Subscribe
Demo

MIAMI — As Pitbull’s “Fireball” thundered from the stadium speakers, Shohei Ohtani readied himself for one last chance.

Standing in loanDepot Park’s third-base dugout before the bottom of the ninth inning, Ohtani went through his pre-at-bat routine. He tightened his batting gloves, fidgeted with his elbow guard and retrieved his lumber from the bat rack. He looked as confident and as impenetrable as ever. But with his club down three runs and down to its final three outs, Ohtani would have to conjure a miracle to keep Japan’s World Baseball Classic hopes alive.

Advertisement

It was not to be.

Neither of the two Samurai Japan hitters ahead of Ohtani reached base. And nobody — not even the greatest player on Earth — can hit a three-run homer with the bases empty. So when the Dodgers’ superstar skied a pop-out to shortstop, it marked the end of the inning, the night and Japan’s dream of back-to-back WBC titles.

Ohtani jogged meekly back to his dugout as the ballyard rumbled around him once again. This time, the reverberating stadium had nothing to do with the earworm anthems of Mr. 305.

[Draft your Yahoo Fantasy Baseball team for the 2026 MLB Season]

This rattling was caused by the majority-Venezuelan crowd erupting in jubilation, with tens of thousands decked out in blue, red and yellow quite literally jumping for joy. The victorious Venezuelan players streamed onto the field to embrace one another. Ohtani gathered his things and ducked out of sight down the dugout tunnel, with the sting of Japan’s worst WBC finish ever yet to sink in.

Advertisement

But Venezuela’s 8-5 victory on Saturday (or rather, Sunday morning — this was a 9 p.m. ET first pitch) was no upset. Nothing about it was flukey, despite Japan’s status as defending champion and Pool C winner. On this night, Venezuela outpitched, outhit and outmanaged Samurai Japan. On paper, Venezuela’s roster was better. And on the field, the team proved as much.

Their reward is a semifinal matchup against a Cinderella Italy team on Monday. Also, crucially, the win guaranteed Venezuela a spot in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

“My country right now is celebrating. It’s extremely happy. It’s on the streets,” Venezuela manager Omar López said afterward. “They’re drinking right now, and that makes me [happier] than anybody else in this world.”

The game started with a volcanic blast, courtesy of Venezuelan top dog Ronald Acuña Jr., the second-most accomplished and talented player on the field. Acuña dispatched the second pitch of Yoshinobu Yamamoto’s evening just over the wall in right. It was vintage Acuña, a low laser to the opposite field, the type of homer that few players could even attempt to muster.

Advertisement

After Acuña’s swing sent loanDepot into a frenzy, Ohtani changed the mood almost immediately with a clob job of his own that evened the score at one. It was a long ball equally predictable and awe-inspiring. If Acuña’s homer produced raw sound, Ohtani’s elicited a more wondrous wave of “ooohs” and “aaahs.”

Read the full article here

Leave A Reply

2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.