Team Italy manager Francisco Cervelli speaks before the 2026 World Baseball Classic 

How can the World Baseball Classic help the growth and development of the game in Italy?

It’s great. This is part of the larger mission of the game. In the future, we want more Italians on this team. We want to elevate the level of the game and give them more playing time. That’s the question mark all the time. You get five or six months during spring and summer then you lose everything. You don’t do anything in winter. It’s a problem. So you try to figure out a way to keep the players active in tournaments outside Italy in Asia or the Dominican Republic. But the WBC is good for us now. I love it. 

After the two pre-WBC exhibition games against the Chicago Cubs and the Los Angeles Angels, what have you learned about the Team Italy players?  

There is talent on this team. They are prospects. And the good part is even if they’re not playing and not in the lineup, every time I walk by they look at me. Like they’re waiting to hear when I might be calling on them. They are very aggressive and run the bases well. We have got speed. My idea and the way I like to play baseball is by attacking, attacking, attacking… A lot of guys that can hit for power, and they can hit for extra bases. But the team is solid, and those kids are real players. 

Los Angeles Angeles pitcher Samuel Aldeghieri is an Italian-born and developed player proudly representing his country in the WBC. How has his participation given baseball a boost in Italy?

It means a lot, you know, it  means like we’re doing something right. He earned it and is the face of Italian baseball right now.  I hope we get more like him playing professionally. Unfortunately, due to injury, we don’t have San Marino’s Alessandro Ercolani, who plays Double-A ball for the Pittsburgh Pirates. I hope we can have more guys like Giaconino Lasarcina, who signed with the Toronto Blue Jays just a few days ago. He is a power guy and very impressive. So we want to get  more guys like him here in the U.S. They need to come here and learn how to play competitively to get them to take it to the next level. They may miss home because Italy is beautiful, but they need to play in the states where this sport is great. They have got to be able to be here for a long time. 

How can Italian players attending U.S. colleges increase their chances of playing professionally? 

The shift over the last four or five years is more college players being taken in the draft. American college baseball has a much higher level of development. We need to take our 16 or 17 year old kids and somehow get into that track. I would love our Italian players to go to college. First because you know, I come from Venezuela, where we got no Plan B. It’s either we get signed and play professionally or you go back home. It’s embarrassing to be sent home because there is no Plan B. I would love Italian players to have a Plan B by learning English and earning their college degree. Then they are also able to play baseball by signing a professional contract at 21 or 22 years old. There are more guys going to college now and it’s a great opportunity. We have a young core of 16 to 17-year-old players in Italy. They are able to sign as a professional so we’re looking forward to getting more young guys on board by signing early so that they can develop quickly. 

How can we get more Italian children to learn to play and love baseball? 

In Italy it is a challenge to find a kid and tell him “Let’s go play baseball.” So what we are doing is introducing Baseball5 in Elementary School, where kids learn the basics of baseball. They like it and eventually we bring them onto the field to play the game. Baseball is probably the hardest sport. It’s not easy to hit, right? You give a kid a bat, and they start swinging and missing. When they don’t have success, they’re going to quit. Baseball5 is the pathway to bring them to the field. So now we have got a bunch of kids playing baseball and also have little girls playing softball. 

Tell us about the success you have had with the Francisco Cervelli/IABF Baseball Academy in Castiglione della Pescaia (Grosseto). 

It’s great. I have had an amazing time. We go to tournaments in Europe and last year our team represented Italy at the Pony League World Series in the U.S. The players had a blast.  That’s what we’re looking for is to give them opportunities to play at higher levels of the game at a young age. Not only are they playing in Italy or Europe, but they compete abroad in the U.S. and other parts of the world. 

Describe your experience during the first year as the manager and leader for Team Italy.

Well, the first year has been a learning year, trying to understand how to make things work successfully in the WBC and beyond. My idea is to make noise. This is the thing, not only just to make some noise, but creating an impact where the people in Italy know what we’re doing. And they start to believe in it because it’s a process. This is not something that you can develop in two years.I am hoping and looking forward to getting a big result here. it’s going to help everything. Whatever you do right here in the WBC, the noise you make, you can feel it deep down in your heart and soul. That’s what we’re trying to do, make noise, and make people  believe and understand what we do. Then we can explain to them what we do and keep this movement growing. 

What are some of your pitching options in the World Baseball Classic? 

We have many pitchers that fill different roles. The challenge in the World Baseball Classic, especially in the first round, is that guys cannot throw back-to-back games as it is early in the year so we have to be able to manage their pitch count. As far as closers, Greg Weissert or Kyle Nicolas are ready. Then you have guys that can give you multiple Innings like Gabriele Quattrini. You saw him pitch really well against the Los Angeles Angels. You know, this guy last year, when you see his numbers and you would think they were a little rough, but his performance at the 2025 European Baseball Championship was one of the best ever and helped us earn a silver medal. His brain works differently. He’s the kind of guy that wants the ball in tough games. So he has earned a roster spot at the WBC. We also have Claudio Scotti, who has played professionally in the minors. He throws hard, 96-97 mph, and  is another guy who has earned the right to compete in the WBC. We got options. We just have to let the game tell us what to do. This game is like chess. Sometimes you let the other team score so you can score later. 

Team Italy players possess some of the best speed in the World Baseball Classic. Who can make a difference in these games? 

I think the only guy that cannot run will run. We have got a lot of speed in Dante Nori, Sam Antonacci and Jakob Marsee. Not only do they have speed, but they know how to use it. They are aggressive and they are waiting. You can see in their eyes. They are waiting for an opportunity to get an extra base. It’s a good thing to have. 

Please elaborate about your Team Italy WBC coaching staff (featuring Jorge Posada, Ron Wotus, Dave Righetti, Frank Menechino, Sal Fasano Alessandro Maestri, Allard Baird, Lipso Nava and Jack Santora).

We have got the people here to help me a lot. We have got an experienced coaching staff that is great. I would love to have this coaching staff manage an MLB team one day. With the staff, it is unbelievable. Jorge Posada is now an honorary Italian. I hear a lot of people saying he is not Italian. That’s a matter of baseball, which doesn’t have a flag. He has always preached baseball and is a proven winner. He has five world championship rings for a reason. You should have seen him in Florida work with the Italian-born and developed players for three days during a pre-WBC Spring Training Camp. He was so passionate about helping players and teaching them how to develop and refine their craft. He was free flowing with instruction and information that they needed. The players may have been talented before, but now they are better than ever because of him. 

You are considered by many as a player’s manager. Who trained you to become the manager you are today? 

I grew up in what I always say was in the best school in the world, the New York Yankees. They taught me how to do things, especially how to prepare myself for that day to win the game. And watching Joe Torre, Joe Girardi, Jorge Posada, Andy Pettitte, and Mariano Rivera every day gave me an idea and how to become a good manager. Managing is not an easy job. There are a lot of challenges and you have to have your eyes wide open all the time. But the key for the success of a manager is his coaching staff. You have got to have a good coaching staff. On our Team Italy WBC coaching staff, we have a total of 21 World Series Championship rings all together.  I was able to work as a San Diego Padres coach under manager Bob Melvin, one of the best I have ever worked with. What I learned from him is he let his coaches do their thing to get the job done. He used to tell me to work in my specialized area and that he would always have my back. He would protect his guys, and that’s what I’m doing right now. Our guys are professional so it’s easy, man. I don’t have to worry about anything. I just need to prepare for battle and execute our game plan to be successful.

Team Italy Pitchers in the 2023 World Baseball Classic

VINCENZO AIELLO  

Selected in the 17th round of the 2017 draft out of University of Oklahoma by the Miami Marlins, right-handed reliever Vincenzo Aiello played in professional baseball for four seasons (2017-21) in the Marlins and White Sox organizations. He recorded 11 wins and a 2.91 ERA in 93 outings in his stints between Rookie League and Double-A. In the summer of 2021, he was placed on the injured list while playing in Winston-Salem and elected free agency at the end of the year. Most recently the 28-year-old Aiello signed with his hometown team, the Atlantic League’s Staten Island FerryHawks. He made 18 appearances on the mound and allowed 19 earned runs in 22 innings.  

GLENN ALBANESE JR.

24-year-old right-handed pitcher Glenn Albanese Jr. was selected by the Los Angeles Angels in the 15th round of the 2021 draft out of University of Louisville. In 38 appearances at the High-A and Double-A level, the Illinois native and 6’7” reliever compiled a 1-2 record (3.34 ERA) with five saves and 68 strikeouts in 62 innings pitched. Relative TJ Galidari played in the NHL from 2010-16.  

ALEX BASSANI

Alex Bassani is one of the pitching veterans in Italian baseball. Having grown up in Bologna with multiple experiences in the Italian Baseball League since 2013, Bassani broke out in 2017 in Novara with a strong season at the plate and on the mound. The 32-year-old hurler later moved to Rimini (2018) and back to Bologna (2019-present), where he won three consecutive Italian championships and the European Champions Cup. He has represented Team Italy in 20 games to date. Bassani made his Azzurri debut in 2017 at the European Baseball Series and has been called upon in every international competition ever since. He earned the save in the 2021 European Baseball Championship bronze medal game against Spain and was the winning pitcher against Curacao in the 2022 Haarlem Week tourney.     

JOE BIAGINI 

Joseph Carlo Biagini will represent Team Italy for the first time at the 2023 WBC. The 32-year-old right-handed pitcher was selected by the San Francisco Giants in the 26th round of the 2011 draft.  The Toronto Blue Jays picked him up on the waiver wire during the 2015 Rule 5 Draft, and the California native made his MLB debut on April 8, 2016.  Working out of the bullpen as an effective setup pitcher during the regular season and also pitching in the postseason, Biagini was named 2016 Blue Jays Rookie of the Year. He became a fan favorite and made two TV appearances on The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon. Biagini was traded to the Houston Astros alongside Aaron Sanchez and Cal Stevenson for Derek Fisher on July 31, 2019. He had brief stints with Houston in 2020 and with the Chicago Cubs in 2021. However, he returned to the Blues Jays organization in 2022 and compiled a 4-2 record (3.46 ERA) in 30 appearances including five starts for Triple-A Buffalo.  

MATTEO BOCCHI

The 26-year-old Parma native competed in the 2008 Little League World Series while on the first-ever Italian squad (Emilia Little League) to play in the international youth competition and a decade later on March 20, 2018 became the first Italian-born student-athlete to play for the College World Series-bound University of Texas Longhorns. Right-handed pitcher Matteo Bocchi signed a minor league contract with the Chicago Cubs on June 13, 2019 and reached as high as AAA playing for the Iowa Cubs. During his two seasons in the minors, he compiled a 4-3 record with one save in 37 appearances (3.90 ERA. 94.2 IP, 109 K).    

RYAN CASTELLANI 

Philadelphia-born Ryan Castellani was selected out of high school in the 2nd round in of the 2014 draft by the Colorado Rockies. He was named Baseball America High-A All-Star while pitching for the Modesto Nuts in the California League. Despite some injuries along the way, the right-handed pitcher made his MLB debut for the Colorado Rockies on August 8, 2020 and remained in the starting rotation for the remainder of the season. He managed to make only one start for the Rockies in 2021 before signing with the Oakland Athletics on March 11, 2022. Castellani pitched only 2.2 innings in three appearances for the A’s during the 2022 season.  

TIAGO DA SILVA 

A Team Italy WBC veteran pitcher having played in the 2009, 2013 and 2017 editions, 37-year-old Tiago da Silva signed a minor league contract with the Toronto Blue Jays on January 30, 2015 and pitched at Single-A Dunedin and Double-A New Hampshire before returning to the Mexican Leagues. He was awarded the 2014 Mexican League Reliever of the Year while pitching for Delfines de Ciudad del Carmen. The Brazilian-Italian pitcher led San Marino to back-to-back Italian championship titles in 2021 (when he won Italian Baseball Series MVP) and 2022.  

ALESSANDRO ERCOLANI

San Marino-born pitcher Alessandro Ercolani signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2021. He is the very first player to sign an MiLB contract from the small country located in northwest Italy with just over 33,000 citizens. The right hander has since made 20 Rookie ball appearances and posted a 2.77 ERA in 48.2 innings of work with 59 strikeouts. The 18-year-old prospect is the youngest member of the Team Italy WBC roster after recently playing in the U18 World Cup and European Baseball Championship.  

NICK FANTI

Left-handed pitcher Nick Fanti makes an encore appearance at the 2023 WBC after making his Team Italy debut at the 2017 WBC in Jalisco, Mexico, where he threw a scoreless inning of relief against Puerto Rico. The 26-year-old New York native was selected in the 31st round of the 2015 draft by the Philadelphia Phillies out of high school. He was named to the FCL Post-Season All-Star team in 2016 and a Baseball America Low-A All-Star in 2017. Fanti pitched four seasons in the Philadelphia Phillies minor league system and reached High-A in 2018 prior to a stint in the Australian Baseball League playing for the Sydney Blue Sox. Multiple injuries resulted in a Tommy John surgery, and a shoulder injury kept him off the field during the 2022 season. 

MATT FESTA

Selected in the seventh round of the 2016 draft by the Seattle Mariners, the Brooklyn-born and Staten Island native Matthew Festa made his MLB pitching debut on July 14, 2018 and subsequently made the 2019 Mariners’ Opening Day roster. After Tommy John surgery, he once again made the Mariners’ Opening Day roster in 2022 when the 29-year-old reliever made 53 regular season appearances (2-0, 2 SV, 4.17 ERA, 64K, 54 IP) and two postseason appearances (0-0, 2.70 ERA, 2 K, 3.1 IP against the Toronto Blue Jays and Houston Astros).  

SAM GAVIGLIO

Right-handed pitcher Sam Gaviglio returns to Team Italy after making his Azzurri debut during the 2017 WBC when he started the second game of the tournament against Venezuela (4.2 innings, 2 runs allowed). The 32-year-old Oregon native was selected in the fifth round of the 2011 draft by the St. Louis Cardinals. He subsequently spent four seasons in MLB (11-18 record, 4.88 ERA and 296.2 innings in 98 games pitched) playing for the Seattle Mariners (2017), Kansas City Royals (2017) and the Toronto Blue Jays (2018-20). Gaviglio has since signed minor league contracts with the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Dodgers. He spent the 2022 season pitching for the Triple-A Oklahoma City Dodgers and compiled a 6-4 record (6.34 ERA) in 17 appearances including nine starts.  

MATT HARVEY

Vying for an MLB comeback after knee surgery, pitcher Matt Harvey will represent Team Italy in the 2023 WBC. Thanks to his Italian mother, the 33-year-old right-handed pitcher will be in the Italian rotation after his 2022 season between High-A and Triple A (8-1, 3.72 ERA in 13 starts).  Born in New London, Connecticut and selected in the first round of the 2010 draft by the New York Mets out of University of North Carolina, Harvey pitched six seasons for the Mets. He reunites with Mike Piazza, who managed Team USA in the World Futures Game in 2011 when Matt picked up the save for the Americans. Among his highlights of his first three seasons, he broke a franchise record for a debuting pitcher with 11 strikeouts against Arizona in 2012. Harvey was named MLB All-Star in 2013 and started game five of the 2015 World Series against the Kansas City Royals. From 2019 to 2021, he pitched for the Cincinnati Reds, Los Angeles Angels, Oakland Athletics, Kansas City Royals and Baltimore Orioles. During his illustrious MLB career, Harvey compiled a 50-66 record with a 4.42 ERA and 867 strikeouts in 966.1 innings pitched. 

JOE LASORSA 

Joe LaSorsa is a 24-year-old New York native and a promising left-handed pitcher who was selected by the Tampa Bay Rays in 18th round of the 2019 draft out of St. John’s University. He will begin his fourth professional season by competing in his first international tourney with Team Italy in the 2023 WBC. He made 39 relief appearances and one start for a total of 73.1 innings between High-A and Double-A during the 2022 season when he compiled a 7-3 record with 8 saves (2.33 ERA) and 87 strikeouts in 73.1 innings of work.  

BRAXTON LORENZINI

Pitcher Braxton Lorenzini will make his Team Italy debut in the 2023 WBC. Selected by the San Diego Padres in the 33rd round of the 2015 draft out of California’s West Hills College, the 27-year-old Colorado native and right-handed reliever played six seasons in the minor leagues between 2015 and 2021. He made 94 appearances and registered a 11-9 record (6.17 ERA) with 139 strikeouts in 143.1 innings as a part of the San Diego Padres (2015-17) and the Colorado Rockies (2018-21) organizations.  

JOEY MARCIANO


Related to undefeated American boxing legend Rocky Marciano, pitcher Joey Marciano has the same fighting spirit on the mound. With a late start to his baseball career playing for the first time as a freshman in high school, he made up for lost time and became a pitching sensation at Southern Illinois University. Selected in the 36th round of the 2017 draft by the San Francisco Giants, Joey Marciano had high hopes to pitching professionally. Despite being named 2017 ACL Post-Season All-Star and 2018 ACL Post-Season All-Star, he retired from the game. Marciano returned to the Giants organization in 2021 after the pandemic-induced year off. With a stronger pitching repertoire and a solidified relief role, he moved up to Double-A and Triple-A in 2022 and compiled a 4-2 record with 9 saves (4.12 ERA) and 62 strikeouts in 59 innings of work.  

BRIAN MARCONI

After four seasons in the NCAA’s Atlantic 10 Conference pitching for the George Mason Patriots, Brian Marconi signed a minor league contract on June 12, 2019 with the Philadelphia Phillies, his hometown organization. Forced to miss the entire 2020 due to the COVID-19 outbreak, he broke through High-A, Double-A and Triple-A in 2021 as a dominant closer. Marconi earned the Double-A Northeast League Reliever of the Year Award and named to the All-Star team. The 25-year-old compiled a 4-7 record (4.40 ERA) with 18 saves and 68 strikeouts in 57.1 innings of work during the 2022 season in between Double-A and Triple-A stints.  

VINNY NITTOLI

32-year-old right-handed pitcher Vinny Nittoli began his professional career after being selected by the Seattle Mariners in the 25th round of the 2014 draft. He eventually ventured in the Indy League and pitched for St. Paul Saints as a reliever and starter. Nittoli later signed minor league contracts with the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2018 and the Toronto Blue Jays in 2019 before returning to the Seattle Mariners organization in 2020. He made his MLB pitching debut for the M’s on June 23, 2021 against the Colorado Rockies. Nittoli spent time in Triple-A pitching in the Minnesota Twins, New York Yankees and Toronto Blue Jays organizations before returning to MLB in 2022 for two appearances with the Philadelphia Phillies. On January 12, 2023, he signed a minor league contract with the Chicago Cubs.  

ANDRE PALLANTE


Selected in the fourth round of the 2019 draft by the St. Louis Cardinals out of UC Irvine, Andre Pallante emerged as one of the best pitchers for the Redbirds in 2022. The right-handed pitcher made his MLB debut on March 10, 2022 and a total of 47 appearances during the regular season including 10 starts for the Redbirds in 2022 with a 6-5 record (3.17 ERA) in 108 innings pitched. He also made one Wild Card Series appearance against the Philadelphia Phillies.  Pallante will make his Team Italy pitching debut in the 2023 WBC.  


JEFFREY PASSANTINO

Selected in the 40th round of the 2017 draft by the Chicago Cubs out of Lipscomb University in Nashville, right-handed pitcher Jeffrey Passantino played three minor league seasons before joining the Pittsburgh Pirates’ organization in 2021. The 27-year-old Florida native got as high as Triple-A during the 2022 season and compiled an overall 3-2 record (4.47 ERA) in 22 minor league appearances with 42 strikeouts in 41.1 innings pitched. He recently pitched for Gigantes de Carolina in the Winter League in Puerto Rico and allowed just one run in 11.2 innings pitched.  

NICOLO PINAZZI

Nicolò Pinazzi was born and raised in Milan where he played for local club Milano 1946. The 23-year-old left-handed pitcher signed a minor league contract with the Cincinnati Reds in 2020.  For the past two seasons, he pitched in the Rookie League and compiled a 5-2 record (3.95 ERA) with 98 strikeouts in 57 innings pitched), earning him a promotion to Single-A Daytona at the end of the 2022 season. 

CLAUDIO SCOTTI

A product of the FIBS Academy, MLB pitching prospect Claudio Scotti signed a minor league contract with the Pittsburgh Pirates on April 1, 2016. After two years in the Pirates organization, he returned to pitch for Team Italy during Haarlem Baseball Week and the Super 6 in 2018. Scotti enjoyed success when signing with UnipolSai Bologna and leading the team to two consecutive Italian championship titles in 2019 and 2020 as well as winning the European Champions Cup in 2019. After pitching seven scoreless innings with 16 strikeouts for Team Italy in the 2021 U23 European Baseball Championship in Verona and after two starts at the European Championships in Turin in 2021, he signed a minor league contract with the New York Mets on October 2, 2021. Scotti spent the 2022 season in the Rookie League and made five appearances including two saves.  

MITCHELL STUMPO

 
Mitchell Anthony Stumpo signed a minor league contract with the Arizona Diamondbacks on July 2, 2019. The 26-year-old North Carolina native and right-handed pitcher nearly retired twice after suffering an arm injury in high school and not being drafted after a successful collegiate career at Guildford College. He got his chance for redemption and quickly ascended up the ladder being named 2021 MiLB Organization All-Star Stumpo helped the Triple-A Reno Aces win the 2022 Pacific Coast Championship with 45 appearances and a record of 1-2 (3.53 ERA) with eight saves and 51 strikeouts in 43.1 innings pitched. 

VIN TIMPANELLI

Vin Timpanelli signed a minor league contract with the Cincinnati Reds on August 18, 2020. The Staten Island, New York native played most of his college career at New Jersey’s Ramapo College as a catcher but during his senior year he started throwing some bullpen sessions. After the Covid-plagued 2020, Timpanelli focused on pitching and was subsequently picked up as a free agent by the Cincinnati Reds. After spending his time at High-A Dayton in 2021 and part of 2022, he advanced to Double-A Chattanooga. During his 2022 campaign, he made 32 appearances and compiled a 1-1 record (5.10 ERA) with 2 saves and 79 strikeouts in 47.2 innings pitched. 

MICHELE VASSALOTTI

The 23-year-old right-handed pitcher signed a minor league contract with Milwaukee Brewers on June 9, 2017 and made his Rookie League debut the same year. He made his Team Italy debut in the 2017 U18 World Cup. Michele Vassalotti earned Pioneer League Pitcher of the Week in 2019 and later won Player of the Game honors twice for the Brisbane Bandits during the 2021 Australian Baseball League season. Pitching for the Brewers’ Single-A Carolina Mudcats in 2022, he compiled a 9-2 record (2.64 ERA) with seven saves and 56 strikeouts in 47.1 innings.   

STEPHEN WOODS JR.

Selected in the sixth round of the 2013 draft by the Tampa Bay Rays, right-handed pitcher Stephen Woods Jr. chose to attend SUNY Albany and play collegiate ball. He was selected again in the eighth round of the 2016 draft by the San Francisco and signed a minor league contract on June 22 2016. On December 20, 2017, Woods was traded to the Tampa Bay Rays along with Denard Span, Christian Arroyo and Matt Krook as part of the deal that brought Evan Longoria to San Francisco. After sitting out during the 2018 season due to injury, he pitched 86 innings at the HIgh-A level and secured a sub 2 ERA before being selected as the fourth overall pick by the Kansas City Royals in the 2019 MLB Rule 5 Draft. After 2020 Spring Training, Woods was dropped off the 26-man roster and sent back to the Tampa Bay Rays. He was later traded for and acquired by the Kansas City Royals. Woods reached the Triple-A level in 2022. During his minor league career, he has appeared in 116 games including 52 starts and has complied a 23-19 record (3.58 ERA) with 352 strikeouts in 339.2 innings pitched.