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“They gave their hearts,” AMLO tells Mexican baseball players after defeat against Japan

“Never had such a prominent role been played in a world baseball championship,” the President said in a video.

Mexico City/Miami, March 20 (ASMéxico/AP).- Mexico stayed eliminated of the World Baseball Classic in semifinals. A duel of power to power in which Japan decided it in the ninth down, prevented the Greens from advancing to the final where the United States was already.

President Andres Manuel Lopez workshop was at earring of the Green Ninth throughout the competition, whenever he could, he would post a summary of the Mexican victories in the morning, praising the work of the most outstanding players. This day, after the elimination, left another message:

“I had the joy of watching the entire game, exciting as baseball is, we agreed on that. We were about to beat one of the best teams in the world. The work of the participation of the Mexicans, of the baseball players who represented us, gave everything, deserved the victory, was outstanding”.

“You’ve never had such a prominent role in a world baseball championship. A hug to all Mexican baseball players. This is not a sport of half measures, it is not for softies, it is not for mediocre, it is to win or lose, there is no middle ground.

“A hug to Benjamín Gil who directed very well, to our countryman, Arozarena, who looked like what he is, a horse, that’s why he’s in the big leagues; but they all played very well, they gave their hearts, even the pitching, but in baseball you win or lose, we had to lose, however, it was very outstanding, I underline it, the work of the Mexican team, ”he said.

Shohei Ohtani ignited the rally in the ninth inning with a double, and Munetaka Murakami hit a two-run double that catapulted Japan to a 6-5 victory over Mexico on Monday night and to the final of the World Baseball Classic.

Japan will meet defending champions the United States in a championship matchup on Tuesday that pits Ohtani against Mike Trout, his teammate from the Los Angeles Angels and center fielder for the US team.

The Japanese were proclaimed champions in the first two editions of the tournament. The United States did it in the last one, played in 2017.

Mexico was lying on the field of the Miami Marlins stadium after reaching the semifinals for the first time in a Classic.

Japan’s players celebrate their 6-5 victory over Mexico in the semifinals of the World Baseball Classic, Monday, March 20, 2023, in Miami. Photo: Wilfredo Lee, AP.

After exceeding expectations, the Mexicans believe that their performance will have an impact to promote baseball in their country.

“In Mexico there will be a radical change,” said Mexican manager Benjamín Gil. “I don’t know if tomorrow or in a week, a month or a year. But baseball is going to start to grow, if not the most important sport.

“These two weeks are going to attract many young players both in Mexico and Mexicans abroad. For that reason I feel that it was a victory even though it was not won today”, he added.

Ohtani went 2-for-4. He scored in the seventh when Masataka Yoshida tied the game with a three-run homer off reliever JoJo Romero.

Ohtani’s double against Giovanny Gallegos was his fourth in the contest. After Ohtani got the rally going, Yoshida drew a walk that set up the table for Murakami’s game-ending hit.

“Mexico was a fantastic team and they put us in a very difficult situation,” said Hideki Kuriyama, Japan’s manager. “I have always had the faith that there is always a chance at the end no matter how the game has gone.

The semifinal began with a pitching duel between Roki Sasaki and Patrick Sandoval, but the Japanese offensive power tipped the balance against the Mexican relievers.

Sandoval covered 4 1/3 innings scoreless, spreading four hits and a walk.

Sasaki struck out three in four innings in his first outing outside of Japan.

Luis Urías put Mexico ahead in the fourth with a three-run home run to left-center field off Sasaki, hitting a 90.8 mph fastball. The hit drove in Rowdy Téllez and Isaac Paredes, who reached base with two of the five hits allowed by Sasaki.

Mexico left fielder Randy Arozarena signs autographs during a pitching change in the seventh inning of the semifinal against Japan in the World Baseball Classic, Photo: Wilfredo Lee, AP.

Dozens of MLB scouts closely followed Sasaki, whose arrival in the majors could be in the future after becoming a sensation last year in his second season with the Chiba Lotte Marines of the Pacific League. Some put the 21-year-old right-hander in the same category as Ohtani. Twenty-six of Sasaki’s 64 pitches eclipsed 100 mph.

With his glove in left field and his bat, Randy Arozarena was the dynamo of the Mexican team. In the fifth, the Cuban nationalized Mexican astonished by catching Kazuma Okamoto’s shot by extending his arm over the fence after measuring the trajectory with absolute serenity. Moments later, while Gil made a pitching change, Arozarena began signing autographs for fans behind the wall.

“Randy is amazing,” Gil said. “An extraordinary talent, with an infectious personality. I think everyone will agree that he is phenomenal for baseball, phenomenal for Cuba and phenomenal for Mexico.”

Alex Verdugo, Yoshida’s new teammate on the Boston Red Sox, put the lead back with a double that drove in Arozarena in the eighth. Isaac Paredes produced another with a ground ball to left field that brought in Jarren Durán.

Japan pulled back in the eighth on Hotaka Yamakawa’s sacrifice fly.

— With information from Mario Guerrero of AS Mexico and Alanis Thames of AP