Beisbol Sudamerica had its second expansion prior to the 1987 season and re-aligned in the process. The new additions were the south Peru-based Arequipa Arrows to the Bolivar League and the north central Argentina-based Mendoza Mutants to the Southern Cone League. With that, both leagues now had 15 teams and the decision was made to divide into three divisions of five teams each. Logistically, this also created the need for limited interleague play for the first time.

In the Bolivar League, the divisions were set up as follows: the Venezuela division had the five Venezuelan teams (Caracas, Valencia, Maracaibo, Barquisimeto, and Ciudad Guayana). The Peru-Bolivia Division had La Paz, Lima, Callao, Santa Cruz, and Arequipa; and the Colombia-Ecuador Division had Cali, Guayaquil, Medellin, Bogota, and Quito. Liga Cono Sur had to split up the seven Brazilian teams with five making up the North Division (Fortaleza, Belo Horizonte, Recife, Brasilia, Salvador). The new Southeast Division saw Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo join Rosario, Buenos Aires, and Montevideo. The South Central Division would have Cordoba, Asuncion, Santiago, Concepcion, and Mendoza.
The change also required new postseason rules as well as opposed to the prior setup with the two division winners advancing only. The new setup had the three division champions and one wild card advance with a best-of-five Divisional Series. The League Championship Series and Copa Sudamerica remained best-of-sevens. There was also a brief labor disruption, leading to teams missing around 10-12 games this season from the usual 162 game schedule.*

Defending Copa Sudamerica champion Cali won the new Colombia-Ecuador Division at 97-53, posting the best record in the Bolivar League. This gave the Cyclones a third consecutive playoff berth. Medellin, the winner of the North Division the prior season, fell to 76-77. In the Venezuela Division, Ciudad Guayana was first at 92-61, while 90-63 Caracas took the wild card. La Paz secured the Peru-Bolivia division at 92-61, ending 4 ½ games better than Lima. This ended a four-year playoff drought for the Pump Jacks.
1986 Bolivar League MVP Lincoln Ruvalcaba was traded in the offseason from Santa Cruz to La Paz. The move paid off for the Pump Jacks as the 26-year old Bolivian designated hitter won MVP yet again. In 1987, he was the leader in runs (114), home runs (57), RBI (133), total bases (422), slugging (.726), OPS (1.109), and wRC +(197) with 7.9 WAR. Ciudad Guayana’s Ruben Garcia won Pitcher of the Year for the second time in three years. The 30-year old righty from Venezuela led in strikeouts (327), K/BB (12.1), quality starts (26), FIP- (61), and WAR (9.3). He added a 16-9 record and 2.26 ER over 267.1 innings.
In the Divisional Series, both Venezuelan teams advanced as Caracas knocked out Cali 3-1 and Ciudad Guayana popped La Paz 3-1. This created a first-time Bolivar League Championship Series matchup with two division rivals, giving the Colts their second BLCS berth in three years and the Giants their third in five years. In a seven-game classic, Caracas claimed the pennant over Ciudad Guayana, giving the Colts their first title since 1972. It is the tenth overall for Caracas, tying Medellin for the most pennants for a Bolivar League team.

Concepcion finished with triple digit wins for the first time in its 14-year existence. The Chiefs at 100-53 dominated the South Central Division and had the top mark in the Southern Cone League. Concepcion also got a third playoff berth in four years. At 90-60, Rosario won the Southeast Division to snap a 51-year playoff layoff. That was the longest such drought in Beisbol Sudamerica and the Robins’ success passed the new longest active streak to Asuncion at 48 seasons. In the North Division, Fortaleza won in a tight field at 87-63 to end their own eight-year playoff skid. Belo Horizonte (83-67) and Recife (84-69) were both close, but just behind. Both also narrowly were behind defending league champ Sao Paulo, who secured the wild card at 85-65.
Despite a very middling season for Buenos Aires, they saw second baseman Kip Flores win his second Southern Cone League MVP. The 28-year old from Paraguay won a third straight Gold Glove and won the batting title with a .379 average, also leading in hits (210), and total bases (357). He added 38 home runs and 10.5 WAR with a 1.060 OPS. Rosario’s Pepito Cortina won back-to-back Pitcher of the Year awards and was ten ERA points away from a Triple Crown. The 28-year old Argentine righty led in wins at 22-8, strikeouts (421), WHIP (0.85), inning (280), quality starts (28), and WAR (9.1). He added a 2.31 ERA and 64 FIP-.
Concepcion downed defending champ Sao Paulo 3-1 in the division series, while Fortaleza ended Rosario’s run with a sweep. This gave the Chiefs their third Southern Cone Championship appearance in four years, while it was the first in a decade for the Foxes. Concepcion cruised to their first-ever pennant, taking the series over Fortaleza 4-1. With the Chief win, three of the four teams from the 1974 expansion have now won a league pennant. Only Santa Cruz hasn’t yet as the Crawfish still haven’t posted a winning record in 14 seasons.

Concepcion became the second of the 1974 expansion squads to win Copa Sudamerica, joining Ciudad Guayana from three years earlier. The Chiefs won the 57th edition in five games over Caracas, bringing the cup back to Chile for the first time since Santiago’s 1971 title. 1B Amerigo Orozco led the postseason charge with 20 hits, 10 runs, 6 doubles, 3 triples, and 7 RBI in 14 playoff starts.

Other notes: Lazaro Rodriguez became the third BSA pitcher to 300 career wins. He would pitch one more season and finish with 309, placing him third at retirement behind Mohamed Ramos’ 347 and Laurenco Cedillo’s 342. Pasquale Martin and AJ Nunez both got to 500 career home runs, making 24 batters to reach the milestone. CF Axel Huaman won his eight Gold Glove. Enrique Tafoya won his ninth Silver Slugger and his first as a shortstop, having won his other eight as a second baseman.
*Editor’s note: the auto scheduler didn’t adjust right to the divisional switch, thus teams didn’t play all 162 games and I didn’t catch it until it was too late. This would be resolved from 1988 onward.
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