Team Canada Baseball’s Maple Swing Stalls in Gut-Wrenching Loss to Panama at WBC
You hate to see a game get away like that. Honestly, you could feel the air leave the stadium in San Juan on Sunday night. Just 24 hours after the Canada national baseball team looked like absolute world-beaters against Colombia, they ran into a Panama squad that just refused to quit—and got a whole lot of help from some uncharacteristic Team Canada miscues. The final score, a 4-3 loss, stings because this was a game we had in our back pocket.
For five innings, it was our brand of baseball. Smart, scrappy, and opportunistic. Otto Lopez led off the second with a single, and Abraham Toro brought him home with a double to give us the early lead. After Panama tied it up, we punched right back in the bottom of the fourth. Bo Naylor got things going, and then Denzel Clarke—that guy is an athlete, eh?—slapped an RBI single to right to put us up 2-1. It felt like we were dictating the pace. It felt like our tournament.
The Sixth Inning That Unravelled Everything
Then came the top of the sixth. Look, I’ve been watching this team for a long time, and I’m not sure I’ve seen an inning spiral quite like this one. The skipper went to the pen for a lefty, and that’s when the baseball gods decided to test us. A walk, a fly out, and then the wheels came off. A tough chopper to third, the throw to first was off, and the first baseman couldn’t dig it out. Error. Then a good pitch got a guy, but a single loaded 'em up. With two outs, a Panama veteran hit a slow roller that should have been the third out. Instead, it found a hole, scoring two. To make matters worse, a throw trying to nail another runner at the plate went sailing over the catcher’s head. By the time a speedster dropped down a perfect bunt for another RBI, it was 4-2 Panama. Just like that. Three errors, four runs.
To their absolute credit, the boys didn't fold. That's the sign of a team with real character. In the eighth, young Owen Caissie—who was an absolute force—ripped an RBI double to score Bo Naylor and cut the lead to one. They brought the tying run to the plate in the ninth, but Panama’s closer shut the door. The Maple Swing – Team Canada Baseball Tee will have to wait another day to be worn in celebration.
Looking Ahead: A Must-Win Against Puerto Rico
So now we sit at 1-1 in the pool. The good news? Our destiny is still in our own hands. The bad news? Standing in our way on Tuesday night are the unbeaten Puerto Ricans, and that place is going to be an absolute zoo. It’s a sellout. It’s loud. It’s everything you want in international baseball.
Here’s what we need to clean up if we’re going to punch our ticket to the next round:
- Defensive focus: That sixth inning was an aberration. This team is too good up the middle to let that happen again. Just gotta flush it and get back to basics.
- Clutch hitting: We stranded 10 runners against Panama. Ten. You can’t do that against good teams and expect to win.
- Early pressure: We need to get to their pitching staff early and take that home crowd out of the game. Silence that noise.
It’s funny, sometimes baseball and life intersect in unexpected ways. While we’re all feeling the heartbreak of this loss, there’s another kind of baseball romance capturing people’s attention right now. You might have noticed In Her Own League: The New Sports Romance from Liz Tomforde dropping everywhere. It’s this fantastic story about the first female owner of an MLB team and her clash with the old-school manager. It’s got that same mix of tension and passion you feel watching a game like this—the power struggles, the high stakes, the hope for a comeback. If you need a palate cleanser after the anxiety of that sixth inning, I can’t recommend it enough. It’s the perfect read to remind you why we love this game, even when it breaks your heart.
But back to the task at hand. We’ve got a veteran leader wearing the 'C' on his chest, and you know he’s going to have this group ready. We’ve got the arms, we’ve got the bats. We just need to play our game. Puerto Rico, here we come. Let’s go, Canada.