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World Baseball Softball Confederation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
International governing body for baseball, softball, and Baseball5

"WBSC" redirects here. For other uses, seeWBSC (disambiguation).
World Baseball Softball Confederation
Official logo
AbbreviationWBSC
Founded14 April 2013; 12 years ago (2013-04-14)
Merger ofInternational Baseball Federation (IBAF) andInternational Softball Federation (ISF)
TypeSports federation
Legal statusGoverning body ofbaseball,softball,Baseball5 and Blind baseball.[1]
HeadquartersPully, Switzerland
Location
  • Av. du Général Guisan 45
Region served
Worldwide
Membership141 national federations; 7 professional league "associate members"
Official language
English,French,Spanish,Chinese,Japanese,Korean
President
Riccardo Fraccari
Main organ
Congress
Subsidiaries
AffiliationsInternational Olympic Committee,ARISF,SportAccord
Websitewww.wbsc.org

TheWorld Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) is the internationalgoverning body for the sports ofbaseball,softball,Baseball5 and Blind baseball. It was established in 2013 by the merger of theInternational Baseball Federation (IBAF) andInternational Softball Federation (ISF). Under the WBSC's organizational structure, the IBAF and ISF serve as the confederation's baseball and softball divisions, respectively. Each division is governed by an executive committee, while the WBSC is governed by an executive board.

The WBSC has 208 National Federation members in 141 countries and territories across Asia, Africa, the Americas, Europe, and Oceania.Professional baseball organizations as well as youth organizations are also included and form an arm of the WBSC as associate members. Headquartered inPully, Switzerland, the WBSC was granted recognition as the sole competent global authority for both the sports of baseball and softball by theInternational Olympic Committee (IOC) in2013.

As the recognised governing body of baseball, softball, and Baseball5, the WBSC is charged with overseeing all international competitions. It holds the exclusive rights of all competitions, tournaments and world championships featuring national teams, including theOlympic Games, and WBSC-associated federations hold the right to organize and select national teams[2]

Discussions to merge the two separate world governing bodies for the sports of baseball and softball were sparked by a Memorandum of Understanding that saw baseball and softball leaders agree to form a joint bid to be added to the 2020 Olympic Games sports program.[3][4] Baseball and softball were dropped from the 2012 Summer Olympic program and were scheduled to be reinstated for the 2020 Olympics, but the 2020 Olympics were delayed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. In August 2021, the IOC announced that baseball and softball would not be part of the2024 Paris Olympics.[5] Baseball5 is still set to feature in the2026 Youth Olympics.

History

[edit]
Flag of the WBSC

Following its exclusion of baseball and softball from theSummer Olympics in 2005,[6] the IOC reclassified baseball and softball as two disciplines of the same sport.[7] As the IOC's guidance indicated the necessity for baseball and softball to be jointly considered for reinstatement in the Olympic programme, the two independent International Federations set out on a path toward a full and complete merger.

In 2012, the International Baseball Federation (IBAF) and the International Softball Federation (ISF) laid out the essential ground rules for partnership and began working on a constitution that would guide the merger and provide a framework for governance, ethics and operations. At a historic IBAF Congress in Tokyo in April 2013, the Constitution was ratified and since it had already been approved by an ISF working group empowered to do so, the WBSC was officially formalized and empowered.[citation needed]

The creation of a single federation allowed for the permanent alignment, merger and management of baseball and softball at the world level.[8] The merger resulted in an immediate boost to the governance, universality and gender equality of baseball and softball, criteria for an Olympic sport that are heavily valued by the IOC.[citation needed]

At the first-ever World Baseball Softball Congress—inHammamet, Tunisia—Italy's Fraccari was elected to a seven-year term as the first president of WBSC, along with a fully elected Executive Board.[9]

Creation of Baseball5

[edit]
B5 batter hitting the ball into field.

In 2017,[10] the WBSC introduced a third discipline to be played at an international level,Baseball5 (B5), which is a five-on-five, five-inning game designed to be played with only a rubber ball on a small field. It is targeted at underserved communities,[11] as well as offering a low-cost and fast-paced entry point to baseball and softball in new places around the world.[12] The WBSC introduced it to aid its ultimate goal of having a billion-strong baseball-softball community by 2030.[13] A major difference between B5 and baseball/softball is that the game is played without apitcher, with thebatter starting each play with the ball.[14] It was inspired by various Latin American street games, such as "cuatro esquinas" (four corners) in Cuba,[15] and has been played in some international tournaments in the Americas and Europe,[16][12][17] as well as having been implemented in some schools in various countries.[18][19] It is due to feature in the2026 Youth Olympic Games,[20] and has twoWorld Cups for youth and senior players alternating each year starting in 2022, with both of these international events being played in a mixed-gender format.[21] The WBSC is also planning to, as part of its general push intoE-Sports, introduce a video game version of Baseball5 in the near future.[22]

Coed slow pitch softball

[edit]

The first official WBSC Coed Slow Pitch World Cup was greenlit on 9 June 2022, during a meeting by the WBSC Executive Board in Pully, Switzerland.[23][24] It was to be held inGuadalajara, Mexico in December 2023,[25] but it was cancelled in October 2023 due to logistical challenges.[26]

Organizational structure

[edit]

The WBSC is governed by the executive board, which consists of fourteen members: president, secretary general, two vice presidents, baseball executive vice president, softball executive vice president, treasurer, four members at large, athlete representative for baseball, athlete representative for softball, and global ambassador.[27]

The Baseball Division is governed by an executive committee, which has thirteen members: president, secretary general, 2nd vice president, 3rd vice president, treasurer, three members at large, four continental vice presidents (one each for Africa, Americas, Europe, and Oceania), and executive director.[citation needed]

The Softball Division is governed by an executive committee that has twenty-three members: president, secretary general, 1st vice president, 2nd vice president, treasurer, twelve vice presidents (two each for Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and Oceania, and one each for North America and English-speaking Caribbean), two at-large members, two athlete representatives, immediate past president, and executive director.[citation needed]

The WBSC has four departments: media, finance, tournaments, and marketing. It also has several commissions.[citation needed]

Members

[edit]
WBSC Confederations

Besides its worldwide institutions, there are five regional governing bodies that oversee the game in the different continents and regions of the world.

TeamRegionLeague
 Dominican RepublicAmericasLIDOM
 MexicoAmericasLMB
LMP
 Puerto RicoAmericasLBPRC
 United StatesAmericasAA
AABC
ABO
BRL
PONY
 VenezuelaAmericasLVBP
 Chinese TaipeiAsiaCPBL
 JapanAsiaNPB
 South KoreaAsiaKBO
 FranceEuropeAFBS
 ItalyEuropeAIBxC

In total, WBSC recognizes 198 national associations, with 132 national baseball teams as well as 122 women's national teams.[28]

Unlike theICC, the WBSC identifies associate members as those who particularly endorse international baseball and softball with their own leagues in partnership with the WBSC. These leagues support baseball and softball to the extent that they are major sports in their respective countries. The table to the right has all leagues along with the country hosted:[29]

Presidents

[edit]
NoNameCountryOrg.Took officeLeft office
1Leslie Mann United StatesIBF19381939
2Jaime Mariné Cuba19401943
3Jorge Reyes MexicoFIBA19441945
4Pablo Morales Venezuela19461947
5Chale Pereira Nicaragua19481950
Pablo Morales Venezuela19511952
6Carlos Manuel Zecca Costa Rica19531968
7Juan Isa Netherlands Antilles19691975
William Fehring United StatesFEMBA[a]19731974
Carlos García Solórzano Nicaragua1975
8Manuel González Guerra CubaAINBA19761979
Carlos García Solórzano[b] Nicaragua19801981
9Robert Smith United StatesIBAF19811993
10Aldo Notari Italy19932006
11Harvey Schiller United States20072009
12Riccardo Fraccari Italy2009Incumbent
WBSC

[30][c]

Tournaments

[edit]

Baseball

[edit]
Men's[32][33]
Women's[32]

Softball

[edit]
Men's[34]
Women's[34]
Mixed

Baseball5

[edit]
Mixed

Current title holders

[edit]
See also:Portal:Current events/Sports,2026 in baseball, and2026 in sports
For events postponed or cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, seeImpact of the COVID-19 pandemic on baseball.
CompetitionYearHost country / regionChampionsTitleRunners-upNext editionDates
Baseball
World Baseball Classic2023United States Japan3rd United States2026Qualification:
February 21 – March 6, 2025
Finals:
5–17 March 2026
WBSC Premier122024Japan Chinese Taipei1st Japan2027
Olympic baseball tournament2020Japan Japan1st United States2028July 2028
U-23 Baseball World Cup2024China Japan3rd Puerto Rico20266–15 November 2026
U-18 Baseball World Cup2025Japan United States11th Japan2027
U-15 Baseball World Cup2024Colombia Japan3rd Puerto Rico2026
U-12 Baseball World Cup2025Taiwan United States6th Japan2027
Women's Baseball World Cup2024Canada Japan7th United States20272026 (group stage)
2027 (finals)
Softball
Men's Softball World Cup2025Canada Venezuela1st New Zealand
U-23 Men's Softball World Cup2023Argentina Australia1st Japan202625 April – 3 May 2026
U-18 Men's Softball World Cup2023Mexico Japan4th Mexico2027
Women's Softball World Cup2024Italy Japan4th United States20272026 (group stage)
2027 (finals)
U-18 Women's Softball World Cup2025United States United States9th Japan
U-15 Women's Softball World Cup2025Italy Japan1st Puerto Rico2027
U-12 Softball World Cup2021Taiwan Chinese Taipei2nd Czech Republic2025
Olympic softball tournament2020Japan Japan2nd United States2028July 2028
Baseball 5
Baseball5 World Cup2024Hong KongCubaCuba2ndJapanJapan2026
Youth Baseball5 World Cup2025MexicoCubaCuba2ndChinese TaipeiChinese Taipei2027
Youth Olympic Games
First edition will be held in 2026
2026

World Rankings

[edit]
Main article:WBSC World Rankings

Men's baseball

[edit]
Top 20 Rankings as of 31 December 2025[35]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1Steady Japan6676
2Steady Chinese Taipei5112
3Steady United States4357
4Steady South Korea4192
5Steady Venezuela3653
6Steady Mexico3606
7Steady Puerto Rico3393
8Steady Panama2934
9Increase 1 Netherlands2690
10Decrease 1 Cuba2622
11Steady Australia2615
12Steady Dominican Republic2050
13Steady Colombia1831
14Steady Italy1729
15Steady Czech Republic1544
16Steady Nicaragua1330
17Steady China1136
18Steady Germany996
19Steady Great Britain975
20Steady Canada744
*Change from 31 December 2021

Men's softball

[edit]
Top 20 Rankings as of 31 December 2025[36]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1Steady Japan2989
2Steady Venezuela2621
3Steady Argentina2325
4Steady Canada2165
5Steady United States1964
6Steady Australia1934
7Steady New Zealand1726
8Increase 1 Mexico1481
9Decrease 1 Czech Republic1416
10Increase 1 Singapore1078
11Decrease 1 Dominican Republic1052
12Steady Guatemala879
13Steady Colombia642
14Steady South Africa425
15Steady Hong Kong371
16Steady Israel356
17Increase 2 Philippines290
18Decrease 1 Chinese Taipei289
19Decrease 1 Denmark279
20Steady Netherlands239
*Change from 31 May 2022

Women's baseball

[edit]
Top 20 Rankings as of 31 December 2025[37]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1Steady Japan1310
2Steady United States918
3Steady Canada755
4Increase 2 Mexico746
5Decrease 1 Venezuela710
6Decrease 1 Chinese Taipei654
7Increase 2 Cuba352
8Steady Hong Kong312
9Decrease 2 Puerto Rico297
10Increase 3 Australia264
11Steady Indonesia224
12Decrease 2 South Korea212
13Decrease 2 India171
14Increase 1 France164
15Increase 13 Great Britain160
16Increase 1 Thailand146
17Decrease 3 Pakistan125
18Increase 4 Czech Republic112
19Decrease 1 China96
20Decrease 1 Sri Lanka94
*Change from 11 August 2021

Women's softball

[edit]
Top 20 Rankings as of 31 December 2025[38]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1Steady Japan3649
2Steady United States3490
3Steady Puerto Rico3010
4Steady Canada2667
5Increase 1 Chinese Taipei2276
6Decrease 1 Netherlands1988
7Increase 1 Mexico1825
8Decrease 1 China1686
9Increase 1 Italy1542
10Increase 1 Czech Republic1520
11Decrease 1 Australia1380
12Steady Great Britain1053
13Increase 3 Philippines993
14Decrease 1 Cuba906
15Decrease 1 Spain860
16Decrease 1 Venezuela777
17Steady Brazil602
18Steady Peru554
19Increase 1 Germany464
20Increase 1 Israel451
*Change from 31 December 2021

Baseball5 (Coed)

[edit]
Top 20 Rankings as of 31 December 2025[39]
RankChangeTeamPoints
1Steady Cuba5827
2Steady Japan4527
3Steady France4375
4Steady Chinese Taipei4149
5Steady Tunisia3606
6Steady Mexico3343
7Steady Venezuela3324
8Steady Lithuania2863
9Steady Kenya2538
10Increase 1 Turkey2300
11Decrease 1 South Korea2098
12Steady China1716
13Steady Spain1644
14Steady South Africa1621
15Increase 5 Romania1123
16Decrease 1 Malaysia1092
17Decrease 1 Ghana1055
18Steady Thailand1031
19Steady Belgium893
20Increase 5 Denmark884
*New Rankings

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The status of FEMBA, which broke away from FIBA from 1973 to 1975, is disputed.
  2. ^Elected but did not take office due to theNicaraguan Revolution.Robert Smith filled the role in an interim capacity.
  3. ^Dates according to the WBSC. Other sources, including sports researcher Stephan Müller, offer slightly different dates.[31]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Blind Baseball Rulebook"(PDF).World Baseball Softball Confederation.
  2. ^"WBSC Organisational Profile".wbsc.org. Retrieved9 October 2021.
  3. ^"Baseball, softball agree on name".ESPN Olympics.ESPN. 17 December 2012. Retrieved24 August 2013.
  4. ^Linden, Julian (8 September 2013)."Baseball-softball vow to fight on after Olympic rejection". Reuters. Retrieved18 January 2014.
  5. ^"Breakdancing (yes, breakdancing) in, baseball, softball, karate out for 2024 Paris Olympics".USA Today. 6 August 2021. Retrieved21 September 2021.
  6. ^Michaelis, Vicki (8 July 2015)."Baseball, softball bumped from Olympics".USA Today. Retrieved6 November 2015.
  7. ^Kolatch, Jonathan (3 September 2013)."Baseball and softball belong in the Olympics".Los Angeles Times.Archived from the original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved6 November 2015.
  8. ^"World Baseball and Softball Confederation sets out Olympic vision".British Baseball Federation. 3 April 2013. Archived fromthe original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved6 November 2015.
  9. ^"Fraccari elected baseball-softball president".Yahoo Sports. Associated Press. 14 May 2014. Archived fromthe original on 30 October 2014. Retrieved15 May 2014.
  10. ^"Riccardo Fraccari: WBSC's culture of innovation brings series of firsts to 2022".insidethegames.biz. 17 December 2022. Retrieved17 December 2022.
  11. ^Mackay, Duncan (19 June 2021)."Fraccari believes Baseball5 can offer refugees new opportunities".insidethegames.biz. Retrieved12 August 2021.
  12. ^ab"1st Urban Baseball5 international games staged at Foro Italico in Rome – 1960 Olympic venue".wbsc.org. 15 May 2018.Archived from the original on 6 October 2021. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  13. ^"WBSC reveals new logo for launch of new Baseball 5-on-5 Street competition in Cuba".wbsc.org. 14 November 2017. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  14. ^Cooper, J. J. (1 March 2018)."WBSC Proposes New Street Baseball Game".Baseball America. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  15. ^WBSC (19 April 2019),"What is Baseball5?",YouTube,archived from the original on 16 November 2022, retrieved6 October 2021
  16. ^"Cuba wins the inaugural Baseball5 Americas Open, Venezuela second".wbsc.org. 21 April 2019.Archived from the original on 6 October 2021. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  17. ^"Bulgaria wins Balkan Baseball5 Championship".wbsc.org. 19 February 2020. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  18. ^"Australian Gov puts Baseball5 in schools, reaching millions of youth".wbsc.org. 2019. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  19. ^"La France signe un partenariat pour introduire le Baseball5 à l'école".wbsc.org (in French). 2021. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  20. ^"Debut of Baseball5 at Youth Olympic Games postponed as next YOG shifted from 2022 to 2026".wbsc.org. 15 July 2020. Retrieved20 September 2021.
  21. ^"First-ever Baseball5 World Cup set for 2022 as WBSC announces five-on-five international calendar".wbsc.org. 2020.Archived from the original on 6 October 2021. Retrieved6 October 2021.
  22. ^"End-of-the-year message from WBSC President to the global Baseball Softball community".BFJ. 19 December 2020. Retrieved8 October 2021.
  23. ^"WBSC gives the go-ahead for first Co-ed Slowpitch World Cup". British Softball Federation. 20 June 2022. Retrieved28 May 2023.
  24. ^"WBSC Coed Slow Pitch Softball World Cup 2023 awarded to Guadalajara, Mexico; Dates confirmed in December". World Baseball Softball Confederation. 28 June 2024. Retrieved9 April 2024.
  25. ^"Blu Girls brace for World Cup".The Manila Times. 6 June 2023. Retrieved6 June 2023.
  26. ^"WBSC Coed Slow Pitch Softball World Cup 2023 cancelled". World Baseball Softball Confederation. 27 October 2023. Retrieved9 April 2024.
  27. ^"스포츠토토"". Retrieved16 July 2019.
  28. ^"WBSC Members". World Baseball Softball Confederation. Archived fromthe original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved15 May 2021.
  29. ^"Associated Members of the WBSC". World Baseball Softball Confederation. Retrieved25 February 2024.
  30. ^"President".WBSC.org.
  31. ^Stephan Müller (16 July 2019)."IBAF – International Baseball Federation (defunct)".Sport-record.de. Archived fromthe original on 18 September 2016. Retrieved13 March 2024.
  32. ^ab"Directory of WBSC Baseball World Cups". World Baseball Softball Confederation. Archived fromthe original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved15 May 2021.
  33. ^"About World Baseball Classic".Major League Baseball. Retrieved15 May 2021.
  34. ^ab"Directory of Women's Softball World Cups". World Baseball Softball Confederation. Archived fromthe original on 25 February 2022. Retrieved15 May 2021.
  35. ^"WBSC World Rankings".WBSC. 31 December 2025. Retrieved31 December 2025.
  36. ^"The WBSC Men's Softball World Ranking".WBSC. 31 December 2025. Retrieved31 December 2025.
  37. ^"The WBSC Women's Baseball World Ranking".WBSC. 31 December 2025. Retrieved31 December 2025.
  38. ^"The WBSC Women's World Ranking".WBSC. 31 December 2025. Retrieved31 December 2025.
  39. ^"The WBSC Baseball5 World Ranking".WBSC. 31 December 2025. Retrieved31 December 2025.

External links

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