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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Twenty-nine percent of this season’s MLB players are foreign-born

Gift Ngoepe of the Toronto Blue Jays is the first African-born player to reach the major leagues. He played for Pittsburgh in 2017 and was traded to Toronto. (John Minchillo / Associated Press)

NEW YORK – Major League Baseball started the season with its most players born in Puerto Rico since 2011.

Nineteen players on opening-day rosters were born on the island, an increase of three from last year, the commissioner’s office said Friday.

Toronto infielder Gift Ngoepe is the first player from South Africa on an opening-day roster and Pittsburgh pitcher Dovydas Neverauskas is the first from Lithuania.

The Dominican Republic led with 84, down from 93 last year. Venezuela was next with 74, followed by Puerto Rico, Cuba (17), Mexico (11), Japan (eight), Canada and South Korea (six each), and Colombia and Curacao (five apiece).

Australia, Brazil, Nicaragua and Panama had three apiece. Aruba, Germany, Lithuania, Netherlands, South Africa, Taiwan and the U.S. Virgin Islands each had one.

The Texas Rangers (14) had the most for the second straight year, followed by the Chicago White Sox and Miami (13 each).

Figures include 750 active players on opening day rosters, 118 on disabled lists, eight on the restricted list and one on the paternity list.