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2009 World Baseball Classic

The 2009 World Baseball Classic (WBC) was an international baseball competition. It began on March 5 and finished March 23.

2009 World Baseball Classic
Tournament details
Host countriesCanada
Japan
Mexico
Puerto Rico
United States
DatesMarch 5–23, 2009
Teams16
Final positions
Champions Japan (2nd title)
Runners-up South Korea
Third place Venezuela
Fourth place United States
Tournament statistics
Games played39
Attendance801,408 (20,549 per game)
Most valuable player Daisuke Matsuzaka
2006
2013
Jumbotron ad for the 2009 WBC at Rogers Centre

Unlike in 2006, when the round-robin format of the first two rounds led to some eliminations being decided by run-difference tiebreakers, the first two rounds of the 2009 edition were modified double-elimination format. The modification was that the final game of each bracket was winner-take-all, even if won by the team emerging from the loser's bracket, although that game only affected seeding, as two teams always advanced from each bracket.

The biggest surprise in the first round was the Netherlands, which twice defeated the Dominican Republic in Pool D to advance. The second round saw the two Pool A teams (South Korea and Japan) defeat the two Pool B teams (Cuba and Mexico) while the two Pool C teams (Venezuela and the United States) defeated the two Pool D teams (Puerto Rico and the Netherlands). South Korea and Japan then advanced to the final game, playing each other for the fifth time in the tournament (split 2–2 up to that time), and Japan emerged victorious for the second straight Classic, winning the final game 5–3 in 10 innings.

For the second straight Classic, Daisuke Matsuzaka was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament.

Format

As was the case for the 2006 tournament, the sixteen teams were split into four pools of four teams each.[1] Whereas previously the teams played in round-robin competition in the first two rounds, this time they took part in a double-elimination format, similar to the U.S. College World Series sponsored by the NCAA. Under the new format, teams were only guaranteed to play two games. This change was made to eliminate the complicated tiebreaking procedures,[2] which were required for one of the pools in each of the first two rounds in 2006.

After the first round, the tournament was held in the U.S. The top two teams from each of the four pools—seeded from the final game in their respective pools—went to the second round, with the teams from Pools A and B meeting at Petco Park in San Diego for Pool 1, and the teams in Pools C and D playing at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens for Pool 2.[3] Again, both pools made use of double-elimination to determine the teams qualifying for the semifinals. In another change from 2006, the four qualifying teams crossed over for the semifinals, with the winner of each pool playing against the runner-up from the other pool.[2] The championship round process was otherwise unchanged, with each semifinal being a single elimination match, the victors meeting in the final to determine the tournament champion. All three championship round games were held at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.[3]

In the final, the team with the higher winning percentage of games in the tournament were to be the home team. If the teams competing in the final had identical winning percentages in the tournament, then World Baseball Classic, Inc. (WBCI) would conduct a coin flip or draw to determine the home team.

Rosters

Each participating national federation had a deadline of January 19, 2009 to submit a 45-man provisional roster. Final rosters of 28 players, which was required to include a minimum of 13 pitchers and two catchers, were submitted on February 24. If a player on the submitted roster was unable to play, usually due to injury, he could be substituted at any time before the start of the tournament. While rosters could not be changed during a round of competition, a team that advanced to a later round could change its roster for the later round.

Venues

Seven stadiums were used during the tournament:

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D
  Tokyo, Japan   Mexico City, Mexico   Toronto, Canada   San Juan, Puerto Rico
Tokyo Dome Foro Sol Rogers Centre Hiram Bithorn Stadium
Capacity: 42,000 Capacity: 26,000 Capacity: 49,539 Capacity: 18,264
       
Pool 1 Pool 2 Championship
  San Diego, United States   Miami Gardens, United States   Los Angeles, United States
Petco Park Dolphin Stadium Dodger Stadium
Capacity: 42,685 Capacity: 38,560 Capacity: 56,000
     

Pools composition

The 16 teams that participated in the 2006 World Baseball Classic were all invited back for the 2009 tournament. The World Baseball Classic, Inc. (WBCI) changed the members of each pool as compared with the 2006 Classic, however, except for Pool A. There was no official qualifying competition.

Note: Numbers in parentheses indicate positions in the IBAF World Rankings at the time of the tournament.[4][5]

Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D
  China (14)   Australia (10)   Canada (7)   Dominican Republic (17)
  Chinese Taipei (5)   Cuba (1)   Italy (13)   Netherlands (6)
  Japan (4)   Mexico (8)   United States (2)   Panama (9)
  South Korea (3)   South Africa (20)   Venezuela (15)   Puerto Rico (11)

First round

Pool A

PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding
  China0
  Japan4
W1  Japan14
W2  South Korea2
  Chinese Taipei0
  South Korea9
W4  Japan0
W5  South Korea1
Lower round 1Lower final
W3  China0
L1  China4L4  South Korea14
L2  Chinese Taipei1
Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 5, 2009 18:30 China   0–4   Japan   Tokyo Dome 2:55 43,428 Boxscore
Mar 6, 2009 18:30 Chinese Taipei   0–9   South Korea   Tokyo Dome 2:48 12,704 Boxscore
Mar 7, 2009 12:30 Chinese Taipei   1–4   China   Tokyo Dome 2:51 12,890 Boxscore
Mar 7, 2009 19:00 Japan   14–2   South Korea 7 Tokyo Dome 2:48 45,640 Boxscore
Mar 8, 2009 18:30 China   0–14   South Korea 7 Tokyo Dome 2:13 12,571 Boxscore
Mar 9, 2009 18:30 South Korea   1–0   Japan   Tokyo Dome 3:02 42,879 Boxscore

Pool B

PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding
  South Africa1
  Cuba8
W1  Cuba5
W2  Australia4
  Australia17
  Mexico7
W4  Cuba16
W5  Mexico4
Lower round 1Lower final
W3  Mexico16
L1  South Africa3L4  Australia1
L2  Mexico14
Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 8, 2009 12:00 South Africa   1–8   Cuba   Foro Sol 2:37 11,270 Boxscore
Mar 8, 2009 19:00 Australia   17–7   Mexico 8 Foro Sol 3:43 20,821 Boxscore
Mar 9, 2009 20:00 Mexico   14–3   South Africa   Foro Sol 3:33 10,311 Boxscore
Mar 10, 2009 20:00 Cuba   5–4   Australia   Foro Sol 3:29 13,396 Boxscore
Mar 11, 2009 20:00 Mexico   16–1   Australia 6 Foro Sol 2:31 16,718 Boxscore
Mar 12, 2009 19:00 Mexico   4–16   Cuba 7 Foro Sol 3:33 20,149 Boxscore

Pool C

PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding
  Canada5
  United States6
W1  United States15
W2  Venezuela6
  Italy0
  Venezuela7
W3  United States3
W5  Venezuela5
Lower round 1Lower final
W4  Italy1
L1  Canada2L3  Venezuela10
L2  Italy6
Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 7, 2009 14:00 Canada   5–6   United States   Rogers Centre 2:55 42,314 Boxscore
Mar 7, 2009 20:00 Italy   0–7   Venezuela   Rogers Centre 3:00 13,272 Boxscore
Mar 8, 2009 20:00 United States   15–6   Venezuela   Rogers Centre 3:39 13,094 Boxscore
Mar 9, 2009 18:30 Italy   6–2   Canada   Rogers Centre 3:36 12,411 Boxscore
Mar 10, 2009 17:00 Italy   1–10   Venezuela   Rogers Centre 3:04 10,450 Boxscore
Mar 11, 2009 18:30 Venezuela   5–3   United States   Rogers Centre 3:08 12,358 Boxscore

Pool D

PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding
  Netherlands3
  Dominican Rep.2
W1  Netherlands1
W2  Puerto Rico3
  Panama0
  Puerto Rico7
W4  Puerto Rico5
W5  Netherlands0
Lower round 1Lower final
W3  Dominican Rep.1
L1  Dominican Rep.9L4  Netherlands2
L2  Panama0
Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 7, 2009 12:00 Netherlands   3–2   Dominican Republic   Hiram Bithorn Stadium 3:01 9,335 Boxscore
Mar 7, 2009 18:00 Panama   0–7   Puerto Rico   Hiram Bithorn Stadium 2:57 17,348 Boxscore
Mar 8, 2009 16:30 Panama   0–9   Dominican Republic   Hiram Bithorn Stadium 2:46 9,221 Boxscore
Mar 9, 2009 18:30 Netherlands   1–3   Puerto Rico   Hiram Bithorn Stadium 3:11 19,479 Boxscore
Mar 10, 2009 18:30 Dominican Republic   1–2   Netherlands 11 Hiram Bithorn Stadium 3:38 11,814 Boxscore
Mar 11, 2009 17:30 Netherlands   0–5   Puerto Rico   Hiram Bithorn Stadium 2:55 19,501 Boxscore

Second round

Pool 1

PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding
AR  Japan6
BW  Cuba0
W1  Japan1
W2  South Korea4
BR  Mexico2
AW  South Korea8
W4  South Korea2
W5  Japan6
Lower round 1Lower final
W3  Cuba0
L1  Cuba7L4  Japan5
L2  Mexico4
Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 15, 2009 13:00 Japan   6–0   Cuba   Petco Park 3:33 20,179 Boxscore
Mar 15, 2009 20:00 Mexico   2–8   South Korea   Petco Park 3:43 22,337 Boxscore
Mar 16, 2009 20:00 Cuba   7–4   Mexico   Petco Park 3:09 9,329 Boxscore
Mar 17, 2009 20:00 Japan   1–4   South Korea   Petco Park 3:21 15,332 Boxscore
Mar 18, 2009 20:00 Japan   5–0   Cuba   Petco Park 3:26 9,774 Boxscore
Mar 19, 2009 18:00 Japan   6–2   South Korea   Petco Park 3:42 14,832 Boxscore

Pool 2

PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding
DR  Netherlands1
CW  Venezuela3
W1  Venezuela2
W2  Puerto Rico0
CR  United States1
DW  Puerto Rico11
W4  Venezuela10
W5  United States6
Lower round 1Lower final
W3  United States6
L1  Netherlands3L4  Puerto Rico5
L2  United States9
Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 14, 2009 13:00 Netherlands   1–3   Venezuela   Dolphin Stadium 2:22 17,345 Boxscore
Mar 14, 2009 20:00 United States   1–11   Puerto Rico 7 Dolphin Stadium 2:15 30,595 Boxscore
Mar 15, 2009 19:30 Netherlands   3–9   United States   Dolphin Stadium 3:14 11,059 Boxscore
Mar 16, 2009 20:00 Venezuela   2–0   Puerto Rico   Dolphin Stadium 3:23 25,599 Boxscore
Mar 17, 2009 19:00 Puerto Rico   5–6   United States   Dolphin Stadium 3:54 13,224 Boxscore
Mar 18, 2009 19:00 United States   6–10   Venezuela   Dolphin Stadium 3:32 16,575 Boxscore

Championship round

Semifinals Final
      
1R   South Korea 10
2W   Venezuela 2
SF1W   South Korea 3
SF2W   Japan 5
2R   United States 4
1W   Japan 9

Semifinals

Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 21, 2009 18:00 South Korea   10–2   Venezuela   Dodger Stadium 3:22 43,378 Boxscore
Mar 22, 2009 17:00 United States   4–9   Japan   Dodger Stadium 3:15 43,630 Boxscore

Final

Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn. Venue Game Time Attendance Boxscore
Mar 23, 2009 18:00 Japan   5–3   South Korea 10 Dodger Stadium 4:00 54,846 Boxscore

Final standings

Organizer WBCI has no interest in the final standings and did not compute. So, it was calculated by IBAF for the IBAF Men's Baseball World Rankings.

In the final standings, ties were to be broken in the following order of priority:

  1. The team allowing the fewest runs per nine innings (RA/9) in all games;
  2. The team allowing the fewest earned runs per nine innings (ERA) in all games;
  3. The team with the highest batting average (AVG) in all games;

Attendance

801,408 (avg. 20,549; pct. 54.5%)

First round

453,374 (avg. 18,891; pct. 55.6%)

  • Pool A – 170,112 (avg. 28,352; pct. 67.5%)
  • Pool B – 92,665 (avg. 15,444; pct. 59.4%)
  • Pool C – 103,899 (avg. 17,317; pct. 35.0%)
  • Pool D – 86,698 (avg. 14,450; pct. 79.1%)

Second round

206,180 (avg. 17,182; pct. 42.3%)

  • Pool 1 – 91,783 (avg. 15,297; pct. 35.8%)
  • Pool 2 – 114,397 (avg. 19,066; pct. 49.4%)

Championship round

141,854 (avg. 47,285; pct. 84.4%)

  • Semifinals – 87,008 (avg. 43,504; pct. 77.7%)
  • Final – 54,846 (avg. 54,846; pct. 97.9%)

2009 All-World Baseball Classic team

Note: The tournament Most Valuable Player was Daisuke Matsuzaka.[6]

Statistics leaders

Additional rules

As was the case for the 2006 Classic, several rules were announced for the 2009 tournament that modified the existing rules for international baseball set out by the IBAF.[7][8]

Once again there were limits on the number of pitches thrown in a game, though the limits themselves were changed from the previous tournament:

  • 70 pitches in First Round (up from 65 in 2006)
  • 85 pitches in Second Round (up from 80 in 2006)
  • 100 pitches in Championship Round (up from 95 in 2006)

If a pitcher reached his limit during an at bat, he was allowed to finish pitching to the batter, but was removed from the game at the end of the at bat.

A 30–pitch outing needed to be followed by one day off, and a 50–pitch outing by four days off. No one would be allowed to pitch on three consecutive days. As the championship round was played over three consecutive days, a so-called "pitcher rest equalization" rule was added: a pitcher making 30 or more pitches in a semifinal was ineligible to pitch in the final. This negated an advantage the winners of the first semifinal would have had in the final.

A mercy rule came into effect when one team led by either fifteen runs after five innings, or ten runs after seven innings in the first two rounds.

Instant replay was also available to umpires during the tournament. As was introduced in Major League Baseball during the 2008 season, replays were only used to adjudicate on home run decisions, to determine whether the ball was fair or foul, over the fence or not, and the impact of fan interference.

An alternative version of the IBAF's extra inning rule was also introduced. If after 12 innings the score was still tied, each half inning thereafter would have started with runners on second and first base. The runners would have been the eighth and ninth hitters due in that inning respectively. For example, if the number five hitter was due to lead off the inning, the number three hitter would have been on second base, and the number four hitter on first base. However, this rule was never actually employed in this year's Classic, as the two extra-inning games in the tournament ended prior to a 13th inning.

All base coaches were required to wear protective helmets, in the aftermath of the death of Mike Coolbaugh and participating teams were required to announce the next day's starting pitcher. Additionally, a modified early termination rule was in effect for the first two rounds; had a team been ahead by 15 or more runs after five innings or ten or more runs after seven or eight innings, the game ended at that point.

Prize money

USD 14,000,000

By final standings

  • Champions – USD 2,700,000
  • Runners-up – USD 1,700,000
  • Semifinalists – USD 1,200,000 (x 2 teams)
  • Eliminated in Second Round – USD 700,000 (x 4 teams)
  • Eliminated in First Round – USD 300,000 (x 8 teams)

Bonus for pool winners

  • First Round – USD 300,000 (x 4 teams)
  • Second Round – USD 400,000 (x 2 teams)

Media coverage

In the United States, ESPN and the MLB Network shared the rights, with ESPN broadcasting 23 of the games, including the Finals, while MLB Network showed the remaining 16.[9] Spanish language telecasts in the U.S. were handled by ESPN Deportes telecasting all games. Internationally, it was broadcast to 167 countries by ESPN International.

In Canada, Rogers Sportsnet aired all 39 games.[10]

In the Dominican Republic, CDN (Cadena de Noticias) and CDN2 broadcast all games live (except for games played in Tokyo, shown on tape delay)[citation needed]

In Japan, J Sports broadcast all 39 games. TV Asahi (Round 1) and TBS (Round 2 and Finals) broadcast all games featuring Japan. For all games featuring Japan, they gained viewing ratings of at least 20%. The final game gained ratings in the range 30-45%.[11]

Video games

World Baseball Classic 2009 has licensed three video games, all only released in Japan: Pro Yakyuu Spirits 6,[12] Baseball Heroes 2009[13] and Jikkyou Pawafuru Major League 2009[14]

References

  1. ^ "WBC 2009 Brackets". Major League Baseball. 2008-07-31. from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  2. ^ a b "Classic changes advancement rules". Major League Baseball. 2008-03-23. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  3. ^ a b "Dodger Stadium to host Classic finals". Major League Baseball. 2008-07-31. from the original on 9 September 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-27.
  4. ^ "Inaugural IBAF World Ranking Released". MyGameday. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  5. ^ "14 European Teams listed in IBAF World Ranking". Mister Baseball. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
  6. ^ See: 2009 World Baseball Classic – Championship § Final – Japan 5, South Korea 3.
  7. ^ (Press release). Major League Baseball. 29 January 2009. Archived from the original on 5 November 2012. Retrieved 6 October 2010.
  8. ^ Miller, Doug; MLB.com (30 January 2009). "Rules changes approved for Classic". WorldBaseballClassic.com. Major League Baseball. Archived from the original on 16 February 2012. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
  9. ^ Ibarra, Sergio (2008-10-07). . TelevisionWeek. Archived from the original on 2012-03-23. Retrieved 2009-03-20.
  10. ^ . Toronto Star. 2009-02-25. Archived from the original on 2012-10-14. Retrieved 2009-03-20.
  11. ^ "WBC決勝戦視聴率、36.4%【WBC】" (in Japanese). Jiji Press. 2009-03-25. Archived from the original on 2009-09-08. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  12. ^ "Pro Yakyuu Spirits 6". from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 5 March 2010.
  13. ^ "Baseball Heroes 2009". from the original on 5 February 2010. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  14. ^ "Jikkyou Pawafuru Major League 2009". from the original on 15 April 2010. Retrieved 5 March 2010.

External links

  • Official website

2009, world, baseball, classic, international, baseball, competition, began, march, finished, march, tournament, detailshost, countriescanadajapanmexicopuerto, ricounited, statesdatesmarch, 2009teams16final, positionschampions, japan, title, runners, south, ko. The 2009 World Baseball Classic WBC was an international baseball competition It began on March 5 and finished March 23 2009 World Baseball ClassicTournament detailsHost countriesCanadaJapanMexicoPuerto RicoUnited StatesDatesMarch 5 23 2009Teams16Final positionsChampions Japan 2nd title Runners up South KoreaThird place VenezuelaFourth place United StatesTournament statisticsGames played39Attendance801 408 20 549 per game Most valuable playerDaisuke Matsuzaka 20062013 Jumbotron ad for the 2009 WBC at Rogers Centre Unlike in 2006 when the round robin format of the first two rounds led to some eliminations being decided by run difference tiebreakers the first two rounds of the 2009 edition were modified double elimination format The modification was that the final game of each bracket was winner take all even if won by the team emerging from the loser s bracket although that game only affected seeding as two teams always advanced from each bracket The biggest surprise in the first round was the Netherlands which twice defeated the Dominican Republic in Pool D to advance The second round saw the two Pool A teams South Korea and Japan defeat the two Pool B teams Cuba and Mexico while the two Pool C teams Venezuela and the United States defeated the two Pool D teams Puerto Rico and the Netherlands South Korea and Japan then advanced to the final game playing each other for the fifth time in the tournament split 2 2 up to that time and Japan emerged victorious for the second straight Classic winning the final game 5 3 in 10 innings For the second straight Classic Daisuke Matsuzaka was named the Most Valuable Player of the tournament Contents 1 Format 2 Rosters 3 Venues 4 Pools composition 5 First round 5 1 Pool A 5 2 Pool B 5 3 Pool C 5 4 Pool D 6 Second round 6 1 Pool 1 6 2 Pool 2 7 Championship round 7 1 Semifinals 7 2 Final 8 Final standings 9 Attendance 9 1 First round 9 2 Second round 9 3 Championship round 10 2009 All World Baseball Classic team 11 Statistics leaders 11 1 Batting 11 2 Pitching 12 Additional rules 13 Prize money 13 1 By final standings 13 2 Bonus for pool winners 14 Media coverage 15 Video games 16 References 17 External linksFormat EditAs was the case for the 2006 tournament the sixteen teams were split into four pools of four teams each 1 Whereas previously the teams played in round robin competition in the first two rounds this time they took part in a double elimination format similar to the U S College World Series sponsored by the NCAA Under the new format teams were only guaranteed to play two games This change was made to eliminate the complicated tiebreaking procedures 2 which were required for one of the pools in each of the first two rounds in 2006 After the first round the tournament was held in the U S The top two teams from each of the four pools seeded from the final game in their respective pools went to the second round with the teams from Pools A and B meeting at Petco Park in San Diego for Pool 1 and the teams in Pools C and D playing at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens for Pool 2 3 Again both pools made use of double elimination to determine the teams qualifying for the semifinals In another change from 2006 the four qualifying teams crossed over for the semifinals with the winner of each pool playing against the runner up from the other pool 2 The championship round process was otherwise unchanged with each semifinal being a single elimination match the victors meeting in the final to determine the tournament champion All three championship round games were held at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles 3 In the final the team with the higher winning percentage of games in the tournament were to be the home team If the teams competing in the final had identical winning percentages in the tournament then World Baseball Classic Inc WBCI would conduct a coin flip or draw to determine the home team Rosters EditMain article 2009 World Baseball Classic rosters Each participating national federation had a deadline of January 19 2009 to submit a 45 man provisional roster Final rosters of 28 players which was required to include a minimum of 13 pitchers and two catchers were submitted on February 24 If a player on the submitted roster was unable to play usually due to injury he could be substituted at any time before the start of the tournament While rosters could not be changed during a round of competition a team that advanced to a later round could change its roster for the later round Venues EditSeven stadiums were used during the tournament Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D Tokyo Japan Mexico City Mexico Toronto Canada San Juan Puerto RicoTokyo Dome Foro Sol Rogers Centre Hiram Bithorn StadiumCapacity 42 000 Capacity 26 000 Capacity 49 539 Capacity 18 264 Pool 1 Pool 2 Championship San Diego United States Miami Gardens United States Los Angeles United StatesPetco Park Dolphin Stadium Dodger StadiumCapacity 42 685 Capacity 38 560 Capacity 56 000 Pools composition EditThe 16 teams that participated in the 2006 World Baseball Classic were all invited back for the 2009 tournament The World Baseball Classic Inc WBCI changed the members of each pool as compared with the 2006 Classic however except for Pool A There was no official qualifying competition Note Numbers in parentheses indicate positions in the IBAF World Rankings at the time of the tournament 4 5 Pool A Pool B Pool C Pool D China 14 Australia 10 Canada 7 Dominican Republic 17 Chinese Taipei 5 Cuba 1 Italy 13 Netherlands 6 Japan 4 Mexico 8 United States 2 Panama 9 South Korea 3 South Africa 20 Venezuela 15 Puerto Rico 11 First round EditPool A Edit Main article 2009 World Baseball Classic Pool A PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding China0 Japan4W1 Japan14W2 South Korea2 Chinese Taipei0 South Korea9W4 Japan0W5 South Korea1Lower round 1Lower finalW3 China0L1 China4L4 South Korea14L2 Chinese Taipei1Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 5 2009 18 30 China 0 4 Japan Tokyo Dome 2 55 43 428 BoxscoreMar 6 2009 18 30 Chinese Taipei 0 9 South Korea Tokyo Dome 2 48 12 704 BoxscoreMar 7 2009 12 30 Chinese Taipei 1 4 China Tokyo Dome 2 51 12 890 BoxscoreMar 7 2009 19 00 Japan 14 2 South Korea 7 Tokyo Dome 2 48 45 640 BoxscoreMar 8 2009 18 30 China 0 14 South Korea 7 Tokyo Dome 2 13 12 571 BoxscoreMar 9 2009 18 30 South Korea 1 0 Japan Tokyo Dome 3 02 42 879 BoxscorePool B Edit Main article 2009 World Baseball Classic Pool B PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding South Africa1 Cuba8W1 Cuba5W2 Australia4 Australia17 Mexico7W4 Cuba16W5 Mexico4Lower round 1Lower finalW3 Mexico16L1 South Africa3L4 Australia1L2 Mexico14Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 8 2009 12 00 South Africa 1 8 Cuba Foro Sol 2 37 11 270 BoxscoreMar 8 2009 19 00 Australia 17 7 Mexico 8 Foro Sol 3 43 20 821 BoxscoreMar 9 2009 20 00 Mexico 14 3 South Africa Foro Sol 3 33 10 311 BoxscoreMar 10 2009 20 00 Cuba 5 4 Australia Foro Sol 3 29 13 396 BoxscoreMar 11 2009 20 00 Mexico 16 1 Australia 6 Foro Sol 2 31 16 718 BoxscoreMar 12 2009 19 00 Mexico 4 16 Cuba 7 Foro Sol 3 33 20 149 BoxscorePool C Edit Main article 2009 World Baseball Classic Pool C PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding Canada5 United States6W1 United States15W2 Venezuela6 Italy0 Venezuela7W3 United States3W5 Venezuela5Lower round 1Lower finalW4 Italy1L1 Canada2L3 Venezuela10L2 Italy6Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 7 2009 14 00 Canada 5 6 United States Rogers Centre 2 55 42 314 BoxscoreMar 7 2009 20 00 Italy 0 7 Venezuela Rogers Centre 3 00 13 272 BoxscoreMar 8 2009 20 00 United States 15 6 Venezuela Rogers Centre 3 39 13 094 BoxscoreMar 9 2009 18 30 Italy 6 2 Canada Rogers Centre 3 36 12 411 BoxscoreMar 10 2009 17 00 Italy 1 10 Venezuela Rogers Centre 3 04 10 450 BoxscoreMar 11 2009 18 30 Venezuela 5 3 United States Rogers Centre 3 08 12 358 BoxscorePool D Edit Main article 2009 World Baseball Classic Pool D PreliminariesQualifiersSeeding Netherlands3 Dominican Rep 2W1 Netherlands1W2 Puerto Rico3 Panama0 Puerto Rico7W4 Puerto Rico5W5 Netherlands0Lower round 1Lower finalW3 Dominican Rep 1L1 Dominican Rep 9L4 Netherlands2L2 Panama0Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 7 2009 12 00 Netherlands 3 2 Dominican Republic Hiram Bithorn Stadium 3 01 9 335 BoxscoreMar 7 2009 18 00 Panama 0 7 Puerto Rico Hiram Bithorn Stadium 2 57 17 348 BoxscoreMar 8 2009 16 30 Panama 0 9 Dominican Republic Hiram Bithorn Stadium 2 46 9 221 BoxscoreMar 9 2009 18 30 Netherlands 1 3 Puerto Rico Hiram Bithorn Stadium 3 11 19 479 BoxscoreMar 10 2009 18 30 Dominican Republic 1 2 Netherlands 11 Hiram Bithorn Stadium 3 38 11 814 BoxscoreMar 11 2009 17 30 Netherlands 0 5 Puerto Rico Hiram Bithorn Stadium 2 55 19 501 BoxscoreSecond round EditPool 1 Edit Main article 2009 World Baseball Classic Pool 1 PreliminariesQualifiersSeedingAR Japan6BW Cuba0W1 Japan1W2 South Korea4BR Mexico2AW South Korea8W4 South Korea2W5 Japan6Lower round 1Lower finalW3 Cuba0L1 Cuba7L4 Japan5L2 Mexico4Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 15 2009 13 00 Japan 6 0 Cuba Petco Park 3 33 20 179 BoxscoreMar 15 2009 20 00 Mexico 2 8 South Korea Petco Park 3 43 22 337 BoxscoreMar 16 2009 20 00 Cuba 7 4 Mexico Petco Park 3 09 9 329 BoxscoreMar 17 2009 20 00 Japan 1 4 South Korea Petco Park 3 21 15 332 BoxscoreMar 18 2009 20 00 Japan 5 0 Cuba Petco Park 3 26 9 774 BoxscoreMar 19 2009 18 00 Japan 6 2 South Korea Petco Park 3 42 14 832 BoxscorePool 2 Edit Main article 2009 World Baseball Classic Pool 2 PreliminariesQualifiersSeedingDR Netherlands1CW Venezuela3W1 Venezuela2W2 Puerto Rico0CR United States1DW Puerto Rico11W4 Venezuela10W5 United States6Lower round 1Lower finalW3 United States6L1 Netherlands3L4 Puerto Rico5L2 United States9Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 14 2009 13 00 Netherlands 1 3 Venezuela Dolphin Stadium 2 22 17 345 BoxscoreMar 14 2009 20 00 United States 1 11 Puerto Rico 7 Dolphin Stadium 2 15 30 595 BoxscoreMar 15 2009 19 30 Netherlands 3 9 United States Dolphin Stadium 3 14 11 059 BoxscoreMar 16 2009 20 00 Venezuela 2 0 Puerto Rico Dolphin Stadium 3 23 25 599 BoxscoreMar 17 2009 19 00 Puerto Rico 5 6 United States Dolphin Stadium 3 54 13 224 BoxscoreMar 18 2009 19 00 United States 6 10 Venezuela Dolphin Stadium 3 32 16 575 BoxscoreChampionship round EditMain article 2009 World Baseball Classic championship SemifinalsFinal 1R South Korea102W Venezuela2SF1W South Korea3SF2W Japan52R United States41W Japan9Semifinals Edit Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 21 2009 18 00 South Korea 10 2 Venezuela Dodger Stadium 3 22 43 378 BoxscoreMar 22 2009 17 00 United States 4 9 Japan Dodger Stadium 3 15 43 630 BoxscoreFinal Edit Date Local Time Road Team Score Home Team Inn Venue Game Time Attendance BoxscoreMar 23 2009 18 00 Japan 5 3 South Korea 10 Dodger Stadium 4 00 54 846 BoxscoreFinal standings EditOrganizer WBCI has no interest in the final standings and did not compute So it was calculated by IBAF for the IBAF Men s Baseball World Rankings In the final standings ties were to be broken in the following order of priority The team allowing the fewest runs per nine innings RA 9 in all games The team allowing the fewest earned runs per nine innings ERA in all games The team with the highest batting average AVG in all games Rk Team W L Tiebreaker1 Japan 7 2 Lost in Final2 South Korea 6 3 Lost in Semifinals3 Venezuela 6 2 4 United States 4 4 Eliminated in Second Round5 Puerto Rico 4 2 1 75 RA 96 Cuba 4 2 4 15 RA 97 Netherlands 2 4 3 98 RA 98 Mexico 2 4 10 10 RA 9Eliminated in First Round9 Dominican Republic 1 2 1 57 RA 910 Italy 1 2 6 84 RA 911 China 1 2 7 43 RA 912 Australia 1 2 10 96 RA 913 Canada 0 2 6 35 RA 914 Chinese Taipei 0 2 7 31 RA 915 Panama 0 2 9 00 RA 916 South Africa 0 2 11 65 RA 9 2009 World Baseball Classic Champions JapanSecond titleAttendance Edit801 408 avg 20 549 pct 54 5 First round Edit 453 374 avg 18 891 pct 55 6 Pool A 170 112 avg 28 352 pct 67 5 Pool B 92 665 avg 15 444 pct 59 4 Pool C 103 899 avg 17 317 pct 35 0 Pool D 86 698 avg 14 450 pct 79 1 Second round Edit 206 180 avg 17 182 pct 42 3 Pool 1 91 783 avg 15 297 pct 35 8 Pool 2 114 397 avg 19 066 pct 49 4 Championship round Edit 141 854 avg 47 285 pct 84 4 Semifinals 87 008 avg 43 504 pct 77 7 Final 54 846 avg 54 846 pct 97 9 2009 All World Baseball Classic team EditNote The tournament Most Valuable Player was Daisuke Matsuzaka 6 Position PlayerC Ivan Rodriguez1B Tae kyun Kim2B Jose Lopez3B Bum ho LeeSS Jimmy RollinsOF Norichika Aoki Frederich Cepeda Yoenis CespedesDH Hyun soo KimP Jung keun Bong Hisashi Iwakuma Daisuke MatsuzakaStatistics leaders EditBatting Edit Statistic Name Total AvgBatting average Brett Roneberg 714Hits Norichika Aoki Frederich Cepeda Ichiro Suzuki 12Runs Adam Dunn Tae kyun Kim Kevin Youkilis 9Home runs 7 Players 3RBI Tae kyun Kim 11Walks Adam Dunn 9Strikeouts Adam Dunn Michihiro Ogasawara 10Stolen bases Yasuyuki Kataoka Jimmy Rollins 4On base percentage Jason Bay 778Slugging percentage Brett Roneberg 1 286OPS Brett Roneberg 2 036 Minimum 2 7 plate appearances per game Pitching Edit Statistic Name Total AvgWins Daisuke Matsuzaka 3Losses Jeremy Guthrie 2Saves Francisco Rodriguez 3Innings pitched Hisashi Iwakuma 20 0Hits allowed Roy Oswalt 17Runs allowed Jeremy Guthrie 10Earned runs allowed Kwang hyun Kim 8ERA Enrique Gonzalez 0 00 Walks 5 Players 6Strikeouts Yu Darvish 20WHIP Rafael Perez 0 00 Minimum 0 8 innings pitched per game Gonzalez is tied with 17 others with a 0 00 ERA but he pitched the most innings with 9 2Additional rules EditAs was the case for the 2006 Classic several rules were announced for the 2009 tournament that modified the existing rules for international baseball set out by the IBAF 7 8 Once again there were limits on the number of pitches thrown in a game though the limits themselves were changed from the previous tournament 70 pitches in First Round up from 65 in 2006 85 pitches in Second Round up from 80 in 2006 100 pitches in Championship Round up from 95 in 2006 If a pitcher reached his limit during an at bat he was allowed to finish pitching to the batter but was removed from the game at the end of the at bat A 30 pitch outing needed to be followed by one day off and a 50 pitch outing by four days off No one would be allowed to pitch on three consecutive days As the championship round was played over three consecutive days a so called pitcher rest equalization rule was added a pitcher making 30 or more pitches in a semifinal was ineligible to pitch in the final This negated an advantage the winners of the first semifinal would have had in the final A mercy rule came into effect when one team led by either fifteen runs after five innings or ten runs after seven innings in the first two rounds Instant replay was also available to umpires during the tournament As was introduced in Major League Baseball during the 2008 season replays were only used to adjudicate on home run decisions to determine whether the ball was fair or foul over the fence or not and the impact of fan interference An alternative version of the IBAF s extra inning rule was also introduced If after 12 innings the score was still tied each half inning thereafter would have started with runners on second and first base The runners would have been the eighth and ninth hitters due in that inning respectively For example if the number five hitter was due to lead off the inning the number three hitter would have been on second base and the number four hitter on first base However this rule was never actually employed in this year s Classic as the two extra inning games in the tournament ended prior to a 13th inning All base coaches were required to wear protective helmets in the aftermath of the death of Mike Coolbaugh and participating teams were required to announce the next day s starting pitcher Additionally a modified early termination rule was in effect for the first two rounds had a team been ahead by 15 or more runs after five innings or ten or more runs after seven or eight innings the game ended at that point Prize money EditUSD 14 000 000 By final standings Edit Champions USD 2 700 000 Runners up USD 1 700 000 Semifinalists USD 1 200 000 x 2 teams Eliminated in Second Round USD 700 000 x 4 teams Eliminated in First Round USD 300 000 x 8 teams Bonus for pool winners Edit First Round USD 300 000 x 4 teams Second Round USD 400 000 x 2 teams Media coverage EditIn the United States ESPN and the MLB Network shared the rights with ESPN broadcasting 23 of the games including the Finals while MLB Network showed the remaining 16 9 Spanish language telecasts in the U S were handled by ESPN Deportes telecasting all games Internationally it was broadcast to 167 countries by ESPN International In Canada Rogers Sportsnet aired all 39 games 10 In the Dominican Republic CDN Cadena de Noticias and CDN2 broadcast all games live except for games played in Tokyo shown on tape delay citation needed In Japan J Sports broadcast all 39 games TV Asahi Round 1 and TBS Round 2 and Finals broadcast all games featuring Japan For all games featuring Japan they gained viewing ratings of at least 20 The final game gained ratings in the range 30 45 11 Video games EditWorld Baseball Classic 2009 has licensed three video games all only released in Japan Pro Yakyuu Spirits 6 12 Baseball Heroes 2009 13 and Jikkyou Pawafuru Major League 2009 14 References Edit WBC 2009 Brackets Major League Baseball 2008 07 31 Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 27 a b Classic changes advancement rules Major League Baseball 2008 03 23 Retrieved 2008 09 27 a b Dodger Stadium to host Classic finals Major League Baseball 2008 07 31 Archived from the original on 9 September 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 27 Inaugural IBAF World Ranking Released MyGameday Retrieved 20 August 2022 14 European Teams listed in IBAF World Ranking Mister Baseball Retrieved 20 August 2022 See 2009 World Baseball Classic Championship Final Japan 5 South Korea 3 Several rules changes adopted for 2009 World Baseball Classic Press release Major League Baseball 29 January 2009 Archived from the original on 5 November 2012 Retrieved 6 October 2010 Miller Doug MLB com 30 January 2009 Rules changes approved for Classic WorldBaseballClassic com Major League Baseball Archived from the original on 16 February 2012 Retrieved 31 January 2009 Ibarra Sergio 2008 10 07 ESPN MLB Net Map Plans for World Baseball Classic TelevisionWeek Archived from the original on 2012 03 23 Retrieved 2009 03 20 Notebook Happy fans would pay Junior well Toronto Star 2009 02 25 Archived from the original on 2012 10 14 Retrieved 2009 03 20 WBC決勝戦視聴率 36 4 WBC in Japanese Jiji Press 2009 03 25 Archived from the original on 2009 09 08 Retrieved 2009 03 27 Pro Yakyuu Spirits 6 Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 5 March 2010 Baseball Heroes 2009 Archived from the original on 5 February 2010 Retrieved 6 March 2010 Jikkyou Pawafuru Major League 2009 Archived from the original on 15 April 2010 Retrieved 5 March 2010 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 World Baseball Classic amp oldid 1131830966, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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