
Two-time defending Bolivar League champ Barranquilla had their best season yet in their six-year playoff streak. The Blues finished 111-51 for the top seed and their fifth Colombia-Ecuador Division title. All six seasons of their streak have had 99+ victories. Everyone else in the division was below .500, including Quito at 79-83. That ended a three-year playoff streak for the Thunderbolts and was their first losing season since 2015.
The next best records fought for the Peru-Bolivia Division with Lima (104-58) taking it over Santa Cruz (101-61). The Lobos broke the Beisbol Sudamerica record for runs scored at 931 and set a new record for team slugging percentage at .523. It was a surprise explosion for Lima, who ended the Bolivar League’s longest active playoff drought at 22 years. The Crawfish were denied a fourth straight division title, but easily got the first wild card. Santa Cruz allowed the fewest runs in the BL at 577.
Caracas again claimed the Venezuela Division at 93-69, giving the Colts ten division titles in the last eleven years. Valencia was eight back in second at 85-77, but that was just enough to take the second wild card over 84-78 Ciudad Guayana. The Velocity picked up their fourth wild card in seven years. Barquisimeto and Arequipa both were five back on the last wild card at 80-82.
Although the Arrows missed the playoffs, their LF Paco Amorim won his second Bolivar League MVP in three years. He broke his own BSA record for on-base percentage at .489 and now has BSA’s top three OBP seasons. His .489 ranked as the fourth-highest qualifying single-season OBP in all of pro baseball history. Amorim’s 107 walks were third-most in BSA history, two behind his record 109 from 2023.
The 27-year old Brazilian lefty led in the triple slash (.387/.489/.765), OPS (1.254), wRC+ (223), WAR (11.1), home runs (57), and walks (107). Amorim also had 211 hits, 120 runs, 31 doubles, and 117 RBI with only 52 strikeouts. His 1.254 OPS was the second-best in BSA history behind only Juan Carlos Rivera’s 1.281 from 2023. Amorim’s slugging also ranked as fifth best. After the season, Arequipa signed Amorim to an eight-year, $185,200,000 extension.
Barranquilla’s Fernando Alves won Pitcher of the Year in his ninth season. The 32-year old Brazilian righty led in wins (21-2), ERA (2.35), walks (74), and quality starts (26). Alves struck out 262 over 237.2 innings with 5.3 WAR and 167 ERA+.
Caracas defeated Valencia 2-1 in the first round, then promptly was swept in the divisional series by Barranquilla. Lima also swept Santa Cruz, earning their first Bolivar League Championship Series trip since their 2001 pennant. The Blues dynasty remained too strong though, defeating Lima 4-2 for the first BL three-peat since Santa Cruz’s 2008-10 effort. Despite being in only their 19th season, Barranquilla now had many or more pennants than five charter franchises that started with the league in 1931.

Santiago won the South Central Division for the eighth straight year and earned their 12th playoff trip in 13 years. For the fifth time in six years, the Saints also earned the Southern Cone League’s top seed, although this was their best record of the run at 109-53. Santiago’s .297 team batting average was the second-best in league history and they led all teams with 823 runs.
The Chilean capital also set an all-time Beisbol Sudamerica attendance record at 2,905,410. Concepcion was second in the division at 97-65 to earn the first wild card, bouncing back after a rare losing season in 2026. The Chiefs earned their fifth wild card in six years and their 14th playoff appearance since 2011. Concepcion allowed the league’s fewest runs at 524.
Sao Paulo won the Southeast Division at 101-61 and Manaus took the North at 99-63; both taking first by eight game margins. The Padres earned a fourth division crown in a row while the Magpies earned their second-ever (2017). For the second wild card, Rosario (93-69) edged reigning Copa Sudamerica champ Buenos Aires (92-70) and Brasilia (91-71). The Robins snapped a 13-year playoff drought. Also of note was Fortaleza’s playoff streak ending at six as the Foxes fell to 78-84.
Santiago two-way star Will Arocha won his second Southern Cone League MVP in three years and also took his first Pitcher of the Year. The 26-year old Chilean had missed most of 2026 with a broken kneecap, bouncing back impressively for his fourth season. On the mound, Arocha led in wins (25-4) and innings (274.1). He posted a 2.23 ERA, 292 strikeouts, 163 ERA+, and 7.4 WAR. Arocha also earned Gold Glove honors as a pitcher.
Arocha also played regularly at second base with 117 games and 105 starts offensively on the year. He had 4.8 WAR with a .292/.330/.543 slash, 145 wRC+, 122 hits, 70 runs, 13 doubles, 16 triples, 20 homers, 81 RBI, and 37 stolen bases. Arocha had the unique feat of winning MVP, POTY, Silver Slugger, and a Gold Glove all in the same year. That had only previously been accomplished once in all of professional baseball history back in 1968 by Totaro Uchiyama of the Japan League.
Concepcion edged Rosario 2-1 in the first round, then fell 3-1 to Santiago in the divisional series. Manaus topped Sao Paulo 3-1 on the other side to earn their first trip to the Southern Cone League Championship. The Saints ended a four-year stretch of one-and-dones despite their regular season success. However, Santiago still fell short of the pennant for the seventh straight year. The Magpies pulled off a shocking sweep of the Saints, setting up a finals matchup between two teams from the 2009 expansion.

The 97th Copa Sudamerica went all seven games with Barranquilla outlasting Manaus, earning their second Cup in three years. It was the eighth straight year without a Brazilian team on top, tying 1959-66 for the longest such drought. RF Rodrigo Enriquez was finals MVP in his fifth season. In seven playoff starts, he was 11-27 with 7 runs, 3 extra base hits, 4 RBI, and 5 steals. At 111-51, the 2027 Blues were tied for the ninth-best record by a Cup winner.

Other notes: 2027 was the final season for legendary Recife 3B Niccolo Coelho at age 44. He finally hit a hard wall, struggling to 0.4 WAR with only 68 games and 24 starts. Coelho did get 16 RBI, getting him to 2231 and passing Milton Becker’s record of 2226. Coelho’s 926 homers did fall shy of Becker’s 941 for the top spot and his 3745 hits were second to Owen Arcia’s 3940. Coelho also retired as BSA’s all-time leader in runs (2133), total bases (7275) and WAR among position players (168.5).
As of 2037 among all players in pro baseball history, Coelho ranks 20th in homers, 24th in RBI, 17th in runs, 19th in hits, 16th in games played, and 12th in WAR among position players. When adding pitchers and two-way guys, Coelho ranks 17th on the all-time WAR board. All 3369 of Coelho’s games came with Recife. The only player in pro baseball history with more games for one team was Angel Gabriel Cornejo, who played all 3444 of his games from 1936-59 with Cordoba.
In other hitting milestones, Juan Rizo became the 18th member of the 3000 hit club. Rizo and Sebastian Nazario became the 35th and 36th to 1500 RBI. Daniel Schafer became the 23rd to score 1500 runs. Ronaldo Ayala and Elijah Reuter became the 78th and 79th to 2500 hits. Valencia’s Timo Ordonez had a 31-game hitting streak, which was the 21st time in BSA that a player had a 31+ game streak. In pitching, Julio Arias was the 68th to 200 wins and Ronaldo Navarette was the 37th to 300 saves.
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