Mexico’s Monday slate ended with a tense 0–0 between Pachuca and América. Winter baseball delivered defining leverage, from Puerto Rico’s 7–0 lifeline win for Ponce to a replay game in the Dominican Republic.
Venezuela’s round robin stayed knife-edge, with two one-run results. Brazil’s Copinha quarterfinal day produced big-name pressure and surprise winners. Argentina’s Liga Nacional added a late-game separator with Unión beating San Lorenzo.
1. Pachuca 0–0 América in Liga MX
Key facts: The match finished scoreless at Estadio Hidalgo and neither side found a clean finishing window. Pachuca had the better first-half moments, while América pushed harder after the break. América’s Rodrigo Dourado was booked late, as frustration rose in the final minutes.
Why picked: A scoreless América game is always a league-wide signal early in a short tournament.
10 Key Sports Developments in Latin America (January 19, 2026). (Photo Internet reproduction)
2. LBPRC final: Ponce crush Santurce 7–0 in Game 5
Key facts: Ponce avoided elimination with a 7–0 win at Francisco Montaner and cut the series deficit to 4–1. Bryant Salgado threw six no-hit innings and struck out seven, setting the tone early. Ponce nearly completed a combined no-hitter, before a late single spoiled it.
Why picked: It was the biggest swing result of the Caribbean winter finals on the day.
3. LIDOM replay drama: Toros beat Águilas 8–7 in La Romana
Key facts: The replay was ordered after LIDOM annulled the original January 16 result and scheduled a replacement on January 19. Toros won 8–7, completing the 18-game round robin for both clubs. The result left Toros and Escogido tied on 12–6, while Águilas finished 10–8.
Why picked: A single replay decided who controlled the Dominican finals math.
4. LVBP: Caribes beat Bravos 5–4 in a one-run finish
Key facts: The game stayed within one swing, and neither side created a safe cushion late. Caribes’ final runs arrived in the middle innings, then the bullpen protected the margin. Bravos threatened, but could not land the equalizer in the closing frames.
Why picked: One-run wins are standings events in Venezuela’s short playoff format.
5. LVBP: Magallanes beat Cardenales 3–2 and tightened the race
Key facts: Magallanes broke through in the fifth, then added two in the eighth to take control. Cardenales scored twice in the sixth, but never regained the lead. Felipe Vázquez earned the save, after Cardenales left a late push short.
Why picked: It was a direct head-to-head result between contenders, with immediate table implications.
6. Copinha quarterfinals: Grêmio 3–0 Ceará and Cruzeiro 3–0 Guanabara City
Key facts: Grêmio advanced with a clean 3–0 win, keeping control from the first goal onward. Cruzeiro also won 3–0, avoiding the penalty chaos that has decided many ties this year. Both wins booked a semifinal place and protected them from tiebreak randomness.
Why picked: Two traditional pipelines reached the final four with decisive, low-drama wins.
7. Copinha quarterfinals: Ibrachina upset Palmeiras on penalties after 2–2
Key facts: Palmeiras and Ibrachina finished 2–2 in regulation, with neither side able to close the door. The tie went to penalties and Ibrachina won 5–4. The result removed one of the tournament’s favorites and opened the bracket for a surprise run.
Why picked: A heavyweight exit on penalties changes the entire youth-tournament narrative.
8. Copinha quarterfinals: São Paulo beat Botafogo 3–1 to reach the semis
Key facts: São Paulo won 3–1 in Sorocaba and secured a semifinal against Ibrachina. Djhordney and Matheus Menezes scored before Paulinho added a late long-range goal. Botafogo pulled one back, but São Paulo’s late control decided the night.
Why picked: The defending champion stayed alive, and the semifinal pairing is now set.
9. Argentina Liga Nacional: Unión beat San Lorenzo 96–93
Key facts: Unión won a three-point game that stayed tight into the final possessions. San Lorenzo matched scoring runs, but could not flip the last defensive sequence. The result added another road-style statement for Unión in a travel-heavy stretch.
Why picked: Close wins like this decide seeding tiers long before the playoffs arrive.
10. LMP final schedule locked: Tomateros vs Charros starts January 21
Key facts: The championship series calendar was published with Games 1–2 in Culiacán on January 21 and 22. The series then shifts to Guadalajara for Games 3–4 on January 24 and 25. If needed, Games 5–7 are scheduled later in the week, with rest days built in.
Why picked: The Caribbean Series pathway becomes concrete once the final calendar is fixed.




