklaces and funny swings, the Asian brand of baseball will remain king of the American pastime in 2009, and leave baseball nation much to question about the fortitude of the red, white, and blue.

Paradox?

I think so.
Page 1 of 1

Article Tools

Viewing Comments 1 - 3 of 3

Abram

posted 3/27/09 @ 3:46 PM EST

I think you are right. It is a shame that the American team is not on top where it should be. I am Puertorican and American and share both worlds in my heart. (Continued…)

Jason

posted 3/27/09 @ 5:42 PM EST

"and remains desperate for a World Baseball Classic title."

Hardly, most of American probably didn't even know the WBC was being played, and despite the WBC being a mainly MLB promoted project, even MLB doesn't push the US team to excel. (Continued…)

Klaus Neumann

posted 3/27/09 @ 10:58 PM EST

"most of American probably didn't even know the WBC was being played"

I would actually like to see a statistic on this. I would guess that the number that do know is several times higher this go round than in 2009, and in my own empirical observation American people (including myself) who weren't maladroit and actually liked either baseball, sports, or fun really enjoyed the tournament. (Continued…)

Post a Comment

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Advertisement