Canada was eliminated by Italy last night in the World Baseball Classic. Yeah, I know what you’re thinking.
“So?”
Well, Mr. Cheney, you aren’t alone. There’s been a lot of criticism of the WBC. That it’s played at a poor time of the year, that it’s not a true showing of international talent, that it’s a superfluous exercise created by the commissioner to do nothing more than line the pockets of Major League Baseball. While it’s hard to argue with some of these points, the critics are missing the bigger picture.
There’s some good ball being played right now. You’ve got mighty rosters loaded with All Stars form the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, and the United States. You’ve got underdogs like the Netherlands beating the Dominicans and putting the fear of God into Puerto Rico. You have the aforementioned Italians, who just dismissed a lineup of Justin Morneau, Jason Bay, Mark Teahan and Matt Stairs.
There are great stories within the tournament. Dutch pitching coach Bert Blyleven, the Rodney Dangerfield of baseball who is on a seemingly endless quest for respect, has taken a group of nobodies (Juan Carlos Sulbaran? Rick VandenHurk? Who are these guys?) and has them competing at a very high – if not the highest – level of the game.
Mike Piazza is doing the same thing for the Italian hitters, especially Chris Denorfia.
Bernie Williams was discarded and dismissed by the Yankees two years ago. It was a classless move made by an organization that prides itself on taking care of it’s players. Williams is playing some outfield for Puerto Rico this spring, because he knows he has a little more left in the tank. He wants to leave the game with a little dignity, and on his own terms.
Beyond the human interest stuff, this is the best way to showcase baseball on an international stage. It’s no longer an Olympic sport, and it would be silly to not have an international competition. Just like soccer. Just like basketball. Hell, even Cricket has a world cup.
Yes, it’s a weird time to hold the tournament, because it screws up spring training. But when would be a better time to play it. November? I don’t think so. And I just can’t see Major League Baseball, the Japanese Leagues, and the various other professional leagues around the world all agreeing to shut their seasons down for two weeks in the middle of July. March is an inconvenient time, but it’s really the only time to do it.
And yes, you don’t have all the best players in the world playing for a multitude of different reasons, and that’s an issue that needs to be addressed. Some players are afraid to risk their health, and I can respect that. But there are rumors that some teams have quietly pressured their players not to play. That falls directly on Bud Selig. This tournament is his baby, and he needs to get his owners and organizations in line. A stronger commissioner could – and hopefully someday will – get that done.
And yes, it’s meant to be a money maker for the various professional baseball organizations around the world. But that doesn’t mean it’s not a good idea. Just because it’s a capitalistic venture doesn’t mean that the guys who are playing don’t feel national pride when they put on a jersey with their country’s name on it.
And that’s the big point, right there. This is about the passion that so many players – Dominican, Korean, Australian, whoever – have for their game and their country. It’s about bragging rights, and civic pride, and showing the rest of the world that your country is the best. It’s really pretty simple.
This is only the second time the tournament has been held. It will grow. It will mature. It will gain some prestige. It needs some time, but it’s going to write its own legends. Like this one: as I’m finishing this article, a bunch of minor leagers and amateurs from the Netherlands just beat the Dominican Republic and its All-Star-at-every-position roster for the second time in four days, knocking the Dominicans out of the tournament.
Unbelievable. This thing is awesome.
“And yes, it’s meant to be a money maker for the various professional baseball organizations around the world.”
Out of curiosity, who are the various professional baseball organizations that are making money from this? Where does the revenue from this go?
The World Baseball Classic is essentially a joint venture between the major professional baseball leagues from the participating countries (the United States, Japan, Australia, etc.), their corresponding players unions, and the International Baseball Federation (which is known as the IBAF). I don’t know this for sure, but I have a pretty good feeling that most of the investment comes from Major League Baseball and the MLBPA, followed by Nippon Professional Baseball and the NPBPA. This year, there will be approximately $15 million dollars distributed to the participating countries, with the amount depending on where those countries finish in the standings. That money is then intended to be used to develop baseball in each of those countries, although I have no idea how much regulation and oversight follows that money. The IBAF is also receiving $1 million dollars to develop basbeall around the world.
That’s all well and good, but the real intent here is to market baseball on an international scale, especially in areas where the popularity of the game isn’t vry high. I would say it’s probably already done wonders for the interest in the Netherlands. The more interest there is in the game around the world, the more those international markets will become consumers of the game, thereby adding to the bottom line of the various professional leagues around the world.
I would refer you to a couple articles I found online:
http://baseballdeworld.com/2009/03/04/2009-world-baseball-classic-to-generate-15-million-for-worldwide-baseball-development/
http://www.bizofbaseball.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3030:participating-baseball-federations-in-wbc-to-receive-more-than-15m&catid=30:mlb-news&Itemid=42