09 March 2023
Australia upsets powerhouse Korea to open World Baseball Classic
by Eric Balnar
Team Australia just dropped a whole world of chaos on the World Baseball Classic and the international baseball scene.
Australia just knocked off baseball powerhouse and World #4 South Korea in one of the most famous victories in this country’s history.
The game itself was some kind of crazy. It took a whole team effort.
If you are an Australian baseball player named Robbie, you had a good one.
Robbie Perkins and Robbie Glendinning each had a monumental moment with the bat and a game saving moment in the field.
Let’s start with Robbie of the Glendinning variety. Down 4-2 in the seventh, and with two runners on, the Western Australian hammered a 410-foot homer to deep, deep left field to put the Aussies in front 5-4.
The very next defensive inning, Glendinning made a sensational heads up play at second to preserve the one-run lead.
Here’s what happened.
Powerhouse Korean slugger Baekho Kang melted a double off the wall to work himself in scoring position.
But Kang celebrated too early and stepped off the bag for a brief moment.
Glendinning tagged him out in one of the most heads up plays you’ll see.

Robbie Glendinning tags out a runner PHOTO: SMP Images
“I know from previously I’ve tagged guys when they have come off the base and I knew in that situation he might not have been thinking,” says Glendinning. “When I put the tag on, I knew for a fact that he came off the base.”
It was crucial because Korea had a base hit their very next batter. They would have scored a vital run and likely tied the game.
“It was a big turning point in the game,” says manager Dave Nilsson. “He let the dugout know what had happened, so that’s just a great moment by a great player.”
Then came the moment for the other Robbie – this one of the Perkins variety. Or moments, shall we say.
Canberra native Robbie Perkins delivered a monstrous three-run homer in the eighth inning to put Australia up 8-4 and in a strong position. Australia ended up needing all of those extra runs.
Then, Perkins later threw out a runner at second for the final out of the game.
That final out was one Australia sorely needed because South Korea was coming back. Hard.
In the eighth inning, off a series of walks and a fielder’s choice, Korea closed the gap and made it 8-7.
Enter Sam Holland and his moment.
The tall Queenslander entered the game with the bases loaded and 1200+ game KBO veteran Na Sung-bum at the plate.
Na ripped a ball of the left field wall. Korean fans went crazy. They thought they took the lead.
But the ball was called foul by a couple feet. Holland was given a second chance.
The very next pitch, Holland struck out Na to end the inning, stop the Korean threat and preserve an 8-7 lead heading to the last.
The win will go down as one of the most famous in Australian baseball history. It’s the Green & Gold’s third ever win at the World Baseball Classic in Australia’s fifth trip to the biggest international tournament.

“There’s a lot of relief right now. Very proud of the team, the resilience they showed,” says Dave Nilsson. “It was a very tough game, a very strange game. Had to stand out on defense for a long time, had to overcome a lot of emotions. Korea threw a lot of different challenges at us, but we responded like I knew we could and very rewarding for everyone involved.”
Korea put out a strong side littered with Korean Baseball League All-Stars and some high-end MLB talent. They have ended up on the wrong end of one of the biggest WBC upsets ever.
Australia got the better of them on one magical afternoon in Toyko – just.
“What I can tell you is right now that feels pretty significant. That feels like a pretty big moment, definitely,” says Nilsson.

Robbie Perkins celebrates in the eighth. PHOTO: Scott Powick
While Australia had to come from behind to win the game, they still struck first. They had a two-run lead at the midway point.
Logan Wade scored Darryl George on a sacrifice fly in the fourth inning to put Australia up early.
Tim Kennelly added to Australia’s tally with a solo shot in the fifth to put the Green & Gold up 2-0.
After a slow offensive start to the game, Korea’s bats woke up in a big way in the fifth and sixth innings.
To that point, it was struggle at the plate for the Asian baseball powerhouse. South Australian Jack O’Loughlin pitched a perfect first two innings. Western Australian Mitch Neunborn followed him up by retiring his first seven batters he faced.
It took 14 plate appearances before Korea finally got a runner on base by virtue of a walk in the fifth. Then they piled it on.
With two outs and two on, Korea’s Euiji Yang blasted a ball over the left field fence off reliever Dan McGrath to put them up 3-2.

The Tokyo Dome. Photo: SMP Images.
Korea added to their total in the sixth. ByungHo Park, a power hitter in the KBO for KT Wiz, drilled a ball off the top of the left field wall to drive in another run and give Korea a 4-2 edge.
Pitching wise for Korea, they started the game with Ko Young-Pyo – an All-Star KBO pitcher with the Hanwa Eagles. He went 4.1 innings, allowing four hits, two runs and hit two batters.
After that, Korea used seven different relievers to finish the game.
Australia emptied the bullpen, too. Australia used nine pitchers in the game. Lefthanded Victorian pitcher Jon Kennedy replaced McGrath for a key out in the sixth. Former MLB arm Warwick Saupold got two outs in the seventh.
Steve Kent and Will Sherrif pitched parts of the eighth before Holland got that clutch strike out.
Josh Guyer came in to close out the game. He had a daunting task, too. Guyer had to face two MLB stars in Tommy Edman and HaSeong Kim. He delivered.
But in what was a perfect ending for Australia, catcher Robbie Perkins threw out the runner for the final out.
It was a total team effort for the Australians, who used nine pitchers in the game. Nine of Australia’s ten position players used reached base. There were clutch moments from everyone.
“I think every guy just has their role to play and everyone played their role today to obviously result in a win against a tough team like Korea,” says Perkins. “Just guys coming in, doing the right thing, giving it their all, playing with heart for every play.”
Australia has the day off on Friday. They’ll play China at 2:00PM on Saturday.
Korea faces Japan tomorrow.







Warwick Saupold at training (PHOTO: SMP Images / Scott Powick)
Aaron Whitefield at a practice game in Miyazaki (PHOTO: SMP Images / Scott Powick)














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

