Adames: Classic experience 'maybe above' World Series
March 17, 2023 1 minute ago
SURPRISE, Ariz. --
If there were any doubt what the World Baseball Classic means to players from around the globe, listen to Willy Adames after he returned to Brewers camp on Friday morning after representing the Dominican Republic.
“For us, it’s in our blood,” Adames said. “We live for this. We love the game. This is what we do since we are babies. Since we were in the belly of our mother, we feel baseball.
“They have so many sports going on [in the United States]. They have basketball, they have American football. Dominicans, Puerto Ricans, Venezuelans, we have baseball. That’s what we have.”
Adames played in the 2020 World Series with the Rays. How did his Classic experience compare?
“I mean, it would have to be tied with the World Series. Maybe above. Maybe,” Adames said. “But it was just incredible. It was different, way different.”
The Classic didn’t go the way Adames drew it up. He played in only one of four games for the Dominican Republic, which juggled Adames, the Astros’ Jeremy Peña and the Rays’ Wander Franco at shortstop. With such a stacked roster, the Dominicans expected to play beyond the first round, but they were eliminated after going 2-2 in Pool D in Miami, with Venezuela and Puerto Rico advancing.
Red Sox star was in DH role for Dominican Republic: 'The games were very, very intense'
FORT MYERS, Fla. --
Representing the Dominican Republic on an international stage for the first time is something Rafael Devers, will never forget.
“It was a great experience, a really good experience for me,” Devers said. “I'm very happy that I had the opportunity to represent my country. The games were very, very intense, very motivational for me, and I felt happy to be able to represent my country.”
Devers, who served as the cleanup hitter and DH for a squad that had Manny Machado at third base, went 2-for-16 with two walks and no RBIs.
If the performance by Devers was forgettable, there were parts of the experience that the left-handed-hitting slugger will remember for a long time. What stood out the most was the electric crowd in Miami.
“There was a moment where I couldn't hear anybody beside me,” Devers said. “That’s a really beautiful moment for us as players, when you have so many people cheering for you and be as loud as they were.”
The moments he got to bond with other stars from his country was another perk of the experience.
“It was a great experience to be able to share a clubhouse with those guys, with [Juan] Soto, with Machado, with Jeremy Peña. Those are guys that you would like to share your clubhouse with or your team with at any moment, and it was a really great experience for me,” Devers said.
Back and blasting: Peña homers twice in return from Classic
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- If you couldn’t tell, Jeremy Peña has been playing a little bit.
The Astros’ shortstop made that abundantly clear on Friday, when he homered twice in Houston’s 11-7 loss to the Nationals at The Ballpark of the Palm Beaches in his first game back from the World Baseball Classic.
“It was a great time,” Peña said of the Classic. “I had a blast seeing countries go at it. I've never seen an environment like that, with all the drums and the flags, the waving of the flags. It was a pretty cool experience.”
Though Peña is disappointed by the highly touted Dominican club’s early tournament exit, the Astros are relieved to have him and other key contributors back in camp, particularly after Mets closer Edwin Díaz suffered a potentially season-ending right knee injury while celebrating Puerto Rico’s advance. What befell Díaz is a concern for all teams sending players to the Classic, and the Astros, who had 14 participating players, did request that prized starter Framber Valdez not participate, in part due to injury risk.
But for Peña and many others, the opportunity to represent their country on the international stage trumped any inherent injury risk, making the choice to play an easy one. It’s a perspective Astros manager Dusty Baker respects and understands, even if with regards to Peña, the focus now shifts toward being ready for Opening Day.
MLB Pipeline | Top 100 prospects
With all of the ranked prospects now eliminated from the tournament, here's a look back at some of the standouts.
We love the World Baseball Classic because of the big-name stars: Mike Trout, Shohei Ohtani, Juan Soto and Randy Arozarena are among those who have stood out, as expected.
It’s arguable, however, that one of the top storylines of the WBC so far has been the play of the multitude of prospects who were included on their country’s roster. From players on the Top 100 to others on their organization’s Top 30 and even unranked gems, the sport’s future has been on full display.
Harry Ford becomes royalty
Great Britain’s home run celebration -- involving the presentation of a crown and robe -- holds no official weight in the United Kingdom, but Harry Ford may be on his way to actually becoming knighted in the future.
One of three Top 100 prospects participating in the tournament, Ford (No. 49) led his squad with two home runs and a 1.246 OPS in four games. That came on the heels of his WBC Qualifiers performance last September, where he hit three long balls in as many games.
Ford’s play made him a fan favorite across the pond, setting him up to be one to watch in the 2026 edition of the Classic -- which Great Britain qualified for when the United States beat Colombia on the final day of Pool D play and ensured the Brits would not finish last in the group. At that point, the Mariners' top prospect should have substantial Major League time under his belt.
Canada’s young hitters step up
No team entered the WBC rostering more prospects than Canada, which boasted seven players ranked on a team Top 30 list. Leading the pack was Bo Naylor, the Guardians backstop who ranks No. 64 on the Top 100.
The Canadians’ six home runs were the most in pool play among the eight teams based in the United States. Surprising? Yes. Even more shocking -- none came off the bats of powerful Major Leaguers Freddie Freeman and Tyler O’Neill. Instead, five of the six were hit by ranked prospects: two by Edouard Julien (Twins No. 4)
and one each by Naylor, Owen Caissie (Cubs No. 13) and Otto Lopez (Blue Jays No. 14).
Julien went deep on the first pitch of his first plate appearance in the tournament, a sign of things to come. Each component of his triple slash -- .538/.667/1.154 -- led all prospects in pool play, and his 1.821 OPS was tops in the entire tournament at the point of Canada's elimination.
Other notable offensive performances
The highest ranked of the three Top 100 prospects in the WBC, Brewers outfielder
Sal Frelick (No. 30), hit an impressive .329/.421/.556 with three doubles in four group games to lead Italy out of Pool A and into the quarterfinals, where the team fell to Japan.
Jose Ramos (Dodgers No. 23) was one of Panama’s strongest performers in pool play, hitting .313 with one of the team’s two home runs. The 22-year-old drilled 25 homers in the Los Angeles system last season.
Tsung-Che Cheng (Pirates No. 30) did a little bit of everything for Chinese Taipei from clutch hitting and speed on the bases, legging out a triple, to even laying down a bunt for a hit and showing off strong defense up the middle.
Zuñiga introduces himself to the world
Eyebrows may have been raised when the Cardinals signed right-hander Guillermo Zuñiga to a Major League contract in December. After all, this was a pitcher who posted a 4.77 ERA in 2022 at Double-A -- a level he was repeating.
It took about two pitches into Zuñiga’s first outing for Colombia for the signing to make sense. The 24-year-old hit 100 mph 10 times, topping out at 102 during that game against Mexico in which he locked down the save. Between his two appearances Zuñiga struck out six of the 11 batters he faced, including Trout and Paul Goldschmidt in Colombia's final game in Pool C.
Heartwarming moments
Some of the best moments from the opening round of the tournament didn’t come from ranked prospects. In fact, one of them wasn’t even a Minor League player until after his WBC debut.
Duque Hebbert entered the WBC as a 21-year-old reliever for Nicaragua without any experience in affiliated baseball. After striking out three of the Dominican Republic’s most-feared hitters -- Juan Soto, Julio Rodríguez and Rafael Devers -- Hebbert left the stadium that night as the newest member of the Detroit Tigers organization. Following the outing, a scout tracked him down and offered him a contract on the spot.
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