Rio Gomez, son of late ESPN reporter Pedro Gomez, tosses scoreless inning in World Baseball Classic debut

Late ESPN baseball analyst Pedro Gomez took a lot of pride in the baseball career of his son, Rio. (Photo by Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Late ESPN baseball analyst Pedro Gomez took a lot of pride in the baseball career of his son, Rio. (Photo by Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

One of the best things about the World Baseball Classic is watching a previously unknown player turn in an excellent performance against the best of the best. That was on full display Tuesday, as Rio Gomez, the son of late ESPN reporter Pedro Gomez, made his WBC debut with Colombia.

Gomez, who is currently in the Boston Red Sox's farm system, took the mound in the sixth inning. It took him just five pitches to record his first two outs, both on groundballs. After walking Owen Cassie on seven pitches, he rebounded to strike out Jacob Robson to end the inning.

As Gomez walked off the field, his mother was shown on the broadcast cheering him on.

Gomez wasn't finished. He also came out for the seventh inning and notched another strikeout on three pitches before being taken out. His performance came at a crucial point in the contest, as Colombia was trying to limit the damage down 1-0 to Canada.

Colombia got out of the seventh cleanly, but Canada rallied to score in both the eighth and ninth innings and won the game 5-0.

Gomez's father, Pedro, was a longtime MLB reporter who joined ESPN in 2003. He established himself as one of the game's best and most recognizable baseball analysts during his tenure at ESPN. Pedro died unexpectedly in 2021. He was 58.

Pedro took a lot of pride in Rio's baseball career. Broadcaster Adam Amin said Pedro "beamed with pride" when talking about his son.

Rio Gomez spent last season with the Red Sox's Double-A affiliate.