16 August 2024
2004 Olympic Baseball: Australia in early hole after dropping second Olympic game to Chinese Taipei
by Robert Laidlaw | 2004 OLYMPIC BASEBALL – Greece, August 16, 2004 –
This story is part of a series running on baseball.com.au from August 15-25 commemorating the 20-year anniversary of the 2004 Australian Olympic Baseball team. Each day will feature a recap and story as if the tournament is happening now. Scroll to bottom of this story for more links and recaps.
IS IT OVER BEFOR IT GETS STARTED?
After dropping its first game to Cuba, Australia has dug themselves in huge hole after a 3-0 loss Chinese Taipei in game two of the 2004 Olympic baseball tournament in Greece.
It was always going to be a tough battle. Chinese Taipei also entered the game with an 0-1 record and send highly touted pitcher Chien-Ming Wang to the mound. Wang would progress to a nine year MLB career, mainly with the Yankees, right after the Olympics.
But back to the ball game…

Both starting pitchers, Australia’s John Stephens and Taiwan’s Wang, were solid and each lasted seven innings. Chinese Taipei scored twice in the third inning and once in the eighth.
At the top of the third with one out, Yung-Chi Chen and Chih-Yuan Chen collected singles, with the first run coming in on Chung-Yi Huang’s grounder, which was errored. The second run came from a RBI hit to Cheng-Min Peng.
Then at the top of the eighth, Peng hit a RBI double, which forced a pitching change. In Australia’s last two frames, hits to Gavin Fingleson (eighth) and David Nilsson (ninth), were not capitalised on.

BOX SCORE AND PLAY-BY-PLAY: Click here for detailed stats and box score
Stephens pitched 7.1 innings for seven hits and a walk for two strikeouts in taking the loss. Wang conceded just three hits in seven shutout frames to claim the win for Chinese Taipei.
“It was pretty straight forward, we never wavered but faced good pitching,” Nilsson said. “Straight after the game we addressed what had happened. We were a good team, and don’t need to change much. Trust the process – we are good enough.”
Nilsson added the mentality of the Australian team was to trust their preparation.
“We were prepared, so the message was simple, don’t worry about 0-2, just take it one game at a time.”
Manager Jon Deeble echoed Nilsson’s comments, while also praising experienced MLB pitcher Graeme Lloyd for his insights.
“Firstly, Chinese Taipei threw some good pitching at us, with two Big-Leaguers,” Deeble said. “Graeme (Lloyd) told me he thought we were playing fantastic and to keep doing what we were doing.”
Lloyd (below) even drew on some of his Major League Baseball experience in the biggest of stages.
“He told how when he was with the New York Yankees in 1996 when they were down two games in the World Series against Atlanta, but got up. He said, you just have to keep executing.”
“That was our approach, to keep executing and not worry about the score. That’s right through, the coaches, the players, the EO and the physio. We all have a job to do, and to just keep executing.”

Australia now finds themselves in an 0-2 hole to start the Olympic campaign.
It’s effectively a do-or-die game vs Italy tomorrow, with Japan coming up after that. Only the top four teams advance to the semi finals.
Here are the other scores from Day 2 of the 2004 Olympic Baseball tournament:
– Japan 8 (2-0) def Netherlands 3 (1-1)
– Canada 9 (2-0) def Italy 4 (0-2)
– Cuba 5 (2-0) def Greece 4 (0-2)
Standings After Day 2
1. Japan 2-0
2. Canada 2-0
3. Cuba 2-0
4. Netherlands 1-1
—
5. Chinese Taipei 1-1
6. Greece 0-2
7. Australia 0-2
8. Italy 0-2
Top four advance to semi finals.
Other stories:
– Game 1 Recap: Australia vs Cuba
– Preview: Australia looks to learn from success and failures past ahead of 2004 Olympics
– Roster: Meet the 2004 Australian Olympic Baseball team








“In 1999 it worked well, as the tournament (Intercontinental Cup) was in November and I had finished my season with Milwaukee after breaking my thumb six weeks earlier,” Nilsson said.















