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Trea Turner can’t believe it either. Why is he hitting so many homers in the WBC?

Trea Turner hits a three-run home run in the sixth inning of the United States' 14-2 win over Cuba.
Trea Turner hits a three-run home run during the sixth inning of the United States’ 14-2 victory over Cuba in a World Baseball Classic semifinal Sunday night. Turner homered twice in the win.
(Gene Wang / Getty Images)
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Earlier in the World Baseball Classic, before he became the greatest No. 9 hitter the tournament has seen, Trea Turner had a conversation with J.T. Realmuto and Kyle Schwarber. The Team USA and Philadelphia Phillies teammates were talking about spring training numbers. He told them he hadn’t hit a home run during the exhibition season in four or five years.

“It’s kind of funny how it works out,” Turner said, “but I don’t ask questions.”

What’s funny is that Turner has become a prolific slugger in a different March setting.

After homering once for Team USA in its four pool play games, Turner, the former Dodgers shortstop, smashed the go-ahead grand slam in the eighth inning of the Americans’ 9-7 quarterfinal win over Venezuela on Saturday night. He followed that memorable moment — he called it the biggest hit of his career — with two additional home runs and four RBIs in Team USA’s 14-2 rout of Cuba in a semifinal Sunday night.

Protesters critical of the Cuban government make their presence felt in the United States’ 14-2 win over Cuba in the World Baseball Classic semifinals.

“What a fun team where Trea Turner bats ninth,” U.S. starter Adam Wainwright noted.

Turner has gone seven for 19 with a 1.429 on-base-plus-slugging percentage while setting several records in this tournament. The four home runs are the most for a U.S. player in a WBC. The 10 RBIs are tied for tops with Ken Griffey Jr. (2006) and David Wright (2013). He’s the first player in WBC history with four RBIs in consecutive games.

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“I don’t know any of these things,” Turner said.

He also joined Griffey, Team USA’s hitting coach, as the only U.S. players with two home runs in a WBC game.

“Just can’t wait to tell him,” Turner said. “I didn’t know that, but I can’t wait to have that conversation with him in the cage tomorrow. It’s going to be fun for me.”

Turner, 29, has played in pressure-packed contests before. He has 43 postseason games and a World Series title with the Washington Nationals on his resume. But he hasn’t duplicated his regular-season prowess in October, batting .238 with three home runs and a .614 OPS in 197 career playoff plate appearances.

That does not change that Turner, a batting champion and two-time All-Star, is one of the best position players in the majors. He has a rare blend of speed and power at a premium position. It’s why the Dodgers acquired him along with Max Scherzer from the Nationals during the 2021 season. It’s why the Phillies gave him an 11-year, $300-million contract in December. And it’s why he has been the starting shortstop for the most loaded lineup ever assembled for an international baseball competition.

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“I think he’s one of the best players in the game,” Team USA manager Mark DeRosa said. “That’s what I think, honestly. I mean, the Phillies gave him $300 million for a reason. The guy can flat play.”

Turner has excelled from the No. 9 spot over the last two games, surpassing his typical March production by a mile for the baseball world to see, after having never batted ninth as a professional. Without him, the Americans aren’t in Tuesday’s final against Japan or Mexico, whichever team wins Monday’s semifinal. With him, they are a win away from their second consecutive WBC title.

“I kept saying every time he went deep, ‘Who is the idiot that’s hitting him ninth?’ ” DeRosa said. “But that’s the way this lineup’s built. So I’m going to leave him alone right now.”

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