LOS ANGELES -- The U.S.' rollercoaster ride at the World Baseball Classic is finally over -- halted by relentless reigning champion Japan and perhaps also some questionable managing by Davey Johnson.The Americans jumped out to an early lead in the second semifinal, but starter Roy Oswalt was battered for six runs as Johnson watched from the U.S. dugout, only pulling Oswalt with two outs in the bottom of the fourth inning after he had surrendered five runs in the frame.
Japan never looked back from there, beating the U.S. 9-4 and advancing to Monday night's title game against South Korea, a 10-2 winner over Venezuela in Saturday's semifinal. Japan won the inaugural tournament in 2006, defeating Cuba in the final.
Akinori Iwamura's RBI triple was the key hit in the five-run fourth inning, and the U.S. was handed its first loss to Japan since the 2005 World Cup. The Americans had won four in a row, including an 8-4 victory in the bronze medal game at the Beijing Olympics.
The WBC has hardly been a showcase for the United States, despite having a roster loaded with major league stars.
Three years ago, the Americans were eliminated 2-1 by Mexico in the second round of the tournament after beating Japan 4-3 during pool play in Anaheim.
This time, the Americans came into their first final four appearance hobbled by injuries.
During the second round in Miami, they lost second baseman Dustin Pedroia (left side), first baseman Kevin Youkilis (sprained left ankle, left Achilles' tendinitis) and reliever Matt Lindstrom (strained right rotator cuff). Chipper Jones (right side) was replaced for the semifinal by Evan Longoria.
The Americans were the visiting team on a cold, blustery night in Los Angeles, having earned the designation by finishing second in Group 2. Japan won Group 1, with South Korea coming in second.
Matsuzaka allowed two runs and five hits in 4 2/3 innings. The Boston Red Sox ace struck out four and walked three before being pulled when he reached 98 pitches, two shy of the 100-limit for the tournament's final two rounds.
Matsuzaka, who pitched six shutout innings against Cuba last Sunday, is 3-0 in this year's WBC, having allowed 14 hits and four runs in 14 2/3 innings. He went 3-0 and was selected tournament MVP three years ago.
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LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 22: Fans of Japan celebrate after Japan defeated the United States in the semifinal game of the 2009 World Baseball Classic on March 22, 2009 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California. Japan defeated the United States 9-4. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images)
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LOS ANGELES - MARCH 22: Pitcher Yu Darvish #11 of Japan celebrates after striking out Adam Dunn #17 of the United States to win the semifinal game of the 2009 World Baseball Classic on March 22, 2009 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California. Japan defeated the United States 9-4. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Yu Darvish
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LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 22: Ichiro Suzuki #51 of Japan points to teammates after defeating the United States in the semifinal game of the 2009 World Baseball Classic on March 22, 2009 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California. Japan defeated the United States 9-4. (Photo by Stephen Dunn/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Ichiro Suzuki
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LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 22: Ichiro Suzuki #51and Norichika Aoki #23 of Japan celebrate after defeating the United States in the semifinal game of the 2009 World Baseball Classic on March 22, 2009 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, California. Japan defeated the United States 9-4. (Photo by Kevork Djansezian/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Ichiro Suzuki;Norichika Aoki
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Ichiro Suzuki of Team Japan celebrates with team-mates Akinori Iwamura (L) as team-mates Norichika Aoki (2nd R) and Yoshiyuki Kamei (R) follow after beating Team USA 9-4 during their semifinal game at the World Baseball Classic in Los Angeles, California March 22, 2009. REUTERS/Mike Blake (UNITED STATES SPORT BASEBALL)
Reuters
Team Japan's closing pitcher Yu Darvish (11) celebrates with teammates after they beat Team USA during the semifinal game of the World Baseball Classic in Los Angeles, California March 22, 2009. REUTERS/Fred Greaves (UNITED STATES)
Reuters
Team Japan's Daisuke Matsuzaka (L) celebrates with team-mate Yoshiyuki Kamei after Japan defeated Team USA during the semifinals of the World Baseball Classic in Los Angeles, California March 22, 2009. Team Japan will face Team Korea in the final. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson (UNITED STATES SPORT BASEBALL)
Reuters
Team Japan's Ichiro Suzuki hits an RBI single in the eighth inning during the semifinal game against Team USA at the World Baseball Classic in Los Angeles, California March 22, 2009. REUTERS/Fred Greaves (UNITED STATES SPORT BASEBALL)
Reuters
Japan's Ichiro Suzuki crosses home with Japan's ninth run in a 9-4 victory over United States in a semifinal at the World Baseball Classic on Sunday, March 22, 2009, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
AP
Japan's Ichiro Suzuki drives an ankle-high pitch for an RBI hit against the United States in the ninth inning of Japan's 9-4 victory in a semifinal at the World Baseball Classic Sunday, March 22, 2009, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
AP
The United States took a 2-1 lead after three innings on Brian Roberts' leadoff homer in the first and David Wright's RBI double in the third.
Japan broke loose in the fourth, with the help of an error by Roberts at second base that made two of the runs unearned. Roberts was added to the U.S. roster before the second round, replacing Pedroia.
Atsunori Inaba and Michihiro Ogasawara opened the inning with singles and the error by Roberts allowed Japan to tie the game 2-all. Kenji Johjima followed with his second sacrifice fly before Iwamura tripled into the right-field corner.
Munenori Kawasaki then singled home Iwamura. One out later, Hiroyuki Nakajima hit an RBI double on a 3-0 pitch, chasing Oswalt and giving Japan a 6-2 lead.
That put the Americans in a big hole against a team that came into the semifinals having outscored its opponents 36-9 in seven games.
But the U.S. got back in the game in the eighth on a two-run double down the left-field line by Mark DeRosa off Takahiro Mahara, cutting the deficit to 6-4. Mahara avoided further damage by striking out pinch-hitter Evan Longoria and getting Roberts to ground back to the mound.
Japan tacked on three insurance runs in the bottom half off Joel Hanrahan and Scot Shields. The first scored on shortstop Derek Jeter's two-out throwing error. Ichiro Suzuki added an RBI single, and Nakajima had a run-scoring double that right fielder Adam Dunn appeared to lose in the lights.
Japan's fans chanted, waved red-and-white flags and pounded orange Thunder Stix during their country's big fourth inning.
Chants of "U-S-A! U-S-A!," which had quieted down for a while, fired back up in the eighth only to be silenced again. The Americans, who celebrated so vigorously after rallying to beat Puerto Rico for a semifinal berth, had no reason to party this time.
The announced crowd of 43,630 - second-largest in WBC history and the most on U.S. soil - was bundled in jackets and blankets as temperatures hovered in the 50s and wind whipped the palm trees in the outfield. There were large pockets of empty seats throughout the stadium.
The Americans blew a scoring chance in the fifth. Jeter hit a one-out single and Jimmy Rollins walked. Matsuzaka then threw a called third strike past cleanup hitter David Wright before reliever Toshiya Sugiuchi struck out Dunn to end the threat.
Rollins went 4-for-4 with a walk and a two-out triple in the seventh. Masahiro Tanaka struck out Wright to end the inning.
Information from the Associated Press used in this report.

















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
3-23-2009 @ 12:38AM
Tigre said...
I knew they wasn't going to win but I wanted to see them in the finals.
This has to be an embarassment for the MLB and America.
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 1:29AM
Marlon said...
This is a bunch of BS!!! I hate baseball but only followed this because of the US Nat. team and to my surprise, they suck! Screw all the fans that follow this crap game and all the player on this team. Talk about how EMBARRASSED I am knowing that baseball was born in this GREAT country. I'll stick with soccer, at least we suck but did not invent it.... LOSERS
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 4:08AM
lakergregg said...
Team USA was made up of a bunch of guys who are great when surrounded by the rest of the talent on their MLB teams but not guys who are the greatest talent on their team.
Davey Johnson 1986 called and said give it a rest already.
Oh, and it also called you a d-bag.
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 4:30AM
yayabats said...
Amazing the three people who wrote before me, the level of ignorance and hostility is much more embarrassing than the loss of this team to Japan. There is some truth, many players who could have played for team USA either were not asked or turned it down. Some of this is due to greed and coming to Spring training out of condition. It seems it is too much to ask these athletes to stay in condition all year round, something amatures do out of pleasure and desire to be fit. Chosing Johnson as the manager, is just another example of two things, that MLB did not take the tournament seriously either out of some myopic ethno centric view as the case of the dream team in basketball that they could just walk on. Or perhaps the old boy network had it set who would be there, and even more perhaps they wanted to lose so teams in baseball's developing nations could build their market.
My main point is the team especially the depth of pitching is no where near the best players that could have be fielded. Fielding a better team would not have guaranteed a win, but would at least been more competitive. America is a nation in transition in this world, being automatic top dog in anything, those days are over. Adjusting to this, means a change of attitude and discipline. There needs to be this, as a nation we need to adapt work harder, take others with more respect and seriousness and show not nationalism but a bit of national pride.
Fagball, that is the most ignorant word I have ever heard. For one thing being homosexual does not make you an inferior person, less athletic or less agressive. I am not! I say so only that the less than fully intelligent reader who named it such will not jump to ignorant conculsions. Hey Mr. soccer player, lest see how you react when there is not yellow card for a hard slide, or a 90+ fastball put into your thigh as a message.
As a coach of baseball, and of soccer ( soccer youth level) and Hockey, I admire the level of commitment shown by athletes from the two countries Japan and Korea that will play the final. When I coached at a community college of inner city kids I also saw that commitment. I admire they became a single unit, with a purpose, pride and desire. I do not want to see all the world adopt their neo militaristic rituals and training, but to have the positive aspects of what has made them now the countries to deal with in many sports would be admirable.
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 10:37AM
ghl40 said...
I'm not surprised at the outcome. Davey Johnson is to blame for this one and non other. His World Series ring with the Mets came as a result of the power house he had in addition to timely luck. Heck, I could've managed the Mets that year and would have beaten the Red Sox a lot quicker. I said it before and I'll say it now. Davey Johnson is a joke!
Reply
3-23-2009 @ 2:57PM
Tigre said...
yayabats in what way was I being hostile? How am I displaying ignorance? I've been watching WBC since it started and when you look at the way Japan and Korea are playing versus the way the US did, and you could tell that they wasn't going to win. So in my eyes since the MLB is a pro league and the players that was representing the US are professionals this is a black eye to the league. People will say that their making all this money and they can't even dominate the WBC.
Now you bring up health and I have to disagree with you. If Ichiro can manage to stay healthy by constantly training in the offseason then I don't see why our pros can't do the samething.
I do agree though that the coach is to blame for a lot of the problems but I think they need to pick the WBC roaster a year in advance so that players can condition their bodies and be ready when the tournament comes.
Reply