Electric homer was all proof USA needed that starting Gunnar was right call

6:07 AM UTC

Team USA's surplus of elite infielders would leave any manager sick with envy -- in theory.

In practice, USA manager Mark DeRosa has to leave a top-tier player on the bench every day, and more often than not, the odd man out has been , crowded out by another five-tool shortstop (Bobby Witt Jr.) and a two-time World Series champion third baseman (Alex Bregman).

But the Orioles shortstop got the call in Team USA's semifinal vs. the Dominican Republic, crushing a game-tying home run in a 2-1 victory that propelled the Americans to their third straight WBC final.

2026 World Baseball Classic
Semifinals presented by Capital One
Bracket, schedule and how to watch
WBC scoreboard
Tickets
Rosters
Players by MLB team
Complete coverage

Team USA's "A" lineup -- the one any manager would employ to take down the powerhouse that is the Dominican Republic in a winner-take-all scenario -- typically has not featured Henderson.

But there was one slight complication: the scheduled Dominican starter, veteran right-hander Luis Severino, who Henderson had faced nine times in the regular season. A small sample in which Henderson had seven hits -- five singles, a double and a home run. It was that limited history that earned the 24-year-old a start at third base over Bregman.

“Playing the hot hand, right?” DeRosa told the media earlier in the day. “Gunnar’s got numbers against Severino.”

Sure enough, Henderson led off the fourth against Severino with a 400-foot blast. One out later, Roman Anthony crushed a solo shot to center, giving the Americans a 2-1 edge they wouldn't give up.

Quite the risk for DeRosa. But did it ever pay off.