MLB teams pressure WBC managers to be careful with pitchers. Venezuela pushed back

In a dramatic championship showdown, Venezuela secured its inaugural World Baseball Classic title with a narrow 3-2 victory over the United States, largely due to strategic managerial maneuvering regarding pitcher usage restrictions. Venezuela’s manager Omar López successfully negotiated with Major League Baseball organizations to relax initial limitations on his pitchers, enabling him to deploy Chicago Cubs closer Daniel Palencia for three appearances within four days. This contrasted sharply with U.S. manager Mark DeRosa’s approach, who strictly honored commitments made to MLB clubs by withholding his top reliever Mason Miller in non-save situations. The decisive moment came in the ninth inning when Venezuela’s Eugenio Suárez drove in the winning run against Boston reliever Garrett Whitlock. Palencia then sealed the victory with a dominant 11-pitch closing performance, striking out the final batter with a 99.7 mph fastball. The outcome highlighted the tension between national team ambitions and MLB organizations’ protective measures for their valuable pitching assets during international competition.