01 March 2023
Why Team Australia catchers are prioritising relationships at World Baseball Classic training camp
An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar, Fuchu City, Japan. Photos by SMP Images. Video by Hugh Whittle.
On one of the first days of Team Australia’s Fuchu City training camp, each veteran took a newer player on the team out to dinner.
It was an intentional exercise aimed at getting familiar with teammates who all come from different ages, states, teams, backgrounds and family situations.
“If you don’t know [your teammates], you’re not comfortable with them,” says catcher Ryan Battaglia. “You need to be on the same page because you don’t want to be on a different one on the big stage.”
Trust is paramount for all teammates on Australia’s World Baseball Classic roster. It’s a whole other level for Australia’s pitchers and catchers.
Australia’s catching trio of Ryan Battaglia, Robbie Perkins and Alex Hall have a big job at hand.
Luckily, they all come with experience.
Robbie Perkins is entering his second World Baseball Classic. At 28, he’s already played over 300 Australian Baseball League games, a World Baseball Classic, a Premier-12, a Claxton Shield and reached as high as Triple-A in the minors.
At 30, Ryan Battaglia was a key part of four straight Claxton Shield winning teams with the Brisbane Bandits. He caught the game where Australia defeated the USA at the Premier-12. He’s been there in huge moments and pressure situations for the national program.
Then there’s Alex Hall. The 22-year-old is the rising catching star. Hall, a switch hitter, is the captain of Australia’s Under-23 team, already received a brief call-up to the MLB, and just won the 2022-23 Australian Baseball League MVP after putting up video game numbers with the Perth Heat.

Catcher Ryan Battaglia during an exhibition game in Fuchu City (PHOTO: Scott Powick)
During the upcoming WBC, it’s one of those three behind the plate, calling, catching, leading and managing the balls and strikes delivered by any one of Australia’s fifteen rostered pitchers.
They need the pitchers to trust them, and they need to trust the pitchers.
“At the end of the day we are a battery out there,” says Perkins. “The pitcher is throwing to me and we need to execute to give everyone else a chance. It’s important we take time to get to know each other at this camp.”
The stakes are high. This is the World Baseball Classic – the biggest international tournament there is and it’s chalk full of pressure moments featuring with the best players the sport has to offer.
Australia plays four games in Group B vs South Korea, China, Japan and Czech Republic. They will play in front of a massive global TV audience and 55,000 people at the Tokyo Dome in baseball-crazed Japan. They will likely need to win at least three of them to get through.
This isn’t regular season baseball. It’s a sprint. Every little moment bares significant meaning.
“It’s polar opposite,” says Perkins. “In a tournament every pitch is just as important as the next. You come out with an intent to get a guy out every single at-bat. In the season, you have to think about the next day. Here, at the World Baseball Classic, every single game is a fight for our lives. You have think about now before you worry about tomorrow.”
Perkins says it’s important he knows what each pitcher’s best pitch is, what they feel comfortable with, and how they react to different situations just as a human being.

Robbie Perkins from Canberra, working with Jon Kennedy from Victoria (PHOTO: Wendy Powick / SMP Images)
He says he wants to know what to call and what the pitcher likes to rely on so when that big moment rears its head, they know what to do.
“There’s a massive mental edge we have to create,” says Perkins, a Canberra-native about to play in his second WBC. “We have to create a bond with every single pitcher and understand how their pitches move, how we need to work with them, what they execute well, what’s their go-to-pitch when it comes down to it. I think there’s a whole other aspect we need to factor into our preparation.”
Australia’s catchers have just two weeks to prepare. One of the reasons for this training camp in Fuchu City is to get used to each other and gain an understanding of who their teammates are.
Manager Dave Nilsson knows how important that pitcher-catcher relationship is. He was a catcher in the Big Leagues for nearly a decade, an MLB All-Star in 1999, and a catcher for Team Australia for a long time.
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He says it’s all about developing good communication habits.
“For them it’s about developing good communication which then develops trust. That’s where all the effort goes into,” he says. “The catcher needs to be on point for this all to work. A big part of catching is mental.”
It’s important for the pitchers, too.
21-year-old Blake Townsend is entering his first World Baseball Classic. He’s from a different state than all three rostered catchers and hasn’t really worked at length with any of them.
Townsend says he appreciates how hard Australia’s catchers are working to get to know him not just as a pitcher, but as a person.

22-year-old Alex Hall is on his first World Baseball Classic roster (PHOTO: Scott Powick / SMP Images)
“The guys you trust the most are the ones that put in the effort off the field,” says 21-year-old Blake Townsend. “Those are the ones you feel a better energy with. You want to know you can have a positive discussion that’s built on trust.”
Veteran pitcher Sam Holland says it takes a different kind of person to be a catcher. He says he appreciates all they do.
“They have the hardest job, man. They have a huge role especially when it comes to the dynamic of a team,” he says. “From a pitcher’s perspective, It’s crucial that we get to know these guys on and off the field and get on the same game plan as them. We need to figure stuff out before we get on the field, which is what we’ve been doing these last few days.”
At 22-years-old, Alex Hall is embracing the challenge of getting to know his new teammates. He could be on this national team for a long time.
“I’m spending a lot of times with pitchers,” he says. “Asking a lot of questions, learning about them. It’s a great challenge and a lot of fun.”
It’s a lot of work, but its’ a roll that that all three of Australia’s catchers say they embrace.
Battaglia says it keeps him busy at the training camp and he wouldn’t have it any other way.
“We have a lot of guys to get to know. We’re busy. We’re going around, talking to pitchers, getting to know them,” he says. “It’s exciting to meet new guys, form new friendships.”






Left-to-right: Alex Hall, Andrew Campbell, Tim Atherton, Tim Kennelly and Darryl George (PHOTO: SMP Images)



































