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13 December 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Aussies Abroad Aussies Sign Pro

South Australian outfielder Drew Davies signs contract with MLB's Cincinnati Reds

photos by Hugh Whittle

In 2022, Drew Davies came dangerously close to becoming one of the youngest players on Australia’s Under 18 World Cup team.

The then-16-year-old was in the last round of cuts at Australia’s Florida-based training camp, where the international event was being held.

While it may not be common for 16-year-olds to make an U18 national team, Davies says that moment was a turning point for him in his baseball career. He says that’s when he realised baseball could be a serious profession for him.

“That [experience] showed me where I needed to be, where I wanted to go, and how I had to work harder to get there,” says Davies.

Hard work just paid off for Davies. He’s turning pro.

Drew Davies is the latest Australian to sign an MLB-affiliate contract, after putting pen to paper with the Cincinatti Reds on Tuesday afternoon surrounded by family in West Beach, South Australia.

“This has always been a goal for me,” says Davies, an 18-year-old from Woodcroft. “Baseball and turning pro has always been in the back of my mind, but things really became serious when it comes to baseball with that 2022 World Cup.”

Davies says he upped his game when he returned from national camp.

“When I came back [ from Florida], I started to train like I was already a professional. I tried to train as much as I can, work around school, and get in as many reps as I possibly could.”

That mindset led Davies to a big 15-months of baseball and a lot of individual success.

Since September last year, the 6’4 left-handed bat starred for South Australia at the U18 National Championships, trained with the ABL’s Adelaide Giants, patrolled the outfield for South Australia’s Southern Districts Hawks, and caught the eye of scouts and colleges alike.

He was also named to Australia’s 2023 U18 World Cup squad but was unable to travel due to a broken finger.

Whatever Davies was doing, people noticed.

The Under 18 National Championships in January 2023 was where Davies caught the eye of Reds’ scout and former MLB player Donald Lutz.

“I really liked his swing,” says a smiling Lutz. “It looked really good. I liked his aggression. He’s got a good body. He has the tools to be a really good baseball player. When it comes down to it, the Reds think he’s got what it takes.”

Davies lit those U18 championships ablaze. In nine games, he went 17-for-27 with 2HR and 16RBI, leading South Australia to a 6-3 record.

“I think he’s a good player, good guy, and he’ll fit into any clubhouse,” Lutz adds. “Keep your eye on him.”

Baseball South Australia’s high performance manager Austin Gallagher agrees. He says he can see why Donald Lutz, Adam Crabb and the rest of the Cincinatti Reds scouts had a keen interest in signing him.

“He proved he’s one of the top talents in Australia at the [Under 18s],” says Gallagher. “He works really hard and is consistent with it. The positive about Drew is you can’t really tell if he’s going good or going bad – he always stays consistent with his approach and how he goes about things.”

His contract doesn’t surprise his former coaches, either. Just ask the person who helped get him into baseball. Davies’ neighbour, former Pittsburgh Pirates prospect and Adelaide Giants pitcher Nick Hutchings, was the one who introduced him to the game.

Davies started playing tee-ball at local club Southern Districts, Hutchings’ club, and the love grew from there. He still plays for Southern Districts and helped them snap a two-decade long finals drought in 2022.

Hutchings says it’s hard not to notice what everyone else does.

“The sweet left-handed swing has everyone in awe,” Hutchings says. “He stays through the zone and has power to the opposite field. Then you add in the size and people definitely took a big interest.”

Davies credits Southern Districts and the South Australian baseball community for helping him develop.

“They’ve been huge, I wouldn’t be here without them,” he says. “Nick Hutchings has been a big influence, all my charter coaches, all the club coaches like Brendan, Jeremy and Mark. I have to thank them a lot.”

But now, it’s on to a professional life.

Gallagher is a former minor league player with the LA Dodgers. He’s been around professional baseballers his whole life. Gallagher says Davies has a lot of the physical tools required to play professional baseball, it’s his approach to the game that sets him apart.

“Baseball is a game of failure and how you handle it is how you define yourself as an athlete. He doesn’t get too high on success or too low on failures. That’s the mentality it takes to play professional baseball,” he says.

Davies reports to camp with the Reds in March 2023. He joins Curtis Mead (Tampa Bay), Jack O’Loughlin (Oakland) and Riley Yeatman (San Diego) as the only four South Australians playing professional MLB-affiliated baseball.

He joins a growing list of nearly 30 Australians who play baseball full time.

 

Tag Cloud:
#AussiesAbroadDrew Davies

06 December 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

Australian Youth Championships

DETAILS AND SCHEDULE: Australian Youth Championships (U16 & U18) set for January 2024

One of the most exciting weeks of the Australian Baseball calendar will return to Blacktown, NSW from January 10-16.

State pride and passion is on the line, as the best U16 and U18 baseball players from across Australia head to Sydney for the marquee event over seven days.

It’s a pathway all of Australia’s best players have competed in – from past MLB stars like Graeme Lloyd, to current Big Leaguers like Curtis Mead, to recent minor league signings like Declan Speirs – the country’s top talent will be here.


Format


This is a seven-day tournament.

Each division (U16 & U18) features the following seven teams: Western Australia, South Australia, Victoria, New South Wales, NSW Country, ACT and Queensland.

On Days 1-4, the teams will compete in the group stage. They will play each opponent once. The Top 4 teams will advance to the championship group on Days 5 & 6, while the bottom three teams will play in a consolation group.

The records reset in the championship group. The Top 4 teams will each play each other once. The Top two teams will advance to Day 7’s Gold Medal Game and the bottom two will play in the consolation bracket.

Schedule


Each team will play on the main diamond at least two teams. Click the links below to download the schedule for your tournament:

  • Master Schedule: 2024 Australian Youth Championships
  • U16 Schedule: 2024 Australian Youth Championships
  • U18 Schedule: 2024 Australian Youth Championships

Visit our event hubs for up-to-date information.

Please stay tuned to Baseball.com.au website and social media handles for any changes in the schedule, likely due to weather.

Broadcast, Scoring and Coverage


Broadcast:

Every Diamond 1 game will be broadcast with multiple cameras and commentary. It will be available on Baseball+.

Baseball+ is now an app that can be downloaded on your smartphone. For links to download, please click here.

The Diamond 2 and 3 games will be scored live on GameChanger. We will post on this page when the link is available.

Scoring:

All games will be scored through GameChanger. It will be free for all to access.

U18 Link: CLICK HERE.
U16 Link: CLICK HERE.

The best bet is to download the GameChanger App, create an account and search your state’s age bracket and state abbreviation. Example: “U16 SA” or “U16 QLD” or “U18 WA” or “U18 NSWC”. Then click follow. The location of the event is Rooty Hill, NSW if you are using the search bar.

Note: For full functionality of GameChanger, you will need at least a “plus” account. You can register for a free trial with a new email address which last seven days – the length of the tournament.

Coverage:

We will post daily recaps, photos and stat updates on Baseball.com.au as the tournament progresses. Please follow Baseball.com.au on Facebook, Instagram and X (formerly Twitter).

Rosters


Follow each state association for their roster updates of the event. Some states have already named their teams.

Western Australia – | U18 State Team | U16 State Team |

South Australia – | U18 State Team | U6 State Team |

Victoria – | U18 State Team | U16 State Team |

ACT: | Yet to be announced on website |

New South Wales: | U 18 State Team | U16 State Team |

NSW Country: | U 18 State Team | U16 State Team |

Queensland: | U18 State Team | U16 State Team |

Tag Cloud:
2024 U16 AYC2024 U18 AYC

06 December 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Little League

Lismore to host 2024 Australian Junior League and Intermediate League Championship

National junior championship baseball is returning to Lismore.

The New South Wales-town, a long-time previous host of Australia’s Little League Championships, will host two national charter events in one great week of baseball from 27-31 May, 2024.

Both the Junior League (U15) and Intermediate League (U14) titles will be contested with trips to the World Series in the USA on the line.

This announcement is a coup for our city and a testament to the calibre of expertise that has gone into rebuilding our high-quality sporting infrastructure,” says Lismore City Council Mayor Steve Kreig. “I look forward to welcoming the 17 teams from across Australia who will participate in the Australian Junior and Intermediate League Baseball Championships in Lismore next May.”

Last year, the Junior League title was won by the Wanneroo Giants at the tournament in South Australia. Brisbane North took home the glory at the 2023 Intermediate League championships in Mildura.

Winners of the 2024 Australian Junior League Championship will advance to the World Series in Taylor, Michigan from August 11-18. The winner of Intermediate League will head to Livermore, California from July 28 – August 4.

This is the first time Lismore has hosted a major event from two different age brackets at the same time.

For this event, there will be 17 total teams going to Lismore – nine junior league squads, and eight intermediate league.

Once you add up players, officials, staff and coaches, there will be over 320+ participants in Lismore.

Mayor Kreig says this is a boon for the local area.

“Lismore continues to earn its place as a regional sporting capital,” he says. “This announcement puts us on the map as a national development hub for junior sports. It not only benefits our local and regional junior athletes but will also provide significant economic uplift of around $1,134,876 for local businesses, for the duration of the competition.”

All games will take place at the newly upgraded Albert Park Baseball Facility

ABOUT CHARTER BASEBALL

Charter baseball is a pathways program that develops players and local clubs, rather than focussing on just the elite. It is a participation-based competition designed to extend player skills at a higher-level to club ball, and exposes athletes to national and international programs.

Teams from each state are divided into different charters (groups) at the little league (U13), Intermediate League (U14), Junior League (U15) and Senior League (U17) level. 

The charters are based on club locations. Think of it like regionally based all-star teams.

Teams qualify for the national championship through their state championships. If you win the national title, you go to the world title in the USA.

Many elite baseball players have gone through this pathway.

04 December 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

College Baseball

New South Wales' Lachlan Rosser commits to US Junior College

From a scenic coastal field on Lake Illawarra to playing baseball abroad, pitcher Lachlan Rosser is going to the United States.

Rosser has committed to Hutchinson Community College, a school in Kansas.

“I chose Hutch because it feels like the right fit,” says the tall pitcher, who featured for Australia at the recent U18 World Cup. “Coach Nehls and the whole staff are great people and the program looks really good from both a facilities standpoint, a baseball point of view, and the strength and conditioning program.”

Hutchinson is a junior college, also known as JUCO. Many Australians attend these two-year programs hoping to impress with their baseball skills before transferring to an NCAA program or turn professional.

Players like Geelong’s Liam Spence are a great example of this pathway. Spence attended a junior college, transferred to Tennessee, and was later drafted by the Chicago Cubs.

“I see my development at Hutchinson helping me get stronger, refining my pitches and also getting smarter on the mound,” says Rosser. “This will help me transition to a university after junior college.”

Rosser will head to school in August 2024. He will work with a coach who has spent time with other Australians.

“Coach Nehls was the pitching coach at Dodge City CC when other Australians such as National Player Development Manager Andrew Riddell, Scott Hillier, Brayden Schuler and Tim Wakefield were there, he says. “He has a good history and experience of coaching Australian players – some of whom went to the junior college world series.”

Rosser originally comes from the Dapto Chiefs, a club in Illawarra. He plays senior club ball at the MacArthur Orioles. He says he was influenced by all his coaches at both spots, as well as his parents.

He competed for NSW Country.

He burst on the scene after an impressive Australian Youth Championships in 2023. He dazzled again at national junior camp, earning a spot on Australia’s U18 World Cup Roster.

In September, he traveled to the USA for the MLB World Select Program in Arizona where he threw against some strong college outfits.

“[That trip helped] show me where I was at and where I stood against them,” says Rosser. “The trip to Arizona also got me seen by coaches which generated interest and started my discussions with schools.”

Rosser will continue to play in NSW this summer, before heading to school later in the year.

 

 

 

 

 

30 November 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Aussies Abroad

Liam Hendriks named MLB's American League Comeback Player of the Year

via Ryan Taylor, NBC Sports Chicago

MLB announced White Sox pitcher Liam Hendriks as its selection for the American League’s Comeback Player of the Year award.

Hendriks received the same award from The Players Choices Awards, which is presented by MLB and voted on by players each year. This award, however, was decided by all 30 beat writers from MLB.com.

Hendriks, 34, was diagnosed with Stage 4 non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma in December. He underwent four rounds of treatment between December and April, his last falling on the day the White Sox opened their home slate against the San Francisco Giants on April 3.

He went into remission in late April, ramping up his rehab stint in the minor leagues shortly after in May. He went from Arizona to pitching with the Triple-A Charlotte Knights before making his major league return.

On May 29, Hendriks made his return to the mound. He gave up two runs in the eighth inning against the Los Angeles Angels. He struggled in his first outing, but bounced back over the rest of his appearances. Hendriks allowed just one run over his next four appearances.

Unfortunately, Hendriks was forced to undergo Tommy John surgery in August. The White Sox declined his club option to return him for the 2024 season, forcing him into free agency.

29 November 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

College Baseball

New South Wales pitcher Luke Hayhow commits to University of Hawaii

New South Wales pitcher Luke Hayhow has become the latest in a string of Australian players to commit to an NCAA Division 1 school.

Hayhow will head to the University of Hawaii in August 2024, he announced earlier via Instagram.


“They were clear front runners early in the recruiting phase,” says Hayhow of the University of Hawaii. “I was blown away with the MLB style lockers, gym and performance centres and the amazing Les Murakami stadium.”

Hawaii are coming off a strong 29-20 season in the Big West conference and seem to be on an upward trajectory. Hayhow, a product of the Castle Hill Knights baseball club in NSW, says it’s an exciting program to be part of.

“What makes the University of Hawaii special is I get the chance to play for a state rather than a university,” he says. “It makes the experience even more special, seeing how they pack out stadiums with local kids and fans.”

Hayhow’s commitment is exciting – it’s another Australian playing a high level. Earlier this month, Ali Tanner committed to NCAA Division 1 school in Arizona State University.


Travis Bazzana, another New South Wales product, is playing at Oregon State University where he could go in the first round of next year’s MLB Draft.

Hayhow says he’s keen to get involved with the high performance elements his new home offers.

For now, it’s all about preparation.

“I’m planning on heading over to the USA in June to play summer ball on the West Coast, and additionally spend some time training at Driveline and re-testing in their motion capture lab,” he says. 

Hayhow says his experience in Australia helped his development to lead to this step in his career.

Watch the ABL, Team Australia and Baseball Australia events on Baseball+.

“I started playing juniors at Castle Hill Knights, under the guidance of Australian Baseball great Scott Tunkin,” he says. “He has nurtured and tutored me to become the baseball player and man I am today – instilling strong values and ideologies about the game.”

Hayhow was also part of national junior squads.

“The intense training [there] and coaching helped me become a more polished pitcher. Additionally, the Australian Youth Championships [helped],” he says. “This event allowed me to compete on the national stage and face the best talent we have to offer, which ultimately helped put into perspective my ambitions to play overseas.”

Congratulations to Luke! We will be following your journey closely.

29 November 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Little League

Geelong to return as host of Senior League National Championships in 2024

Geelong will return as a national championship host in 2024 when the Senior League (U17) National Championships come to town.

East Belmont Saints Winter Baseball Club at Geelong Baseball Centre will host the best senior league charter programs from around Australia from May 13-17 with a trip to the USA on the line.

NSW’s Ryde Hawks are the defending champions. This year’s winner books a trip to Easley, South Carolina for the Senior League World Series in July 2024.

“We pride ourselves on providing for the baseball community and at every opportunity we will avail ourselves to host State level, National level and when given the chance ABL and International level events,” says Stuart McGovern, president of the East Belmont Saints.

“We believe Geelong is a great destination for such events. Whenever nationals are being held in Geelong, we know we are watching the best talent in the land showcasing themselves vs the best.

Watch the ABL, Team Australia and Baseball Australia events live & free on Baseball+.

This isn’t Geelong’s first time hosting major events. They hosted the 2020 Senior League Championships, coming to the rescue after COVID-19 forced relocation.

They’ve also hosted the Australian Women’s National Championships and the Women’s National Showcase in previous years.

Some games will be streamed on Baseball+.

The Senior League Championships is one of many Baseball Australia events coming up in 2024. The Australian Youth Championships (U18 & U16) will head to Blacktown January 10-16.

The Women’s and Youth Women’s titles will take place at Altona in April.

Little League, Junior League and Intermediate League venues and dates will be announced soon.

Visit our events page for up-to-date information.

ABOUT CHARTER BASEBALL

Charter baseball is a pathways program that develops players and local clubs, rather than focusing on just the elite. It is a participation-based competition designed to extend player skills at a higher-level to club ball, and exposes athletes to national and international programs.

Teams from each state are divided into different charters (groups) at the little league (U13), Intermediate League (U14), Junior League (U15) and Senior League (U17) level.

 

21 November 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

Team Australia senior men’s baseball to play on home soil for first time in four years

For the first time in over four years, Team Australia will play a significant baseball game at home.

The Australian senior men’s national team will take on top level Korean club Hanwha Eagles in a two-game series from February 17-18, 2024 at Melbourne Ballpark.

Ticket Information

Saturday 17th Feb 2024
Game 1 tickets

Sunday 18th Feb 2024
Game 2 Tickets

The event is dubbed ‘The International Baseball Showdown’ and is proudly supported by the Victorian Government and hosted by the Melbourne Aces. It gives Australian baseball fans a rare opportunity to see their team play on home soil, and players a chance to wear the Green & Gold in front of family.

The senior men’s national team last played in Australia vs the Doosan Bears in Geelong, but only one game occurred after rain washed out the rest of the scheduled series. 

The national team also played in Sydney in 2016 for the World Baseball Classic qualifiers, and at the SCG for the MLB Opening Day series in 2014. Outside of the ABL All-Star Game, which only included Australians who played in the league and ended in 2017, opportunities to play at home are few and far between. 

Justin Huber says the chance to wear the jersey in front of family & friends is special.

“As an Australian professional and national team player, you’re usually resigned to the fact that your career is going to be played overseas,” he says. “To represent your country at home, in front of home fans, at an international level is the stuff of childhood dreams.”

Australian players returned home from the Asia Professional Baseball Championships in Tokyo this week, where they won the hearts of the Japanese public.

In February, their opponent will come from the Korean Baseball Organisation (KBO) – widely considered the third best competition in the world. The KBO is played in front of tens of thousands of fans and broadcast to huge domestic audiences. In Korea, baseball is king.

The Eagles are home to current KBO home run champion Roh Sihwan, who bashed 31 homers and 101 RBI this season.

The Eagles will be in Melbourne throughout February for ‘Spring Training’ – a month-lng camp to prepare for the 2024 KBO season. The Aces and Melbourne Ballpark, with support from the Victorian state government, are hosting the pre-season activity. 

Korea – and the Eagles – links to Australia are strong. Team Australia co-captain and former MLB pitcher Warwick Saupold played for Hanwha Eagles for two seasons in 2019-2020.

Three other KBO clubs are sending players to compete in the upcoming Australian Baseball League.

The Hanwha Corporation is South Korea’s largest defense company with a strong relationship with the Australian and Victorian governments. Hanwha Defense Australia has headquarters in Melbourne CBD and the Greater Geelong area. While operated separately, Hanwha owns the baseball team too.  

For more information and to view the Melbourne Aces’ official release, please click here.

Ticket Information

Saturday 19th Feb 2024
Game 1 tickets

Sunday 18th Feb 2024
Game 2 Tickets

21 November 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia APBC

Huge in Japan, Big on X: How Australian baseball players became superstars in Japan

When Australia won the Cricket World Cup on Sunday night, the national body tweeted it.

The post on X (formerly twitter) had 2.5 million views at the time of this article. Those are big numbers and they should be – it doesn’t get much bigger for Australia’s #1 sport.

Had it attracted two million more views, it still would not have surpassed the views of a tweet by Team Australia baseball on the same day.

It wouldn’t even have the same views as a Chris Burke RBI single.

19 November 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia APBC

Australia wins hearts of Japanese baseball fans, but loses Bronze Medal heartbreaker

MORE TO COME – story by Eric Balnar

A plucky effort. A heartbreaking loss. An incredible, surreal experience at the Tokyo Dome.

Australia showed they are strongly in the conversation when it comes to competing with international baseball powerhouses. They just haven’t figured out how to control the chat.

Team Australia suffered a third agonising defeat in four days at the Asia Professional Baseball Championships against a top-ranked team. This time, to world #5 Chinese Taipei in the bronze medal game.

CPBL All-Star centrefielder Tien Tsin Kuo had a walk-off RBI single in the ninth inning to win it 4-3 for the proud Taiwanese baseball national.

Other tight losses include extra innings defeats to Korea (World #4) on Thursday, and Taiwan again on Friday.

What happened off the field is almost as exciting as what happened on the field.

Australia trailed 3-0 but they sparked a rally to tie the game late. The Japanese fans greatly assisted with that effort in a “you have to see it to believe it moment.”

Team Australia has gone viral in Japan in recent days. The Aussie baseballers struggle to find any space in media outlets at home, but in Japan they’ve been headline news in every format. Some tweets have over one-million views including a plea for support at the game.

Japanese people formed a cheer section down the left field line, singing traditional baseball cheer songs for their second favourite baseball team – the boys in the green & gold.

This wasn’t just lazy cheering – they were singing, clapping, chanting and dancing Australia on. They were throwing out joyful chorus for Australia like it was their hometown team. The newly formed ‘Kangaroo Club’ was invested.

The support built at exactly the right time. Australia had just made a mess of the third inning.

An infield hit, a walk, an error, a hit-by-pitch and a botched double-play attempt put a crooked ‘three’ on the scoreboard for Chinese Taipei. In international baseball, teams can ill afford a lapse like that.

Australia didn’t quit. In the next half inning, Alex Hall reached on a single. The newly dubbed ‘Kangaroo Club’ of frenetic Japanese supporters rained down support on Chris Burke.

He delivered an RBI double to put Australia on the board.

Just watch.

Australia started the game with Sam Holland, Dan McGrath and Kai-Noa Wynyard on the mound. They turned it over to Coen Wynne.

He was brilliant. The returning World Baseball Classic pitcher held his nerve. He threw a perfect fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth inning – no walks, no hits, no runs.

As any good pitcher needs, Wynne benefited from superb defense.

His stone-cold performance allowed Australia to hang tough and wait for a time to strike.

The moment was the seventh inning.

New Japanese fan favourite Chris Burke knocked a deep RBI-double off the wall. Mitch Edwards legged out an infield hit. Luke Smith had a gutsy pinch-hit single to load the bases.

With two outs, Liam Spence hung tough. He fouled off multiple pitches and waited for one he liked.

He got it. Tie ball-game.

Unfortunately, the seemingly red-hot bats, which collected seven hits in the middle innings, dried up.

Chinese Taipei pitching needed just 11 pitches to retire the final six Australian outs.

Cheng-Yu Chang, the gun shortstop for the newly ordained CPBL champion Dragons side, broke up Coen Wynne’s perfect relief appearance in the bottom of the ninth. He was advanced on a bunt.

Two- CPBL All-Star Tien Hsin Kuo cashed him in on a heartbreaking hit to right-field.

A heartbreaking end. Close.

Players will return to Australia for the ABL season.

BOX SCORE

18 November 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia APBC

Japan shows why they are the best in the world in complete victory at Tokyo Dome

A young Australian national team learned why Japan is the best in the world.

Samurai Japan were brilliant in front of 40,000 boisterous fans at the Tokyo Dome. Fans were chanting, singing, jumping, and clapping all afternoon as the home side rolled to a complete 10-0 victory to finish the group stage 3-0.

They’ll play in the gold medal game tomorrow evening. Australia will play for bronze at 11:00AM AEDT.
Japan were relentless in three phases of the operation – the pitching, the hitting, and the crowd.

Japan had 13 hits and 23 baserunners. Eight different players recorded a hit. Kodai Fujiwara was excellent as the lead-off man, collecting three base knocks. Kaito Kozono – an NPB All-Star and arguably Japan’s best player – had three RBI. Mannami Chusei had two hits including a triple that electrified the crowd.


To be fair, this line-up is laced with talent. There are five players who are NPB All-Stars.

Japan’s Three Japanese pitchers combined to take a perfect game deep into the seventh inning. Walks to Rixon Wingrove and Alex Hall, followed by a single to Clayton Campbell, broke up the perfect game and no-hitter attempt.

Those were the only base runners Australia had the entire game – and since the fifth inning of yesterday’s narrow extra-innings defeat.
The feverish environment is something young players will have to get used to. Even as a spectator, it is intense.

For Dave Nilsson, it’s a learning experience.

“It’s a pretty overwhelming experience. Part of the process of us becoming a better tournament team is our players coming here to experience things,” he says. “The only way you learn is by being out there.”

BOX SCORE: Click here (and click translate)

 

 

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  • - Aussies Abroad about 2 years ago South Australian outfielder Drew Davies signs contract with MLB's Cincinnati Reds
  • Australian Youth Championships about 2 years ago DETAILS AND SCHEDULE: Australian Youth Championships (U16 & U18) set for January 2024
  • - Little League about 2 years ago Lismore to host 2024 Australian Junior League and Intermediate League Championship
  • College Baseball about 2 years ago New South Wales' Lachlan Rosser commits to US Junior College
  • - Aussies Abroad over 2 years ago Liam Hendriks named MLB's American League Comeback Player of the Year
  • College Baseball over 2 years ago New South Wales pitcher Luke Hayhow commits to University of Hawaii
  • - Little League over 2 years ago Geelong to return as host of Senior League National Championships in 2024
  • - Team Australia over 2 years ago Team Australia senior men’s baseball to play on home soil for first time in four years
  • - Team Australia over 2 years ago Huge in Japan, Big on X: How Australian baseball players became superstars in Japan
  • - Team Australia over 2 years ago Australia wins hearts of Japanese baseball fans, but loses Bronze Medal heartbreaker
  • - Team Australia over 2 years ago Japan shows why they are the best in the world in complete victory at Tokyo Dome
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