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Team USA vs. Venezuela: Odds, time, lineup and everything to know about 2026 World Baseball Classic title game

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After 12 days of thrilling games, the World Baseball Classic championship game has arrived. The United States outlasted the high-powered Dominican Republic to return to the title game on Sunday night. Venezuela came back to beat the underdog Italy team to punch its first-ever ticket to the WBC title game on Monday. It is fair to call Tuesday’s title bout in Miami the biggest game in Venezuelan baseball history.

“I’ve never been to the championship of the WBC before. We get there and we’re happy,” Venezuela third baseman Maikel Garcia said after beating Italy. “We’re excited to play tomorrow against the United States. We have to come tomorrow and play the same way we played against Japan, against Italy, and we have to show the world who Venezuela is.”

Team USA will be the home team Tuesday and the game will be played on American soil, but make no mistake, it will be a pro-Venezuela crowd. Venezuelan baseball fans have showed out throughout the WBC and especially Monday night against Italy. The atmosphere will be even more electric Tuesday. Here now is what you need to know going into Tuesday’s WBC Championship Game.

Team USA vs. Venezuela: Where to watch, odds

  • Time: 8 p.m. ET | Date: Tuesday, March 17
  • Location: loanDepot Park (Miami, Florida)
  • TV channel: Fox | Live streamfubo (Try for free)
  • Starting pitchers: LHP Eduardo Rodriguez (VEN) vs. RHP Nolan McLean (USA)
  • Odds (via FanDuel): USA -265, VEN +215, O/U: 8.5

Team USA lineup

1. Bobby Witt Jr., SS
2. Bryce Harper, 1B
3. Aaron Judge, RF
4. Kyle Schwarber, DH
5. Alex Bregman, 3B
6. Roman Anthony, LF
7. Will Smith, C
8. Brice Turang, 2B
9. Byron Buxton, CF

Venezuela lineup

1. Ronald Acuña Jr., RF
2. Maikel Garcia, 3B
3. Luis Arraez, 1B
4. Eugenio Suárez, DH
5. Gleyber Torres, 2B
6. Ezequiel Tovar, SS
7. Wilyer Abreu, LF
8. Salvador Perez, C
9. Jackson Chourio, CF

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Head-to-head history

This will not be the first time USA and Venezuela meet in the WBC. They’ve met five times previously, including three times in 2009 alone, when the WBC format was much different than it is now. Here is a recap of this WBC rivalry:

  • 2009 Pool C Qualifier: USA 15, VEN 6
  • 2009 Pool C Seeding: VEN 5, USA 3
  • 2009 Pool 2 Seeding: VEN 10, USA 6
  • 2017 Pool F: USA 4, VEN 2
  • 2023 Quarterfinals: USA 9, VEN 7

USA and Venezuela both advanced to the semifinals in 2009 and could have met in the Championship Game, but Venezuela lost to Korea in the semifinals while USA lost to Japan. Japan then beat Korea in the title game. In 2023, Trea Turner’s eighth inning grand slam turned a 7-5 deficit into USA’s eventual 9-7 win over Venezuela.

All told, Team USA is 3-2 against Venezuela in the WBC and has outscored Venezuela 37-30 in the five games. And you know what? That won’t matter even a tiny bit Tuesday. What happened in 2009 or 2017 or 2023 will have no bearing on what happens in 2026. Different players, different teams, different time.

USA’s offense hasn’t really broken out

USA blew out Brazil (15-5) and Great Britain (9-1) in pool play, which they were expected to do. In the four games since they’ve scored 3, 6, 5, and 2 runs. They’ve scored two runs in their last 12 innings, both on solo homers. For all the big names and big bats on the roster, USA’s offense hasn’t dominated against teams more on their level (i.e. not Brazil and Great Britain).

That won’t necessarily have to change against Venezuela. Team USA is fully capable of winning a pitchers’ duel (see: Sunday against the Dominican Republic), but this is a team built to punish the ball and wear down opposing pitchers. It’s an offense-first roster and the offense has been good in the WBC, but not amazing. Tuesday is the last chance for USA’s bats to wake up.

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The bullpens may be short

It’s unclear whether each team will have their go-to relievers available Tuesday given their recent workloads. This is still spring training, after all, and USA and Venezuela will not put their players at risk of injury. After the Italy game Monday, Venezuela manager Omar López joked that “even Johan Santana is going to pitch” when asked about his bullpen for the Championship Game. 

This late in the WBC, we’ve got a pretty good understanding of who each team’s trusted late-inning relievers are. López has leaned on Eduard Bazardo, Andrés Machado, and closer Daniel Palencia. USA manager Mark DeRosa has run out David Bednar, Garrett Whitlock, and closer Mason Miller in the late innings of close games. Here are their pitch totals in recent days:

Eduardo Bazardo

9

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7

6

Andrés Machado

9

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14

12

Daniel Palencia

15

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13

17

David Bednar

18

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26

Mason Miller

22

18

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Garrett Whitlock

16

10

Tuesday would be back-to-back days and three times in four days for Bazardo, Machado, and Palencia. Teams don’t like to use their top relievers that much during the regular season, nevermind in mid March. Lefty Angel Zerpa, López’s trusted left-on-left matchup guy, would also be pitching back-to-back days and three times in four days Tuesday. His availability is in question too.

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Team USA had an off-day Monday, so the Americans’ top late-inning relievers had that built-in rest. Still, Tuesday would be three times in five days for Bednar, Miller, and Whitlock. That’s a workload teams prefer to avoid at this point on the calendar. For what it’s worth, Red Sox manager Alex Cora said Whitlock will be available to pitch in the WBC Championship Game.

My guess, and I emphasize this is only a guess, is USA will have a full bullpen with everyone available Tuesday, and Venezuela will have everyone available except Luinder Avila and Ricardo Sánchez. Avila and Sánchez both went multiple innings out of the bullpen Monday, and it’s a lot to ask to pitch a second straight day after that.

For USA, righties Griffin Jax and Brad Keller are next in line to step into high-leverage work. Submarining righty Tyler Rogers, too. Venezuela’s next bullpen tier includes Jose Alvarez and José Buttó. In terms of sheer pitching depth, it’s advantage USA all the way.

Prediction

Our staff overwhelming picked USA to win Tuesday. I was the lone dissenter who went Venezuela and, honestly, I can’t give you a great reason for that pick. Predicting one single baseball game between teams that are reasonably evenly matched is a fool’s errand. This sport isn’t built to be predictable. If Venezuela does win the championship, it should not be a shock. It’s a very good team loaded with MLB stars, just like Team USA. I went Venezuela 6, USA 5 because, well, why not?

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Sports

Rory McIlroy to acknowledge Tiger Woods & Phil Mickelson’s absence from Champions Dinner

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Rory McIlroy to acknowledge Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson’s absence from the Champions Dinner. The Northern Irish golfer will host his first Champions Dinner for the past winners of the Masters on Tuesday. The traditional dinner is only attended by past winners. However, this year, Woods and Mickelson are set to miss it.

At Monday’s Drive, Chip, and Putting event, McIlroy opened up about his Champions Dinner and talked about the absence of Woods and Mickelson. He said that he wants to make sure to “acknowledge” the absence of the legendary golfers.

“Unfortunately, there will be a couple of guys that won’t be in that room, which is a shame, but I want to make sure that they’re acknowledged as well. They’ve been two of the greatest champions that the Masters has ever seen.”

Phil Mickelson withdrew from the Masters last week to focus on his family’s health. He has been away from the field for a while and has only played in one LIV Golf event this season.

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Meanwhile, joining the list of absentees at the Masters is Tiger Woods. The American golfer had an accident last month, following which he released a statement on his X (formerly Twitter) account that he would be stepping away from the game for a “period of time.” He is looking forward to treatment and will not be playing at the Masters.


Rory McIlroy “ready” to defend his Masters title

Rory McIlroy is looking forward to defending his title at the Masters and opened up ahead of the event on Monday. He talked about his Champions Dinner and the tournament.

“It’s going to be a really cool night. I can’t wait,” McIlroy said. “I hope everyone enjoys the dinner and enjoys everything that I’ve selected. Hopefully we won’t stay too long, and I’ll be ready to go. I may be not as fresh on Wednesday morning, but Thursday, I’ll be ready to go.”

This season has been decent so far for Rory McIlroy. He started the campaign with a T14 finish at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am, where he carded rounds of 68, 67, 72, and 64. He was then runner-up at the Genesis Invitational, where he played rounds of 66, 65, 69, and 67.

However, McIlroy had a tough time playing at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, where he struggled with an injury and withdrew from the game after playing two rounds of 72 and 68. He then finished T46 at The Players Championship.

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Rory McIlroy has not played since The Players, and it would be interesting to see how things will unfold for him at the Masters. The first major of the year is scheduled to take place from April 9 to 12.