World preparing to turn eyes on Classic
Sixteen teams excited for Thursday's start of international tournament
By John Schlegel / MLB.com

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First, the world has to earn a chance to play at Dodger Stadium. That begins with the Pool A games in Tokyo, being played earlier than the rest so the two teams that advance to the second round can acclimate to the time-zone difference between Japan and the U.S. They'll hold brief camps in Arizona before traveling to San Diego to meet the top two teams from Pool B, featuring perennial amateur power Cuba and local first-round favorite Mexico.
Team USA is among the squads gathering in Florida and Arizona starting Monday for short camps that will set up the pools being held in the Western Hemisphere. The U.S. and the rest will play exhibitions against Major League teams throughout this week leading up to the tournament. Pool C, featuring the U.S. and Venezuela, will begin in Toronto on Saturday, the same day Pool D, featuring potential powerhouse Dominican Republic and host Puerto Rico, begins in San Juan. Pool B will begin in Mexico City on Sunday, with Mexico and Cuba the favorites to advance. The inaugural World Baseball Classic made a global impression, and it was clear that baseball's innovative gathering of professional and amateur stars from all over the planet was an idea with staying power. It was Team USA's tradition and superstars, Japan's deep pool of professional talent and Cuba's amazing amateur tradition. It was South Africa playing Canada at Scottsdale Stadium -- in baseball. It was Korea and Japan squaring off in Anaheim with enough electricity and fervor to light up the Main Street Electrical Parade across the freeway at Disneyland. And, in the end, it was Japanese closer Akinori Otsuka punching out a victorious yell at PETCO Park. For baseball, it was a revelation not only for the surprising level of competition for a month usually reserved for exhibitions, but also for the chord it struck with fans of all nationalities and descents. The chord it struck in the U.S. might have been a more of a warning bell. USA manager Davey Johnson doesn't need a whole lot of pep talks stored up for his squad, which by all accounts disappointed by winning just one of three games in the second round and missing out on the semifinal round, which instead featured Japan, runner-up Cuba, Korea and the Dominican Republic. "Everybody I've talked to, some guys like the first-timers, they're real pumped up because they saw what happened a couple of years ago, and they don't want that to happen again," said Johnson. "Nobody wants to go back early." Of course not. Everybody wants to be on top of the world, and once again teams from six continents have that chance. It's an opportunity like none other to strut their baseball stuff in front of the world. "This is going to be a great experience to be representing my country," said Korean outfielder Shin-Soo Choo, who made a splash in the Major Leagues last season with the Indians. "This is a once-in-a-lifetime experience." Or, actually, twice in a lifetime now for the baseball world anticipating World Baseball Classic 2.0.John Schlegel is a national reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.















