14 August 2023
Emeralds pile on late runs to finish World Cup with 9-2 win over Hong Kong
Australia ended their Women’s World Cup campaign on a high note with a 9-2 win over Hong Kong on Monday morning.
The game was much closer than the scoreline suggests. The Emeralds trailed 2-0 in the fifth inning and were being no-hit.
Claire O’Sullivan (NSW) recorded two of her three runs batted in on the afternoon with a clutch two-out double in the fifth to put Australia up 3-2, helping to erase an early 2-0 deficit.
The Emeralds piled on the runs in the seventh, scoring six times to put the game beyond doubt.
O’Sullivan went 2-for-3 with 3RBI. Morgan Doty also pieced together a 2-for-3 afternoon with a pair of RBIs to her name.
Lili Cavanagh and Gen Beacom also each had two hits. In total, Australia had 10 base knocks.
The Emeralds got solid pitching throughout the game, limiting Hong Kong to just three hits.
Maddison Erwin (ACT) opened the game with 2.2 innings of work, allowing two unearned runs off two hits. Maddison Tabrett (NSW) pitched 3.1 innings of relief with one hit, no walks and no runs. Ash Patton (ACT) pitched a clean seventh inning to round things out.
Australia finishes Group A in fourth place with a 2-3 record. Unfortunately, the Emeralds fall just short of advancing to the Final Round in 2024. Australia either led or had the winning run in scoring position in all games played.
You can read about the tournament and view the game recaps at our international hub at www.baseball.com.au/internationalhub.
BOX SCORE – Australia def. Hong Kong

Game Recap

Maddie Erwin started well on the mound for the Aussies. She weaved a perfect first two innings to keep zeros on the board.
The Emeralds had their chances early. They loaded the bases in the second but starting pitcher Yin Sum Kwong struck out Kelsey Brennan to end the inning.
In total, Australia left six baserunners on through the first four innings but couldn’t convert.
Despite the six base runners, none of them were actually hits – they all came off walks and errors.
It didn’t help that Hong Kong made some highlight reel defensive plays to keep bats at bay.
WBSC Women’s Baseball World Cup players 1️⃣
WBSC Women’s Baseball World Cup wall 0️⃣#BaseballWorldCupW pic.twitter.com/nkvmndeRdm— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 13, 2023
Hong Kong plated a pair in the third inning. With two outs and nobody on, Hong Kong started a rally. A walk and hit put two runners on, and then Australia made two errors to account for the two runs.
Yin Sum Kwong put forward a heck-of-an-effort for Hong Kong. She held Australia hitless through the first 4.2 innings with five strike outs.
Finally, Emerald bats woke from their slumber with two outs and nobody on in the fifth.
Lili Cavanagh, Gen Beacom, Leah Cornish and Claire O’Sullivan strung together four consecutive hits to put Australia on the board.
Cornish had an RBI to make it 2-1 and chase Kwong from the game.
Claire O’Sullivan went bang on one of the first pitches she saw from new pitcher Yik Shan Hung. The veteran slugged a ball deep into the outfield to score Beacom and Cornish and give Australia the lead.
Claire O’Sullivan gives us the lead! #WorldCupBaseballW
📹: @wbsc pic.twitter.com/n8B7mcQOK8
— Team Australia (@TeamAusBaseball) August 13, 2023
Hong Kong, meanwhile, struggled to get anything going offensively after their two runs in the third.
Maddison Tabrett was excellent in relief of Erwin, throwing 3.1 innings of one-hit, shutout baseball.
Australia put up a lopsided number in the seventh inning to seal the deal. Five hits, a walk, a hit-by pitch and a sacrifice fly accounted for six runs in the damaging getaway inning.
O’Sullivan, Gen Beacom, Carly Moore, Morgan Doty and Lili Cavanagh had the hits in the seventh for Australia. Doty had a two-run RBI, O’Sullivan plated a run, while Jordan Richardson and Caitlin Eynon had sacrfice flies.
16-year-old Ash Patton finished the game off with a tidy 1-2-3 inning including two strikeouts.
Standings
- USA – 5-0
- Canada – 3-1
- Mexico – 3-2
- Australia – 2-3
- Hong Kong – 1-4
- Korea – 0-4










Although associated with Glenelg Baseball Club, Phil actually originally suited up with East Torrens in the winter league and Norwood Redsox in the Night Baseball League in the summer, from 1965 – when just a teenager.
Although a veteran of the game, in 1982 Phil Alexander won the Capps Medal, and proved to be the ‘King of the Catchers’, with equal runners-up Mal Loveday from Port Adelaide and West Torrens’ Phil Burgess also playing the backstop position.

