Baseball is our game, Walt Whitman once wrote, but he never saw what happened in Miami last night. He never heard a bunch of scrappy underdogs -- because aren't underdogs always "scrappy"? -- singing, shouting, howling "Gloria Al Bravo Pueblo" into the south Florida night as if it were, I don't know, "The Star-Spangled Banner" or something.
"Gloria Al Bravo Pueblo", you see, is the Venezuelan national anthem. And that's what a bunch of weeping, hugging Venezuelan baseball players were singing at the end of Venezuela 3, USA 2.
Turned the championship game of the World Baseball Classic into a 'dog show, the Venezuelans did. As in, "underdog show."
The Americans were supposed to win last night, transforming what is frankly America's Passed Time into America's Pastime again. But, just as in 2023, they lost 3-2 in the title game. Three years ago to Japan; last night to the Venezuelans.
Which suggests America the Great Exporter has done a bang-up job of exporting one of its most cherished cultural treasures.
And the hugging and crying and belting out of their national anthem by the Venezuelans?
Well, that suggested something else.
"This country needs this happiness with all the things that we've gone through," said designated hitter Eugenio Suarez, who delivered the go-ahead RBI double in the ninth inning.
And, yes, everyone knew what he meant, or at least every Venezuelan did. Assigning political motives to an athletic contest is often the most lazy of cliches, but it's impossible to view Venezuela-USA solely through the lens of runs, hits and runners left on base. Not after the United States spent months violating Venezuela's sovereignty, killing its citizens and waylaying its shipping.
Culminating, of course, with the raid that kidnapped Venezuela's admittedly vile gangster Nicolas Maduro, and whisked him off to the U.S. -- for the crime, essentially, of denying America access to Venezuela's oil.
Now a new regime is installed that may or may not play ball with America's own Regime, and may or may not survive without resorting to Maduro-esque brutality. In any event, it's welcome to more instability for another South American country.
So, yes. Venezuela needed this happiness, as Suarez said. And if winning a baseball game is pale business compared to getting kicked around geopolitically by a perceived bully, it was at least, for one night, a sliver of payback.
Gloria Al Bravo Pueblo 1, The Star-Spangled Banner 0. For one night, anyway.