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Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal, winner of the last two American League Cy Young Awards, was named to Team USA's World Baseball Classic roster on Thursday. So too was San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb, who has led baseball in innings each of the last three year. Skubal's inclusion ensures the Americans can now deploy a rotation fronted by both reigning Cy Young Award winners, as Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Paul Skenes joined the roster earlier this winter.

Add in several other notable arms, including Minnesota Twins righty Joe Ryan, and one thing is for certain: manager Mark DeRosa will have better starting options now than he did back in 2023, when Team USA finished second in the tournament. 

Tarik Skubal
DET • SP • #29
ERA2.21
WHIP.89
IP195.1
BB33
K241
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Indeed, the success of that squad (which lost to Japan in the Championship Game) makes it easy to forget that they fielded a less-than-impressive rotation. The Americans gave at least one start to four different pitchers, none of them on the level of Skubal or Skenes: Merrill Kelly, Lance Lynn, Adam Wainwright, and Nick Martinez. Comparatively, next spring's squad could have enough rotation options that the likes of Matthew BoydClay Holmes, and Nolan McLean, all quality starters themselves, may have to work out of the bullpen.

The names alone might tell the difference between the rotations. But, just to drive home the point, here's how the top four starting options stack up based on their prior regular-season performances:

RotationIP ERASO/BBWAR 

2023 (Kelly, Lynn, Wainwright, Marinez)

620

3.61

3.08

7.8

2026 (Skubal, Skenes, Ryan, Webb)

761

2.70

5.47

21.8

Next spring's rotation has the advantage across the board and not by a little either. The 2026 staff is much better positioned to give innings (within the WBC's pitch limit rules) and dominate.

Of course, there are no guarantees in baseball, least of all in a tournament setting. On paper, though, the Americans would seem poised to make another deep run on the strength of their rotation. In fact, they're the favorites to win it all (+130, per Caesars), ahead of Japan (+300), the Dominican Republic (+450) and Puerto Rico (+950).

The next iteration of the WBC, the sixth since the international tournament was forged a few decades ago, will commence next March. The Americans have won just one of the first five WBC, with that victory coming in 2017.