Yoan Moncada is officially part of part of Major League Baseball Opening Day history.
The 29-year-old Cuban professional baseball third baseman made his Los Angeles Angels debut at his former home, Rate Field, drawing a walk in his only plate appearance during the opening game.
In the process, Moncada helped his native Cuba make MLB history, with a record 26 players on MLB‘s Opening Day rosters.
Cuba’s total topped its previous high of 23 in 2016, 2017 and 2022.
In all the percentage of Opening Day players born outside the 50 states remained at 27.8%, matching its lowest level since 2016.
There were 265 players from 18 nations and territories outside of the 50 states among 954 players on Opening Day active rosters and injured, restricted and inactive lists, the commissioner’s office said Friday.
The Dominican Republic led countries outside the U.S. with 100, down from 108 last year and 110 in 2020.
Venezuela was second at 63, followed by Cuba (26), Puerto Rico (16), Canada (13), Japan (12), Mexico (11), Curacao and Panama (four), South Korea (three), Aruba, Australia and Colombia (two) and Bahamas, Brazil, Germany, Honduras, Nicaragua and South Africa (one apiece).
Philadelphia Phillies‘ Jesús Luzardo was listed as “miscellaneous.” Born in Peru, he’s of Venezuelan descent.
The Houston Astros and San Diego Padres topped teams with 16 international players each, with the Astros having a share of the lead for the fifth straight season
They were followed by the Atlanta Braves (14), the New York Mets (13) and the Baltimore Orioles and Miami Marlins (12 each).