Italy’s unbeaten WBC run rolls on with an 8-6 win over Puerto Rico and semifinal berth

In a stunning display of resilience and offensive firepower, Italy’s national baseball team secured an historic 8-6 victory over Puerto Rico in the World Baseball Classic quarterfinals on Saturday. The undefeated Azzurri (5-0) have now advanced to their first-ever semifinal appearance in tournament history, where they will face either defending champion Japan or Venezuela in Miami on Monday.

The game began dramatically with Puerto Rico’s Willi Castro launching a leadoff home run into left field’s Crawford Boxes off Italian starter Sam Aldegheri. However, Italy responded explosively in the bottom of the first inning, scoring four runs to seize control. The offensive surge featured RBI singles from Dominic Canzone and Jac Caglianone, along with a game-tying single from Vinnie Pasquantino—who had set a WBC record with three home runs in Italy’s previous contest.

Italy expanded their lead through strategic hitting and fortunate circumstances. In the fourth inning, Andrew Fischer was credited with a controversial double on fan interference when a spectator reached over the right-field fence, resulting in two RBIs. J.J. D’Orazio immediately followed with a ground-rule double that drove in two additional runs, finishing with three RBIs total.

Puerto Rico mounted a formidable comeback attempt in the eighth inning, scoring four runs through Eddie Rosario’s run-scoring forceout, a wild pitch from Joe La Sorsa, and Christian Vázquez’s two-run single. However, reliever Greg Weissert entered to secure a five-out save, allowing just one hit while closing the game with a clutch inning-ending groundout from Nolan Arenado.

This defeat marks another disappointing quarterfinal exit for Puerto Rico, who now hold a 1-2 record against Italy in World Baseball Classic competition. The Italian squad continues their remarkable tournament performance, combining timely hitting with determined pitching to extend their magical run in international baseball’s premier event.