31 August 2023
Australian bats held in check by brilliant Chinese Taipei pitching in World Cup opener
Australian bats were stymied by sensational Taiwanese pitching in a 3-0 loss at the Under 18 World Cup opener in Taipei.
Highly touted Chinese Taipei pitching prospect Sun Yi-Lei was exactly as advertised for the host-nation. The Taiwanese pitcher, who comes equipped with a fastball that charts up to 95mph, was simply brilliant.
Sun pitched a complete game shutout, going 7.0 innings, allowing just one hit, two walks and eight strike-outs.
Australian starting pitcher Adam Bates (NSW) did a good job of controlling a tricky Chinese Taipei line-up. He allowed just four hits and one run in his 4.0 innings of work.
“I thought Adam was outstanding tonight,” said Australian head coach Andy Kyle. “He really set the tone and attacked the strike zone. He kept hitters off-balance and produced some weak contact. He was unlucky to not leave the game with 0-0 score-line.”
Chinese Taipei scored the winning run in the fourth inning off back-to-back soft contact hits.
They added two more off Australian miscues in the sixth.
The Under 18 World Cup is arguably the most prestigious of all junior international events, consistently featuring future household names and global stars. Read the game recap, as it happened, below.
Australia has an off day on Friday. They play Mexico next at 12:30PM on Saturday morning.
Box Score: Click here.
Game Recap – As It Happened

Above: Adam Bates (Photo provided by WBSC)
To use an age-old analogy, this World Cup opener had the feel of a heavyweight match-up. Especially when it comes to the battle between the two pitchers.
In Australia’s corner was Adam Bates. The experienced teenager from New South Wales is returning for his second U18 World Cup after posting a sub-2.00 ERA in last year’s tournament. There’s a big reason why scouts from major US colleges and MLB teams are circling.
In Chinese Taipei’s corner is Sun Yi-Lei. Widely regarded as the “Ace” of the Taiwanese staff, Sun comes equipped with a 95mph fast-ball, a buckling change-up and a devasting curveball.
⚾Day 1 is underway! ⚾🏆 Australia take on Chinese Taipei in Game 1 of the WBSC U-18 Baseball World Cup!
📺Watch on https://t.co/soado4PumL#BaseballWorldCupU18 pic.twitter.com/0TfTULxi13
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 31, 2023
Both prized fighters delivered for their country.
Sun was everything as advertised and more. He got off to a stunning start by holding Australian batters hitless through the first four innings while stacking up six strike-outs.
The Taiwanese Ace was landing his first pitch for strikes, often using his breaking ball to get ahead in counts. He used his off-speed to compliment his buzzing mid-90s fastball.
If Sun was attacking with devasting, swinging, right-handed punches, Australia’s Adam Bates was countering with tactful jabs in the World Cup ring.

View more stories, meet the U18 team, and find the schedule at our International Hub.
Taiwan may have pressured early but Bates found ways to get Australia out of jams. The hosts had baserunners in the first and second innings but couldn’t capitalise.
Bates worked counts, kept composure, and kept the hosts scoreless through the first three innings.
He mixed his pitches well, especially landing his curve ball, to induce soft contact. Bates moved his fastball up-down-and-around the strike zone to keep the Taiwanese offense off balance.
Australia also got some help from the defense, too.
A tough play was executed by the Australia catcher to beat the Chinese Taipei runner at first base for the out. – XXXI WBSC U-18 Baseball World Cup#BaseballWorldCupU18 pic.twitter.com/RBP0aMaJl6
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 31, 2023
At one point, Bates retired eight batters in a row.
Despite his efforts, Chinese Taipei went ahead in the fourth inning. It was a matter of “where” the ball seemed to bounce.
Bates got the first two outs of the inning with ease. Then, a walk.
Chinese-Taipei got a homefield kick with an infield single to put two runners on with two outs.
Lee Hsun-Chieh then put the hosts ahead with a dribbling ball that had eyes for a gap between shortstop and third.
Hsun-Chieh Lee drove in the first run in the 2023 edition of the U-18 Baseball World Cup to give Chinese Taipei a 1-0 lead! – XXXI WBSC U-18 Baseball World Cup#BaseballWorldCupU18 pic.twitter.com/v0uPqmXqsv
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 31, 2023
Australia, meanwhile, struggled to build something defensively. They couldn’t find a way to move a runner past second base.
Lachlan Smith did break up Sun’s no-hitter in the fifth inning.
Bates got the hook after four innings. His final line? A fantastic 4.0IP with just four hits, three strikeouts and only one earned run.
Jai Hewitt (WA) grabbed the reigns in the fifth-inning. He immediately worked a 1-2-3 inning.
Sun, meanwhile, just found a way to keep on rolling.
“Obviously he was dominant,” said head coach Andy Kyle after the game. “A fastball in the 90s, a change-up and a split was always going to be tough. I thought we competed well in the box and had some hard-hit balls, but we couldn’t find that big hit tonight.
Chinese Taipei pulled away in the sixth. Two misplays in the Australian outfield helped scored two runs before the boys from Down Under could record an out.
3-0.
Benjamin Karakasis took over from Lachlan Rosser in the sixth. He entered with two runners on-base and nobody out. He needed just needed four pitches to get out of the jam and stop the hosts from pulling further away.
Australia fell in order in the seventh inning, sealing the complete game for Sun and the victory for Chinese Taipei.
Despite the loss, Kyle remains optimistic about the rest of the tournament, as focus shifts to Mexico on Saturday.
“We will stay positive,” he says. “We did a lot of things well in the ballgame and have arms fresh and ready to go for Mexico. Hopefully we can build some momentum and start well in the next game.”
Catch up on all stories at our International Hub.




Jason became the youngest player selected for the Australian National Team in the 1994 Baseball World Cup held in Managua, Nicaragua. He also played for Australia at the 1996 Olympics, was an ABL All Star in 1998 (Perth Heat), a Heat MVP and a three-time Claxton Shield winner.



