18 August 2024
2004 Olympic Baseball: Australia storms back from five runs down to beat Greece
by Robert Laidlaw | Greece, August 20, 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.
Call it a comeback.
Australia stormed back from a five run deficit to defeat Greece 11-7 and gain a winning record after game five of the 2004 Olympic baseball tournament in Athens.
A five-run seventh inning for the Aussies broke open a close one-run game that at one stage looked to be owned by the Greeks.
Greece opened up an early 5-0 lead and even led 6-3 in the sixth inning before the Aussies fought back.

BOX SCORE AND PLAY-BY-PLAY: Click here for detailed stats and box score
Greece came out with all guns blazing to score four runs at the top of the first inning, after hits to Peter Maestrales, James Demetral, Cory Harris, James Kavourias and future MLBer Nick Markakis.
Then at the top of the second, Maestrales smashed a home run and Greece seemed to be in full control, as Australia failed to collect a hit off Greek starter Clinton Zavaras in the first two frames.
Finally, some noise from the Aussie bats in the bottom of the third.
Craig Lewis led off with a single, followed by Paul Gonzalez’s huge home run. Later, Brett Roneberg also put one out, and it was 5-3 Greece. There was life.
The next two innings were scoreless, as Greece continued to hold on, and then at the top of the sixth gained a bit of breathing space, after back-to-back doubles to Kavourias and Peter Rasmusen, to go 6-3 up.
But Australia responded in the bottom of the sixth close the gap.

Roneberg hit his second dinger of the game, followed by David Nilsson walking and coming home on Glenn Williams’ double.
Australia trailed 6-5 in the bottom of the seventh and needed to find a way to grab the lead for the first time in the game.
Brett Tamburrino led off with a walk and went to second base on Rodney van Buizen’s bunt. Gavin Fingleson did the job with a single to tie the scores.
Fingleson stole second base, Nilsson reached on an infield hit, Williams hit a RBI double for the lead, and then the big blow, as Brendan Kingman cleared the bases with a three-run homer.
Although leading 10-6, no game is safe, especially when Kavourias led off the top of the eighth for Greece with a home run, but that was it for the home country.
Australia added another run in the bottom of the eighth on Fingleson’s RBI single.
“For our medal chances the Greece game was a must win,” said slugger Paul Gonzalez. “After a couple of early losses, every game was critical, and anytime you’re playing the host nation you need to be wary – they were a tough side, with US born Greeks.”
Gonzalez’s homer seemed to spark the Australian bats in this game.

(PHOTO: OMAR TORRES/AFP via Getty Images)
“We needed to position ourself for later on (in the tournament) and gain some momentum, which we did by overcoming an early deficit. For me personally, you’re always happy to ignite the offence, so yes, it was good to hit that home run to help us get started.”
Gonzalez said preparation was key for the Australian bats.
It was another team effort. Roneberg, Williams and Fingleson each had two hits while eight different players in the line-up reached base.
“We had faced him (Greek pitcher Zavaras) in a few exhibition games, I knew he threw a lot of changeups, I sat on one and drove it over the rightfield fence – he couldn’t beat me with the fastball, as I would go after it if he left something up,” said Gonzalez. “Anything I could contribute, that’s always the goal. Everyone knew they had a role – one hit, one pitch, they knew their role.”
Gonzales has the rare distinction of playing in Australia’s previous senior medal winning tournaments, in Intercontinental Cups – bronze in 1997 and gold in 1999.
Although having retired after the 2000 Olympics, Gonzalesz returned to support David Nilsson and manager Jon Deeble to help add some experience for the 2004 Olympic campaign.
Australia now sits at 3-2 in the tournament and moves into a Top 4 spot. If they can find a way to beat Netherlands tomorrow, it likely clinches a spot in the medal rounds.
Here are other scores from Day 5 of the Olympic Baseball tournament:
– Italy 5 def Chinese Taipei 4
– Japan 9 def Canada 1
– Cuba 9 def Netherlands 2
Standings After Day 5
1. Japan 4-1
2. Cuba 4-1
3. Canada 4-1
4. Australia 3-2
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5. Netherlands 2-3
6. Chinese Taipei 2-3
7. Italy 1-4
8. Greece 0-5
Other stories:
– Game 4 Recap: Australia vs Japan
– Game 3 Recap: Australia vs Italy
– Game 2 Recap: Australia vs Chinese Taipei
– 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.













