29 December 2025
Australian Youth Championships
Australian Youth Championships Draws attention from MLB Clubs and College Coaches
The U16 and U18 Australian National Baseball Championships is one of the country’s best junior sporting events.
Called the Australian Youth Championships (AYC), the best young players come to the country and compete for state pride.
It’s an event which brings out pure passion from players who are representing something bigger than themselves – their club, their community, their family and importantly…their state.
Global talent scouters will have their eye on the event.
College coaches, professional scouts and high-performance staff watch closely, searching for the next wave of Australian talent ready to take the next step.
This year’s event, held 7–15 January in Melbourne, is again set to attract significant attention.
HUB: All your information for the 2026 AYC
While the primary focus of the teams and their players is winning a national title, scouts from at least 16 Major League Baseball (MLB) clubs have confirmed their attendance at the event, with others watching from afar, making it one of the most heavily scouted junior sporting tournaments in the region.
That level of interest regularly translates into opportunity. Just last year, Mitch Evans and Robinson Smith signed professional contracts shortly after the Championships.
The college pathway is equally active.
More than 100 Australians are currently playing college baseball in the United States, and over the last three years, over 65 players alone have committed to college programs directly after appearing at AYC.
While the total number of schools tracking the event is impossible to quantify, Baseball Australia provides every college coach who asks with complete game footage and detailed player clips, ensuring no athlete goes unseen.
A major driver of that visibility is Baseball Australia’s partnership with Synergy Sports, who film and tag every pitch of the tournament.
Through the agreement, Synergy sends two operators to Melbourne, generating the data and video that the High Performance team uses to create individual player reels.
“Those videos are then shared with MLB teams and college programs, allowing decision-makers to evaluate Australian talent with the same tools they rely on in the United States,” says Andrew Riddell, Baseball Australia’s Player Development Manager. “The partnership has transformed how Australian athletes are scouted and recruited. It’s massive for the pathway.”
The Championships are also one of the most watched events in the country.
All games stream free on Baseball+, drawing close to 3,000 viewers per game, while the tournament’s dedicated AYC Hub records more than 20,000 page views across the week. Social media coverage on Baseball.com.au reaches around 400,000 unique accounts with over 2 million impressions throughout the week.
For players, families and community members, it means every standout moment reaches far beyond the ballpark.
Since 2024, 49 players have either signed professionally or committed to US colleges after competing at AYC — and with big interest again this year, that total is poised to grow.
In 2025, a record number of Australians played Division I baseball (24).
Follow along the 2026 version of the tournament via the AYC Hub: www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026. Team previews and rosters are now posted.


















