08 September 2024
Four Japanese fifth-inning runs hands Australia first loss of Under 23 World Cup
World number one Japan scored all of their runs in the fifth inning to pull ahead of Australia in there 4-1 win at the Under 23 World Cup on Sunday.
Australia falls to 2-1 in Pool A at the World Cup and are now in a four-way tie for first place with Japan, China and Puerto Rico.
The top three teams advance to the Super Round. Australia has two games remaining – vs Great Britain and China – and may need to win both of them to advance.
This one could have been different. Australia had plenty of early chances.
Australia had bases loaded with one out in the second. They loaded the bases again in the third – this time with no outs.
Australia managed to score just one run off a Jo Stevens single.
It allowed Japan to stay in touch and rock four runs in a damaging fifth inning where nine players came to the plate. Takuya Yamada cranked a double off the wall to score to runs and Kota Takata provided the insurance with his two out, two-RBI single.
The full game recap, as it happened, is below.
AUSTRALIA U23 HUB: All the stories, standings and tournament details
Kieren Hall turned in an excellent performance on the mound for Australia. The opening pitcher threw 2.2 shutout innings, allowing just two hits & no walks. His fastball regularly touched 93mph.
Conor Myles pitched another two scoreless innings.
Both teams recorded seven hits. Japan was just a little bit more opportunistic.
Jo Stevens led the Australian offence with three hits and the lone RBI.
Australia’s next game is Monday 9 September at 5:00PM AEST vs Great Britain.
BOX SCORE: View the stats
Other Day 3 Results
– Pool A: China 4 def Colombia 3…Puerto Rico 8 def Great Britain 3
– Pool B: Venezuela 10 def South Africa 0…Korea 4 def Netherlands 0
Pool B Standings
T1. Australia 2-1
T1. China 2-1
T1. Japan 2-1
T1. Puerto Rico 2-1
5. Colombia 1-2
6. Great Britain 0-3
Head to WBSC website for official ladder – top three advance to Super Round


RECAP – HOW IT UNFOLDED
24-year-old Western Australian Kieren Hall delivered a wonderful opening inning for Australia. His fastball sat around 93-miles-per hour, while dealing up a pair of strikeouts.
Industrial League pitcher Ryota Gotoh returned serve with a 1-2-3 inning of his own.
Hall was brilliant for Australia. He finished with six strike strikeouts in his 2.2 innings, conceding two hits and no walks.
Ben Fierenzi lent a helping hand with some sensation defense at second base.
Meanwhile, Australian bats started to pressure.
The Aussies recorded three straight one out singles to load the bases in the second, but Gota struck out Jake Burns and forced Fierenzi into a shallow pop out to escape the jam. All were left stranded.
They loaded the bases again in the third, this time with no outs.
Jo Stevens cashed one run in with an RBI single to centre field, but that is all the Australians managed. Cayden Nicoletto grounded into an inning ending double play and Australia led just by one.
At this point, Australia was 2-for-6 with RISP and left five on-base and scored just one with two bases loaded opportunities.
To his credit, Gotoh weaved his way out of trouble in his start for Japan. He allowed just one run off five hits and two walks in 31.1 innings.
Lachlan Brook, who was a late addition to the World Cup Roster, began his World Cup debut in strong fashion. Brook registered an important first out in the third inning with two runners on and two-outs. He followed it up with a near perfect fourth inning.
The Japanese bats finally came alive in the fifth inning. They sent all nine batters to the plate in a damaging four run inning.
The first two runs came with no outs and two on. Takuya Yamada cranked a double off the wall – one run scored off the hit, the other off an error on the relay. 2-1 Japan.
The booming double signalled the end of the night for Lachlan Brook. He was replaced by Sydney teammate Dylan Clarke.
The right-hander took a couple early outs from Japan but persistent batting eventually loaded the bases. With two-outs, Kota Takata drove a ball up the middle, plating two.
4-1.
From there, the Japanese bullpen kept the game on lockdown. Oga Nishimura threw 1.2 innings with one hit and two strikeouts. Aren Sato tossed a clean sixth inning with a double play. Yuto Hahashida was credited with the save with a 1-2-3 ninth.
After Australia’s two glorious bases loaded chances, they managed just two base runners.
Australian lefty Conor Myles was impressive in his two innings. He didn’t allow a hit or run, and struck out three in his Team Australia debut.
Final: 4-1 Japan.







































