05 March 2023
How the brotherhood of Australian baseball carries the national team
An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar, Fuchu City, Japan. Photos by SMP Images. Video by Hugh Whittle.
Liam and Josh Spence used to play catch in the backyard of their childhood home in Geelong.
“I might have to grab a glove have to have a quick throw with him,” Josh Spence semi-jokes, looking out at Liam Spence running with Australian teammates on a sunny left field at a Miyazaki stadium. “That would be pretty special.”
It would be.
Liam Spence grew up idolising his two brothers Nick and Josh – two baseball playing boys eight and ten years his senior.
Nick played college baseball and still coaches in the USA. Josh went on to play MLB for the San Diego Padres and now coaches in the minor leagues.
Liam has forged his own outstanding baseball career. He is on the national team, after all. The kid from Geelong became the King of Tennessee university baseball when he led the NCAA’s powerhouse South East Conference (SEC) in hits in 2021. He was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 2021, has already played Triple-A and just won a Claxton Shield.

Liam Spence at Team Australia training in Miyazaki (PHOTO: Scott Powick / SMP Images)
But Liam and Josh have never been on the same team together. The closest they came was when a very young Liam Spence was the batboy for his older brothers at the family’s home club in Geelong, Victoria.
That all changed today as Team Australia’s preparation shifted to Miyazaki – a small surfing town in the South of Japan.
Josh Spence was one of nine new baseball bombshells who entered the Australian WBC villa.
“They’ve played the biggest of roles,” says Liam of his brothers. “My brothers are the reason I play the sport. To be here together is surreal.”
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Over the next three days in Miyazaki, Australia will train and play two exhibition games vs Japanese teams before the tournament starts for real on March 9.
Spence is one of six new staff members to join the team physically. He is working in analytics. Five Australian coaches from major league camps also joined the squad.
Three players – Robbie Glendinning, Kyle Glogoski and Aaron Whitefield – rounded out Team Australia’s roster after the trio left their respective MLB club’s spring training to join their baseball brothers in Japan.
“They know this is the group. There’s nobody else coming and we’re moving forward,” said manager Dave Nilsson. “Now it feels a bit more fun.”
While Josh and Liam are literal brothers re-united, the family feeling is powerful between Australian teammates here in Miyazaki.
They aren’t related by blood, but they may as well be. They are related by the blood, sweat, tears and the common experience of playing Australian baseball.
“Playing in the Big Leagues is one of the greatest things I’ve ever done but coming here it’s different,” says Whitefield, who’s appeared in MLB games with the Minnesota Twins and LA Angels.
Whitefield says the common roots between Australian teammates separates the experience of playing in a World Baseball Classic and in the Big Leagues.
“Here, you’re playing with guys who eat meat pies like you did, have ice coffees like you did,” he says. “It’s being able to relate to everything that you grew up to believe in, how you grew up, and then going out and shedding blood with your brothers – and that’s what they are.”
Whitefield grew up playing club baseball in Queensland. He busted into the Australian Baseball League as an 18-year-old and won an MVP nearly immediately. He joins teammates he played junior baseball with, club baseball for, and guys he played against in the ABL.

Aaron Whitfield (sitting) surrounded by his Australian teammates in Miyazaki (PHOTO: SMP Images)
He says it makes him feel part of something bigger.
“It’s something different than playing in the states where maybe it feels a little more selfish. We’re here and playing for each other. Playing for each other’s families and for the country we come from.”
Kyle Glogoski says joining the team was “revitalising.”
“Everyone is so helpful and wants what’s best for the team. The team camaraderie is like nothing I’ve been part of before,” says Glogoski.
Robbie Glendinning just came from MLB camp with the Kansas City Royals where he started his spring in hot form. He says he couldn’t wait to join his teammates in Japan.
“The baseball community in Australia is so small. We all band together and just love being around each other,” he says.
You could feel that rejuvenated energy at lunch after training. Team Australia gathered in a small cafeteria for really felt like a big family dinner. Green & Gold jerseys sprawled throughout the long tables surrounded by sounds of laughter and a feeling of excited anticipation.

Dave Nilsson addresses the team before Miyazaki Camp (PHOTO: Scott Powick / SMP Images)
Aaron Whitefield, Jordan McArdle, Warwick Saupold and Jarryd Dale all sat together at the end of the tables. Four players – from four different Australian states – cracked jokes, shared stories and reminisced about old games.
Saupold, a former MLB pitcher himself, says the camaraderie of the national team is the difference between the WBC and the Big Leagues.
“We’re all mates, that’s more of it,” says Saupold. “You play in the States and you might know guys in the system and then you play in the Big Leagues with them. But it’s [not the same].”
“Here you grow up playing juniors with them, you go through the ranks with them, and then you get to the men’s team together and you know you’re here for a reason.”
Saupold – now 33 – has been on a long baseball journey with many of his teammates. One of them is Steve Kent.
The two of them went to an elite baseball academy together as teammates and are now about to pitch in their third World Baseball Classic as a pair.
“It’s just different when you go through the system with them all. It’s a different feeling because we’ve all been through such a similar experience,” he says.
Saupold played club ball for South Perth, battling in games on weekends vs the likes of Tim Kennelly over at the Melville Braves. He and Kennelly won ABL Championships together and are now on their third WBC roster.

Warwick Saupold at training (PHOTO: SMP Images)
“We’ve been around these guys our whole baseball career. You go through transitions, you see how guys evolve and you’re very much part of their story,” he says.
That brotherhood between players extends between newer members of the team and guys who have been there for over a decade.
Saupold says its as much about seizing the moment know as it is paving the way for the future.
He says he’s using his time on the World Baseball Classic roster to help pave the way for future players.
“You always root for other Aussie players. It doesn’t matter who it is. You want to see more Australians in the Big Leagues,” he says. “I think it’s a special thing being an Australian baseball player because you know the whole of Australia will be behind you. Hopefully some of the younger guys can use this tournament to take the next step in their careers.”














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




















