Undefeated Puerto Rico baseball team is the best story in 2026 WBC

Undefeated Puerto Rico baseball team is the best story in 2026 WBC

The best story of thisWorld Baseball Classicis not the baseball overdogs, the absurdly talented Team USA or Dominican Republic squads that mix next-level baseball talent with bloodless execution.

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Nor is it – at least not yet – Shohei Ohtani, who blasted a pair of home runs as Japan quietly prevailed in its pool in Tokyo. And never mind the goofy upstarts from countries we weren't sure played baseball – thoughItalymay make its biggest WBC mark yet.

No, the most remarkable group once again hails from an island of 3.2 million, a fraction of the population in theDominicanor Cuba and a miniscule slice of humanity relative to the global superpowers that count their citizens in the hundreds of millions.

For the sixth time in as many iterations of the WBC, Puerto Rico is on to the quarterfinals. That's a claim the Dominicans can't make, having once failed to escape group play. And it may seem ho-hum, given the island of Clemente and Beltran and many Molinas established its hardball bona fides several generations ago.

Yet the baseball-mad territory has been dealt setback after setback going on decades, be it subjugation to the Major League Baseball draft, to a series of hurricanes pounding the island to now, this strange situation involvinginsurance coverageand the terrible misfortune that it just so happened to befall nearly a dozen Puerto Rican ballplayers, thinning a strong yet already compromised talent pool.

Certainly, you've heard about the holy trinity of Puerto Rican shortstops, that Francisco Lindor was denied insurance (he'd end up fracturing a hamate bone, anyway), and the actuaries wouldn't come near Carlos Correa's medical charts, and that Javy Baez was sidelined for a years-agomarijuana violationthat wouldn't have cost him any games in Major League Baseball.

Edwin Diaz and Martin Maldonado celebrate the win against Cuba.

But the insurance monster wouldn't stop until ace Jose Berríos was knocked out, along with useful reliever Alexis Diaz and, perhaps most importantly, switch-hitting catcher Victor Caratini.

All this coming on an island that hasn't been the same ater it was ravaged for eight days in 2017 by Hurricane Maria, dealing long-term setbacks to its infrastructure while its leadertossed paper towelsat the problem.

It's been nearly a decade since Maria. Perhaps you tuned into theSuper Bowl halftimeshow and appreciated the Puerto Rican struggle.

If not, Puerto Rico manager Yadier Molina can fill you in on the baseball end of that equation.

"Here in Puerto Rico, there are a lot of parks that haven't been repaired since Maria," says Molina, the former St. Louis Cardinals great and youngest of the Molina catcher troika, before the team's colossal pool play showdown against Cuba. "We need to give a little TLC to the sport. Everyone talks about education and health, but we need to talk about the sports, also.

"We need to help it, and we need to move it forward."

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Yet help or no help, the Puerto Ricans always seem to move it forward.

United States shortstop Gunnar Henderson (11) celebrates after hitting a two-run double against Great Britain during the fifth inning at Daikin Park on Mar 7, 2026. Shohei Ohtani of Team Japan is forced out after the grounder of Kensuke Kondo #8 of Team Japan in the seventh inning during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool C game between Australia and Japan at Tokyo Dome on March 8, 2026 in Tokyo, Japan. Fans celebrate Taiwan's victory after the World Baseball Classic (WBC) Pool C game between Taiwan and South Korea at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo on March 8, 2026. Taiwan players celebrate after winning their game against South Korea on March 8, 2026 at the Tokyo Dome, Tokyo, Japan. Taiwan's Shao-Hung Chiang (R) tags out South Korea's Kim Ju-won at home plate during the World Baseball Classic (WBC) Pool C game between Taiwan and South Korea at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo on March 8, 2026. Fans hold up Korean national flags as they stand for the national anthem prior to the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool C game between Chinese Taipei and South Korea at Tokyo Dome on March 8, 2026 in Tokyo, Japan. United States shortstop Gunnar Henderson (11), right fielder Roman Anthony (3) and center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong (4) celebrate after the game against Great Britain at Daikin Park. Venezuela first baseman Luis Arraez reacts from second base after hitting a double against Israel during the eighth inning at loanDepot Park on March 7, 2026 in Miami. Bo Gyeong Moon of Team Republic of Korea collides with fence in the seventh inning during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool C game between South Korea and Japan at Tokyo Dome on March 7, 2026 in Tokyo, Japan. Venezuela center fielder Javier Sanoja reacts from third base against Israel during the seventh inning at loanDepot Park on March 7, 2026 in Miami. Venezuela first baseman Luis Arraez (2) celebrates with catcher Salvador Perez (13) after hitting a two-run home run against Israel during the sixth inning at loanDepot Park on March 7, 2026 in Miami. Italy pitcher Gordon Graceffo (44) reacts after getting an out during the seventh inning against Brazil at Daikin Park on March 7, 2026 in Houston. Dominican Republic center fielder Oneil Cruz (15) celebrates his three-run home run in the eighth inning against Nicaragua with teammates at loanDepot Park on March 6, 2026 in Miami. Brazil first baseman Dante Bichette Jr. (77) looks on from the dugout during the third inning against the United States at Daikin Park on March 6, 2026 in Houston Seiya Suzuki #51 of Team Japan celebrates scoring a run by a RBI triple of Masataka Yoshida #34 (not pictured) in the second inning during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool C game between Japan and Chinese Taipei at Tokyo Dome on March 6, 2026 in Tokyo, Japan. Venezuelan baseball fans show their support for their team against the Netherlands at loanDepot Park on March 6, 2026 in Miami. Brazil shortstop Vitor Ito (1) throws to first on an infield single by United States shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. (not pictured) during the first inning at Daikin Park on March 6 in Houston. Fans cheer as Mexico center fielder Alek Thomas (5) slides to score a run during the ninth inning against Great Britain at Daikin Park on March 6, 2026 in Houston. Mexico first baseman Jonathan Aranda (8) celebrates with right fielder Jarren Duran (16) after. hitting a home run during the eighth inning against Great Britain at Daikin Park on March 6, 2026 in Houston. Robbie Perkins #9 of Team Australia is tagged out at home by Martin Cervenka #55 of Team Czechia in the ninth inning during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool C game between Australia and Czechia at Tokyo Dome on March 6, 2026 in Tokyo, Japan. Ronald Acu–a Jr. of Team Venezuela throws hit bat after getting walked during the fifth inning of a 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool D game against Team Kingdom of the Netherlands at loanDepot park on March 6, 2026 in Miami, Florida. Venezuela outfielder Ronald Acu–a Jr. celebrates scoring a run in the first inning against the Netherlands at loanDepot Park on March 6, 2026 in Miami.

See energy and national pride overflow at World Baseball Classic

Minus Caratini, theBoricuaonce again summoned 39-year-old Martín Maldonado to put on the gear and squat behind the plate. One of the major leagues' most respected backstops, Maldonado might have played his final MLB game, and besides, he was just a .204 career hitter, anyway.

Yet you don't last 15 years in the major leagues without something special. And so when Puerto Rico trailed by a run, bottom of the ninth against Panama in a March 7 game that could have jeopardized its hopes, Maldonado simply rolled an opposite-field single to right field that keyed the tying rally.

An inning later, Darell Hernaiz hit a walk-off home run that generated roars in San Juan that probably endured through the team's off day.

Against Cuba, it was Maldonado's spot that came up in a scoreless game, second inning, bases loaded. And the .204 hitter smoked a first-pitch slider into the left field corner. Three runs scored.

Maldonado handled the five-pitcher relay with aplomb; Puerto Rico held Cuba to two hits. The 4-1 victory ensured their spot in the quarterfinals.

Logic would suggest this is where the Boricua get in over their heads. Yet history suggests otherwise: Puerto Rico advanced to the championship game in both 2013 and 2017 – as many WBC finals appearances as Team USA, and one more than the Dominicans. Sure, the Puerto Ricans haven't yet won it all, but they've nonetheless punched above their weight significantly.

It's easy to laugh off the immaculate vibes that always surround this squad. Team Rubio and all that, and court jester Kiké Hernández – another injury casualty this time around – keeping it all loose.

Yet the 20,000 fans who jam Estadio Hiram Bithorn and the many thousands more watching elsewhere create an expectation for the squad.

"We as Puerto Ricans take that very serious," veteran catcher Christian Vazquez said before the Cuba matchup. "We see there's a lot of children looking up to us, and they're going to step into our shoes when there's another Classic, and we're going to have to keep on being a role model.

"So, it has a weight, and we do take that very seriously."

Consider the tradition upheld. Even if the odds seem to get longer every single time.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Puerto Rico baseball 'Boricua' looks to be best story in 2026 WBC

 

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