08 January 2026
Australian Youth Championships
U16 Recap - Jan 8 | Brown makes history, New South Wales goes top, epic tie on Day 2
Seven games completed on Day 2 of the Australian Youth Championships, and we saw a bit of everything!
Recaps and some highlights are below.
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Day 2 Schedule and Results
– NSW Country 16 def ACT Roos 5
– NSW 10 def Queensland 3
– South Australia 13 def ACT Roos 5
– Victoria 11 def Queensland 9
– Western Australia 21 def South Australia 0
– New South Wales 12 def Victoria 11
– South Australia 5 TIE Western Australia 5
CURRENT STANDINGS – END OF DAY 2
Top 4 make finals
1. New South Wales 3-0
2. Victoria 3-1
3. Western Australia 1-1-1
3. South Australia 1-1-1
5. Queensland 1-2
4. New South Wales Country 1-2
7. ACT Roos 0-3
RECAPS
NSW Country 16 def ACT Roos 5 | Every player in line-up contributes in massive NSW Country win
New South Wales Country came out swinging during their runaway victory to even up their record at one.
Country scored 16 runs off 15 hits.
All nine players in the starting line-up reached base, eight different players had a hit and an RBI.
Riley Coombes and Cooper Stark led the offensive barrage with three hits each.
A pair of bases clearing triples gave two seperate leads to the Country kids.
The first came in the first inning, when Hugh Kelly delivered a two-out bases clearing triple to open the scoring. 3-0.
The next came in the second inning, when Coombes sent a bases clearing triple to left, breaking a 4-4 tie. It was three of his game-leading four RBI.
It helped New South Wales flip the game after they started the second down 4-3.
Corey Daniels had a third triple. Watch them below.
You can read about who had all the hits below.
Shout out to Jackson Leighton who fired off 2.0 innings of hitless, shutout relief. Jakob Cruz started for Country, allowing five runs off three hits.
The Roos scored four runs in the second to take a temporary 4-3 lead.
Country improve to 1-1 while the Roos fire to 0-2.
NSW COUNTRY
Hits (15): Riley Coombes (3), Cooper Stark (3), Austin Turner (2), Corey Daniels (2), Liam Gardner, Wes Dove, Hugh Kelly
RBI: Coombes (4), Kelly (3), Gardner (2), Daniels, Evans, Turner, Dove
ACT ROOS
Hits (5): Oscar Rey-Benguigui, Seth Lutton, Oscar Monaghan, Beckett Shanks, Ollie Mahar
RBI: Shanks, Mahar, Rey-Benguigui, Lutton
New South Wales 10 def Queensland 3 | New South Wales score seven in the fourth to improve to 2-0
New South Wales broke the game open with a seven run fourth inning en route to their second win of the tournament.
Beau Stockdale, Mitch Howay and Daniel Price each had two-RBI base hits for New South Wales in the run-away inning.
Before that, Queensland had a 2-1 lead thanks to Buzz Mecham plating a pair in the third.
Ten different players on New South Wales recorded a hit, led by Owen Hart and Stockdale with two.
Hart (2.1 IP), Jack Phegan (3.1 IP) and Harrison Thomas-McLean (0.1 IP) combined to allow six hits, two earned runs and three walks in a winning pitching effort.
Will Bain was solid for Queensland in his 2.2 innings of work, allowing two hits and one run.
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits (12): Jack Kelly, Noah Nash, Mitch Howay, Owen Hart (2), Alex Bennetts, Nick Rowley, Daniel Price (2), Roman Ellis, Jesse Hanrahan, Beau Stockdale (2)
RBI: Nash, Howarth (2), Bennetts, Price (2), Stockdale
QUEENSLAND
Hits (6): Thomas White, Buzz Mecham, Logan Lokeni, Ashton Wise, Xavier Honsa, Tyson Weavell
SOUTH AUSTRALIA 13 vs ACT ROOS 5 | Alice Brown makes history, SA explode for seven late runs to secure first win of the tournament

At one point South Australia held just a narrow 6-5 advantage. That is, until they exploded for seven runs in a behemoth fifth inning.
Levi Burns, Liam Trembath, Ricky Ferris and Sebastian Bravo all had RBI base hits in the swing inning.
Before that, it was a back-and-forth affair.
Oscar Rey-Benguigui gave the Roos an early 1-0 advantage in the first. The Roos have led in all three games they’ve played.
Ricky Ferris and Hugo Costa produced back-to-back doubles to put South Australia up 3-1 in the second.
The Roos, off the back of a Jackson Schneider triple, tied the game at three in bottom of the second.
South Australia and the Roos traded runs in the third and fourth innings, with SA taking a 6-5 advantage heading into the eventual seven-run fifth.
Alice Brown made history in her start. She became the first girl to ever play for South Australia. Brown threw 3.0 innings, allowing four hits, four runs (two earned) with no walks.
Angas Rivett and Ollie Alexander tossed the final three innings, yielding just two hits and one run.
Ferris led South Australia with two hits.
Hamish Willemsen and Rey-Benguigui had two hit performances for the Roos, who fall to 0-3.
South Australia (1-1) play Western Australia in a pivotal match-up tonight on Baseball+.
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Hits (8): Ricky Ferris (2), Hugo Costa, Sebastian Bravo, Logan Stephens, Ollie Alexander, Levi Burns, Liam Trembath
RBI: Ferris (2), Bravo (2), Coasta, Ollie Breach, Stephens, Alexander, Burns, Trembath
ROOS
Hits (6): Oscar Rey-Benguigui, Hamish Willemsen (2), Jackson Schneider, Lincoln Barrett
RBI: Schneider, Aiden Corkill, Barrett, Rey-Benguigui
VICTORIA 11 def QUEENSLAND 9 | Victoria dominate early, hold on late, to stay keep unbeaten record alive
Every player in Victoria’s line-up recorded a hit in another offensive masterpiece by the hosts.
Victoria combined for 14 hits in a win over Queensland to stay perfect in first place with a 3-0 record.
Victoria started hot and held on late. They exploded for seven runs in the first inning, thanks to RBI base hits from Thomas Hill, Parks Halasz and Bodhi Evans.
Queensland came home strong, scoring three runs in the sixth inning to move within two runs.
Oscar Shimakura (below), Bodhi Evans, Jack Thomas, Thomas Hill and George Steer each had two hits for the Victorians.

Shimakura leads the tournament with five hits.
Buzz Mecham and Kai Flynn-Ballard each had two hits for Queensland. Flynn-Ballard led the team with 2-RBI.
Queensland drop to 1-2, Victoria improve to 3-0.
VICTORIA
Hits (14): Oscar Shimakura (2), Bodhi Evans (2), Jack Thomas (2), Thomas Hill (2), Parks Halasz, Cruize Chase, Chase Potts, George Steer, Jack Northfield
RBI: Halasz (2), Chase (2), Evans (2), Shimakura, Hill, Potts, Steer, Northfield
QUEENSLAND
Hits (7): Will Bain, Buzz Mecham (2), Ashton Wise, Kai Flynn-Ballard (2), Logan Lokeni
RBI: Flynn-Ballard (2), Lokeni, Mecham, Bain, Leigh, Hill
New South Wales 12 def Victoria 8 | New South Wales are the last unbeaten team after pulling away late vs Victoria
In the battle of the undefeated, New South Wales came out on top.
The two heavy weights played it close through four innings before the victors ran away with a seven run maximum fifth inning.
After New South Wales went up 12-4, Victoria responded with a seven run inning of their own in the bottom of the sixth but were legally unable to score more due to the run-per-inning rule.

New South Wales took advantage of a series of walks and errors in the big inning.
With the bat, Noah Nash continued his impressive tournament. The New South Welshman went 2-for-3 with a walk. Daniel Gereaux also collected two hits. Beau Stockdale led the team with 2-RBI.
The game was knotted at 2-2 until the fourth inning. A Stockdale double, Jack Kelly single, and Cooper Smith sacrifice fly pushed the lead out to 5-2 for New South Wales.
Victoria responded with a pair of runs in the bottom of the inning.
Oscar Shimakura had another huge effort at the plate. The 15-year-old Victorian logged three hits and leads the tournament with eight. Jackson Burton drove in four runs in a loss. Edison Bush went 2-for-2 with 2 RBI.
New South Wales entered the last inning up 12-4 before Victoria attempted late charge, plating seven runs in the last inning before the game was called due to scoring the maximum in an inning.
Victoria used five pitchers in the loss. Cale Morris threw 3.0 innings, allowing three hits and one earned run in his start.
Noah Nash started for New South Wales, going 2.1 innings with two runs allowed and four strikeouts. Rowley, Seoyong Kim and Jack Drummond pitched the remainder of the innings.
Both teams made three errors.
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits (8): Noah Nash (2), Jack Kelly, Owen Hart, Daniel Gereuax (2), Austin Murdoch, Beau Stockdale
RBI: Stockdale (2), Murdoch, Kelly, Cooper Smith
VICTORIA
Hits (8): Oscar Shimakura (3), Jacob Tayler, Jackson Burton, Jack Northfield, Lucas Joel, Edison Bush (2),
RBI: Burton (4), Northfield, Bush (2)
WESTERN AUSTRALIA 21 def NSW COUNTRY 0 | Three seven run innings catapult WA to their first win of the tournament

Western Australia dominated from the moment the umpire said ‘Play Ball!’
Ten players combined for 16 hits in the Westerners first win of the tournament.
Thomas Massimini led all batters with a 3-for-4 + 2 RBI effort.
Rylan Ottoway drove in four runs off his two hits.
Flynn Hennessy, Riley Lines, Kobi Scaife, and Hudson Ostaszewskyj all ripped off two hits as well.
On the mound, Western Australia were just as dominating. Noah McCabe tossed 2.2 innings, allowing one hit and no runs. Jayden Woods pitched 2.1 innings, allowing three hits with one strikeout.
Corey Daniels led New South Wales Country with two hits.
Western Australia improve to 1-1, facing South Australia on Thursday night. New South Wales Country drop to 1-2.
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Hits (16): Thomas Massimini (3), Flynn Hennessy (2), Riley Lines (2), Kobi Scaife (2), Rylan Ottoway (2), Hudson Ostaszewskyj (2), Chayce Humble, Cooper Truong, Jake Coorey
RBI: Ottoway (4), Truong, Hennessy (2), Eban Raymond, Lines (2), Corey, Humble (2), Ostaszewskyj (2), Massimini (2)
NEW SOUTH WALES COUNTRY
Hits (4): Corey Daniels (2), Tennyson Bragg, Kirk Gilbert
WESTERN AUSTRALIA 5 TIE SOUTH AUSTRALIA 5 | Heck of a ball game ends in a tie

Western Australia and South Australia traded shots all night. Nobody won, nobody lost.
On paper, not much separates these two teams. Same with the scoreline.
Western Australia scored first in the bottom of the third, taking advantage of some errors.
They were threatening before but pitcher Felix Oliver snagged a line drive and doubled off the runner at third.
That play totally changed the momentum of the game because South Australia jumped in the lead in the fifth inning, scoring four runs. Hugh Costa doubled in a pair, James Dallman hit a sacrifice fly, and Arky Vingelis-Plant drew a walk.
Western Australia responded with three of their own in the bottom of the fifth.
Jake Cooley tripled in a pair of runs to tie the game. A wild pitch gave them the lead.
In the sixth inning, and down to the final out, James Dallman singled down the left field line to tie the game.
Western Australia had the winning run aboard in the bottom of the last but couldn’t score.
Flynn Hennessy was excellent for WA. He surrendered one hit and zero runs over 3.1 innings. Finn Fuller allowed five hits and two runs (one earned) over three innings, striking out two.
Each team had nine hits and seven walks.
Both teams go to bed tied with a 1-1-1 record in third place.
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Hits (9): Rylan Ottoway (2), Arata Samukawa, Flynn Hennessy, Chayce Humble, Jake Coorey, Ollie Barber
RBI: Jake Coorey (2)
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Hits (9): Sebastian Bravo, Hugo Costa (2), Ollie Breach (2), James Dallman, Isaac Giro, Arky Vingelis-Plan
RBI: Costa (2), Dallman (2), Vingelis-Plant



















