Skip to content

Canada draws into group with Puerto Rico, Cuba, Panama at 2026 World Baseball Classic

PULLY — Canada has drawn into a pool with Puerto Rico, Cuba and Panama at the 2026 World Baseball Classic. San Juan, Puerto Rico, will host Pool A from March 6 to 11, with those three nations joined by the winner of a qualifying tournament.
7e1670eaabdedabf21a63927867be54196617a7f8d5a37a3803436dccabe1e50

Mexico's Joey Meneses, left, and Randy Arozarena (56) score as Canada catcher Bo Naylor, top left, tries to catch a throw from right field after a single by Ryan Téllez during the first inning of a World Baseball Classic game in Phoenix, Wednesday, March 15, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP-Godofredo A. Vásquez

PULLY — Canada has drawn into a pool with Puerto Rico, Cuba and Panama at the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

San Juan, Puerto Rico, will host Pool A from March 6 to 11, with those three nations joined by the winner of a qualifying tournament.

Canada is ranked 16th in the world, Cuba is eighth, Panama is 10th and Puerto Rico is No. 12.

Twenty teams, 16 invited from 2023 and four from 2025 qualifiers, will split into four groups at the men's baseball tournament.

The opening round is scheduled from March 5 to 11. The quarterfinals will happen on March 13 and 14.

The championship round will start on March 15, with the WBC final scheduled for March 17 in Miami.

Defending champion and world No. 1 Japan will host No. 11 Australia, No. 15 Czechia, No. 4 Korea and the winner of a qualifier in Pool C in Tokyo from March 5 to 10.

The United States, the runner-up in 2023 and current No 3, will host No. 18 Britain, No. 14 Italy, No. 2 Mexico and the winner of a qualifier in Pool B in Houston from March 6 to 11.

Miami will host Pool D from March 6 to 11, featuring No. 9 Dominican Republic, No. 19 Israel, No. 7 Netherlands, No. 6 Venezuela, and the winner of a qualifier.

Houston and Miami will host the quarterfinals.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 21, 2024.

The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks