27 February 2023
When it comes to the national team, it means a little extra for Australian players
An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar, Fuchu City, Japan. Photos by SMP Images. Video by Hugh Whittle.
—-
“No.”
Blake Townsend quickly cut off a question he knew was coming.
The talented 21-year-old Australian pitcher is a Seattle Mariners prospect who’s already seen time in Triple-A, the level below the Big Leagues.
It’s the end of February and MLB camps are firing up. Townsend is one of many members of Team Australia who could be in the USA at a minor league camp. He could be preparing for Spring Training right now, trying to showcase his stuff to MLB coaches and scouts, hoping to gain a more favourable position in the system.
Instead, he’s in Japan, with his country mates, in the freezing cold, preparing for the World Baseball Classic – the sport’s biggest international tournament.
The question to be asked was a simple: “Was there any consideration of staying in Arizona and fighting for your professional spot?” Townsend knew what was being asked and cut it off before the word ‘Arizona’.
“No,” he says. “When you’re 10-years-old in Australia and playing baseball, you have two dreams. One is to play in the World Baseball Classic, the other is to play in the big leagues. I was never missing this. There was no hesitation.”

There are ten others on the team with current MLB or MLB-affiliate deals. All of them will have to leave their professional camps at some point and put their Big League dreams on hold in pursuit of international success for their country.
Playing for Australia carries a lot of weight. It does in any sport. Baseball is no different.
“I wanted to be here,” Townsend says.
Playing in a World Baseball Classic – and representing a country at the highest possible level – is a big motivating factor for athletes to keep playing the game. It’s what they dream of. All the players give something up to make that dream a reality.
“When you talk about representing your country and your families, this is the truest form,” says manager David Nilsson, who first represented Australia in 1995. “They’re trying to achieve something special, just as people. It takes a special person to buy into this Australian culture.”
For some players, like 32-year-old pitcher Todd Van Steensel, the World Baseball Classic is a big motivating factor to keep playing baseball.
“You sacrifice a lot for this game and it’s the people at home support you so that’s why you can keep doing it,” he says. “I always said I would keep playing to be in another World Baseball Classic and anything that happens after that is just a bonus. Now I’m about to play in another World Baseball Classic.”
Van Steensel has spent every year since he was 18 playing professional baseball somewhere in the world. He was an All-Star in Double-A with the Minnesota Twins, he’s pitched in a World Baseball Classic, he’s played professionally in Mexico, Venezuela, Australia and France. The game has taken him to five different continents and he’s won championships across the globe.
But that amount of travel does have its downside.
“I have never been to any of my friends’ weddings. I’ve missed almost every birthday. I never get my mom’s cooking.” he says. “But I don’t regret it. This is what I love to do and everyone is really supportive of that. Older guys have told me to play this game for as long as you can, so that’s what I’m doing.”
For other players, it is time at home and moments with their kids and family that is missed. They have to juggle being a high-level baseball player and family man.
Steve Kent could be on a family trip to watch one of his kids play sport. 26-year-old Jake Bowey has four kids at home, a full-time job, and balances being a dad and a professional baseball player for the Perth Heat.

He’s relying on a great network at home to let him live out his dream in Tokyo.
“My wife is supportive. We talked about this, I wasn’t going to miss it if I got the chance to go to Japan,” he says.
Bowey did everything he could to force his way on the team and guarantee his spot. He had career high numbers in the ABL and even mashed five homers in six post-season games for the Heat. Now that he’s here, he’s completely focused on baseball.
“It’s about working hard and giving it your all. We will run through a wall if we have to,” he says.
That “run through a wall” attitude was on display on Day 4 of the Fuchu Training Camp. Players were laying out for ground balls, diving at bunts, exerting themselves in simple run-down plays and working at a high tempo.
If you’re already sacrificing a lot to be here, you may as well make sure you’re sacrificing your body to go as hard as you can when you get here, says pitcher Dan McGrath.
“We have a big attention to detail on making everything game speed, going quicker, and getting ready for that,” says McGrath.

Tim Atherton has a lot of skin in the game, too. Australia’s co-captain will be relied on to pitch big innings for Australia, like he has in the past. He owns a mining business. He has kids. He still lives the life of a professional baseball player.
All of that is time consuming, but Atherton calls events like the World Baseball Classic “justification” for all the hard work he does to keep his baseball dreams alive.
“It’s an accumulation of sacrifice, time away, travel, time away, hard work, joy, sadness from the game, all the years in the gym, all the time throwing baseball up against the wall in the dark by myself, all the things – the parties, the birthdays,” he says.
“The thing about this all is you miss out on a lot of personal things in life…so this has to be really important to you. This has to mean something to you.”
“When you step out on that stage in front of 55 thousand people the greatest way to describe it, it’s justification of every single little thing you’ve done to get to this moment, justifies that.”



































