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07 August 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Aussies Abroad College Baseball

Victorian Travis Finney commits to NCAA Division I program South Dakota State

Another Australian has committed to play top level college baseball in the United States.

Melbourne’s Travis Finney has announced he is joining South Dakota State University for the 2026 season.

In 2025, a record 24 Australians played NCAA Division I baseball.

Finney, a product of the Frankston Tomatoes in Victoria, is coming off a standout season with Yakima Valley College in Washington State while playing JUCO.

He won two Pacific Association Golden Glove Awards for his stellar work in the infield.

Finney slashed .331/.455/.840 in 48 games this season with 20 RBI and eight stolen bases. He made just three errors in 3 in 361 opportunities in two seasons with the Yaks.

In Australia, Finney played for the U18 Victorian State Team (2020) and was the Ross McKendrey MVP Award Winner in the Dandenong Association, Senior Winter Championships (2023).

“Stoked to announce my commitment and play Division 1 baseball at South Dakota State University,” said Finney on X. “[I’m] extremely grateful for my family and coaches who have got me to this point of my life and helped me through this process. Pumped to get after it!”

He is currently playing summer ball with the Medford Rogues.

He is the second Australian to transfer to a Division I program in the last couple weeks.

South Australian Max Stagg announced his transfer to UC Santa Barbara. 

Will Page-Allen (Canberra) also confirmed his transfer to Fresno State.

06 August 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Australia back in top ten of baseball World Rankings

Australia is back in the top ten of the World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) Men’s Baseball World Rankings.

Australia picked up 104 points after their record ninth place finish at the U12 World Cup this week, improving their standing from 11th to 10th in the world.

It’s the first time Australia has been in the top ten since October, 2023.

It edges our ranking above traditional baseball powerhouses like Dominican Republic (11th) and Cuba (12th).

WORLD RANKINGS: View the full list from WBSC 

Australia reached as high as sixth in 2019 but COVID limited the national team’s ability to play meaningful international games for a two year stretch.

However, Australia picked up meaningful international ranking points with a quarter-final appearance at the 2023 World Baseball Classic and a seventh place at the 2024 Premier12.

Australia has collected ranking points at the U12 World Cup, U18 World Cup, U23 World Cup, Premier12, World Baseball Classic, and multiple qualifying events.

The top twelve teams at the end of 2025 gain automatic entry into the 2027 Premier12 tournament.

Australia’s next major tournament is the Under 18 World Cup in Okinawa, Japan in September.

05 August 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Little League

Brisbane North's run at 2025 Junior League World Series comes to an end | Recap & Highlights

Brisbane North’s tournament at the 2025 Junior League (U15) World Series has come to an end.

But, we are so proud.

They were one of 12 club teams from around the world (six international, six American) who qualified for the tournament, which ran from August 3-10 in Taylor, Michigan.

All teams qualified by winning through local, regional and then national tournaments.

It caps off an incredible run by Brisbane North. They had to win games in three different states – including a dramatic final day in Melbourne – just to qualify.

Australia was eliminated in the double-elimination bracket.

Here is what you need to know:

SCHEDULE, RESULTS & HOW TO WATCH


Games are broadcast on ESPN and ESPN+. You can watch on Disney+ in Australia.

A GameChanger Link to scoring can be found here.The official bracket is here.

It’s a double-elimination tournament, meaning you have to lose twice to be knocked out of the event.

Other international teams in the competition include Asia Pacific (Taichung, Chinese Taipei), Europe-Africa (Mannheim, Germany), Latin American (Anton, Panama), Canada (Kingston) and Puerto Rico.

Schedule / Results :

– Game 1: Europe-Africa (Germany) 4 def Australia 3 (extra innings)

– Game 2: Latin-America (Panama) 6 def Australia 3

Grab all your up-to-date information from www.littleleague.org/world-series/2025/jlbws/.

BRACKET: https://www.littleleague.org/world-series/2025/jlbws/bracket/

GAME RECAPS


EUROPE-AFRICA 6 def AUSTRALIA 3 (extras) – Panama ends Australia’s tournament in back-and-forth battle

Australia held a lead but ultimately fell to Panama at the Junior League World Series, ending their tournament run.

Brisbane North built up an early 3-1 lead. Logan Lokeni delivered a bases loaded single that scored a pair in the first inning. Colby Holt added another RBI single in the second.

Panama responded with one in the third before taking the lead with a pair in the fourth. They added another two in the sixth.

Tyler Wilson started on the mound. He allowed three earned runs in 3.2 innings with six walks, four hits and four strikeouts.

Petersen threw 2.1 innings, allowing one hit, no earned runs, a walk and had three strikeouts.

Hits for Brisbane North: Logan Lokeni (2), Archer Petersen, Tyler Wilson, Colby Holt.

EUROPE-AFRICA 4 def AUSTRALIA 3 (extras) – Germany upends Australia in extra-innings thriller in first game of Junior League World Series 

Tino Bieth ripped an extra-innings walk-off single to right field to cap off Germany’s 4-3 victory over Australia on Monday night in Michigan.

It was a thriller.

Chase Crew was excellent on the mound for the Aussies. He tossed 7.0 innings, allowing just four hits, one unearned run and tallied six strikeouts.

The German pitching combo of Luise Fermin Giere and Samuel Schaefer combined to allow just six hits while striking out ten.

Australia tied the game in the top of the fourth thanks to a walk by Eddie Jones and a single by Boom Hunter.

Brisbane North took a 3-2 lead in the first extra inning off an error before Germany walked it off.

Australia hits: Chase Crew, Archer Peterson, Logan Lokeni, Patrick Fogg, Logan Larkin and Boom Hunter

Australia will now reset and play an elimination game tomorrow vs Panama.

HOW THEY QUALIFIED


Age Group: 12-14

Brisbane North qualifed for nationals by moving through the Queensland state titles undefeated. They outscored opponents 56-13 undefeated, including a 2-1 win over Brisbane Metro in an intense Gold Medal game.

At nationals, they played Pool Play games in both Lismore (NSW) & Surfers Paradise (QLD), finishing with a 2-1 record.

That mark was good enough to earn them a top two spot in their pool and in a semi-final game in Victoria at the end of June (moved because of rain).

They defeated Cronulla Black 5-2 in the first semi-final. Chase Crew (below) Chase was solid on the mound. He tossed a complete game: 7.0 innings, 2 runs, 4 hits, 4 walks and 8 strikeouts.

Meanwhile, ten different players had hits.

In the Gold Medal Game, Brisbane North booked their trip to the World Series with an 11-2 win over the Melbourne Athletics.

It was a true team effort. They combined for 14 hits and kept the scoreboard ticking over all game.

Tyler Wilson threw 5.0 innings on the mound.

Now, this group of players will represent Australia.

MEET THE BRISBANE NORTH VIKINGS


Brisbane North are made up of players from the Narangba Demons, Redcliffe Padres and Pine Rivers Rapids.

Now they prepare for the best in the world.

“The team is really excited,” Brisbane North EO Kerrie Bell told us. “They are training 2-3 days a week as a team to [prepare].”

The Brisbane North charter has become prolific in recent years, earning berths in the Little League, Intermediate League and Junior League World Series.

In a true show of community, the Brisbane North Senior League Team has been giving up their Saturdays to take part in training and help the junior squad prepare.

“This has been valuable for us to be game ready,” says Bell. “We are very appreciative of this team taking time out of their off season to play us.

This isn’t the only group from Brisbane North getting ready to represent their country. The Little League squad is also heading to the USA.

The team leaves on the evening of Thursday 31 July.

Bell says this group is special.

“I have grown up around baseball and supported many teams and this is a unique special group. They are really amazing team of your men who have formed a tight bond and have a united team ethos. Their moto is one team, one dream.   They live by this and it supported them in the ups and downs – especially at nationals. “

 

Tag Cloud:
2025 Junior League2025 Junior League WS

04 August 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

U16 National Squad to compete in two events in Japan in August

Two Australian national Under 16 teams will compete in tournaments in baseball-crazed Japan in August.

In March 2025, Team Australia named 34 players to a national squad selected off the backs of their performance at the Australian Youth Championships.

The squad has since been split into one team of 18 and one team of 16 based off their date of births and school year.

One squad will compete at the 15U Perfect Game Pacific Baseball Championships in Sapporo, while the other will play against some of the top Japanese junior teams – including a double-header vs the Tokyo Giants U15 Team – in Tokyo.

Here’s what you need to know:

04 August 2025 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Aussies Abroad

Curtis Mead called up by Chicago White Sox

Curtis Mead is back in the Major Leagues but this time he’ll be wearing different colours.

Just four days after being traded from the Tampa Bay Rays to the Chicago White Sox, Curtis was called up to the MLB side.

It will be Curtis’ second MLB team this season.

He spent the weekend in Triple-A with the Charlotte Knights.

03 August 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Australia falls to Panama but secures best ever finish at U12 World Cup | Recap & Highlights

recap by Eric Balnar, photos and videos via WBSC and @rc_rainecreative

Australia may have lost their final game but they officially finish with their best ever placing at an Under 12 World Cup.

The game itself was close until it wasn’t.

Panama broke a 2-2 tie in the fourth inning by exploding for nine runs in their 13-3 win on Sunday afternoon.

Australia ends their tournaments with a pair of wins in the Placement Round.

They finish ninth overall. Their previous best was tenth.

Tag Cloud:
2025 U12 World CupU12 Team Australia

01 August 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Little League

Wanneroo Giants dream run ends at the International Final | Updates from the Senior League World Series

This is the recap story of the Wanneroo Giants at the 2025 Senior League World Series in Easley, South Carolina.

The were one of twelve teams (six from international countries) who qualified for this nationally ESPN broadcasted event.

This is where you follow their journey.

Here you will find:
– Game Recaps & Highlights;
– Schedule;
– How they qualified;
– Roster (at bottom);

It’s the final chapter in what has been a historic junior baseball run for this group of Wanneroo players. This core of players represented Australia at the 2022 Intermediate League World Series and the 2023 Junior League World Series.

Here is what you need to know:

SCHEDULE & HOW TO WATCH


Games are broadcast on ESPN and ESPN+. In Australia, you can watch all the games on Disney+. A GameChanger Link to scoring can be found here.

TOURNAMENT BRACKET: Follow the action.

It’s a double-elimination tournament, meaning you have to lose twice to be knocked out of the event.

Other international teams in the competition include Latin America (Mexico), Asia-Pacific (Guam), Caribbean (Puerto Rico), Europe-Africa (South Czech Republic) & Canada.

The double-elimination schedule is as follows:

– July 27: Australia 5 def Mexico 4
– July 28: Czechia 6 def Australia 2
– July 30: Elimination Game – Australia 10 def Guam 5
– July 31: Elimination Game – Australia 8 def Latin America 0
– July 31: International Semi-Final – Australia 1 def Europe-Africa 0
– Aug 1: International Bracket Final – Puerto Rico 9 def Australia 6

View the PDF Bracket Here.

Grab all your up-to-date information from www.littleleague.org/world-series/2025/slbws/.

GAME RECAPS & HIGHLIGHTS


AUG 1 : INTERNATIONAL BRACKET FINAL – PUERTO RICO 9 def AUSTRALIA 6: Puerto Rico finish in front in back-and-forth battle

It felt like the teams were going shot-for-shot in a game that featured five lead changes.

But ultimately, Puerto Rico had a bit too much firepower in their 9-6 win.

Puerto Rico scored five runs in the sixth inning to pull away for good. Australia had come back on two different occassions in this game but this margin was a little too much to bridge.

The game had a bit of everything.

Hits, walks, errors, stolen bases, diving catches, and one heck of a gutsy effort.

Let me repeat: There were five lead changes.

Chayce Benseman and Riley Lines each collected two hits. Both players had a go-ahead two-RBI knock at some point. Quinn Fatai and Harry Wooden had the other hits.

Kobi Scaife, Jacon Elliott, Lachlan Firth and Sebastian Beazley pitched.

Mitchell Elliott took a diving catch that could be a Sportscentre Top 10 shoe-in.

“I feel nothing but Aussie pride,” says Team Manager Chris George. “What do you say? We pushed and shoved and just fell short in the end. It wasn’t through lack of effort. The boys fought hard and kept fighting.”

“The Caribbean team were too strong for us today. Their base running was amazing. Our pitchers did their job today and the bats worked. We just couldn’t get it done.”

Puerto Rico advance to the World Championship Final with an unblemished record.

For this group of incredible Wanneroo players, their Little League journey comes to an end with a magical run at the Senior League World Series and three trips total to the USA.

“Coming from one club charter, the way these kids come together and play for each other is amazing,” says George. “These boys play baeball almost year round together and have done so for the past six or seven years. The bond is there. It’s not competition. It’s genuine care for each other. In essence…it’s just Wanneroo baseball.

JULY 31: ELIMINATION GAMES – DREAM RUN: WANNEROO WIN TWO GAMES ON MUGGY DAY TO ADVANCE TO INTERNATIONAL BRACKET FINAL

Mark it in the calendars: Thursday 31 July will be a day the boys from the Wanneroo Giants will remember for the rest of their lives.

Needing to win two games to survive and advance to Friday’s International Bracket Final, Australia delivered two shutouts in a five hour span in 35 degree weather with 85% humidity.

The first: a 8-0 win over Latin America.

The second: a 1-0 nailbiter over Europe-Africa.

At 9:00AM, Australia resumed a postponed game in the first inning from the night before. They were ready.

Cooper Barber provided a great launch pad on the mound. He took a no-hitter into the fifth inning. He finished with a stat line that reads: 5.1 IP, 2 H, 2 BB, 0 ER and 4 SO.

Jaxon Elliot allowed just one hit in the final 1.2 innings.

Australia grinded away as a team with the bat. Nine different players collected a combined ten hits. Cooper Barber went 1-for-3 with 3 RBI while Sebastian Beezley had two hits.

Classic Wanneroo Giants baseball.

They just kept the scoreboard rolling over all afternoon.

Chris George, the team’s Manager, said it was a great team effort all round.

“Cooper was solid on the bump today. The lads quickly were back into the swing of it,” he says. Bats were good and the momentum inning by inning kept us going through. I’m proud of them.”

30 minutes later, it was time for first pitch vs a more rested Europe-Africa squad from Czechia.

It was a rematch of an earlier round match up that saw the Czechs end up on top.

Not this time. Australia 1 – Europe-Africa 0.

Brayden George was phenomenal on the mound. He threw all but one out: 6.2 innings, four hits, two walks and three strikeouts.

Australia did their scoring in the first inning – a sole run off a Chayce Benseman single and throwing error by Czechia.

They had three hits on the afternoon.

It was all they needed.

The defense held their nerve throughout. In the fifth inning, Czechia had a runner on third with nobody out.

They didn’t score.

Now they move on to the International Final vs Puerto Rico. If Wanneroo win that, they’ll advance to the Senior League World Series Final vs the winner of the American Bracket.

Only the Southern Mariners (2016) have advanced to the Senior League Gold Medal Game in Australian Baseball history.

Chris George, rightfully, had a lot of proud things to say about the win.

“How do you write a script to that Wanneroo story? Who would’ve thought that the country that doesn’t play baseball as it’s number one sport could end up in an international final at the Senior League World Series?

I’m so proud of the boys and what they did today. Two back-to-back wins is unbelievable given the conditions.

Cooper started the day with a solid outing against Mexico to get us through to the next game, step up Brayden George. One batter away from a complete gam. I couldn’t be prouder of him and what he achieved.

The boys have done so well – rallying and driving outcomes.

Not selling ourselves short but we would’ve been happy to pull off a win. To win four and go through to an international final? That is something dreams are made of.

The message stays the same except with the twist.

Let’s continue to play Wanneroo Baseball: station to station, batter by batter…butdare to dream! Fight for one more.

Quoting Brad Pitt from Moneyball… how can you not get romantic about Baseball?”

An amazing day.

JULY 29: ELIMINATION GAME – AUSTRALIA 10 def ASIA-PACIFIC 5 – Wanneroo score ten unanswered to advance to next round

Down 4-0 after a rocky top of the first inning, the Wanneroo Giants dug deep in an elimination game at the Senior League World Series.

Chris George, Team Manager, says the first inning was filled with a few nerves.

But the message was clear to the lads when they came back into the dugout.

“Boys – let’s get back to Wanneroo Baseball. Back yourselves and trust the process,” said George. “Batter by batter, Station to station baseball. They settled and it worked.”

The three-time national champions responded.

Australia followed suit with a seven spot in the bottom of the inning.

They scored ten runs unanswered and held on during a late Guam fight back.

Dylan Bandy pitched into the seventh inning.

“He was amazing,” says George. “That kid just continues to give his all on every single outing. He is one of the true champions of this team.”

“Quite often he doesn’t get the praise and accolades that he deserves but I’ll tell you what – once again he showed exactly what he is made of,” he adds. “The team backed him up and all did their bit in the field and with the stick.”

Australia is now one of the final four remaining teams in the International bracket.

Next up is a rematch with Latin America (Mexico). The win-or-go-home game is scheduled for 7:30AM AWST on Thursday.

“We can’t wait for the next challenge,” he says.

GAME 2 – AUSTRALIA 5 def MEXICO 4 – Blistering Czech-squad hands Australia first loss at Senior League World Series

Credit where credit is due: the Czechs were mighty impressive.

The ESPN commentators regularly noted how they looked like “the cream of the crop of the international bracket.”


They offense burned the Australians for eleven hits in six offensive innings. Czechia scored twice in each of the first two innings, once in the third, and once in the fifth to power out to a 6-1 lead.

Eight different Czechs had hits, led by Jakob Kliener who delivered a 3-for-3 performance. David Herman was solid on the mound, going 5.0 innings allowing six hits and one earned run.

The Aussies laboured a little bit in sweltering South Carolina heat. The field made three errors, making a tough day a little tougher.

“A tough game in the heat today,” says Chris George, Team Manager. “The conditions seemed tougher than yesterday with little breeze not helping the team settle into the game routine.We had a good start in the first innings, however, we couldn’t continue the momentum through the middle half of the game. A few hits by our lads, however left runners on bases. Some good hitting by Europe Africa certainly changed the momentum balance through the middle half of the game.”

But Wanneroo didn’t go down without a fight. Eight different players had a base hit as Australia always seemed to have someone on the basebaths searching for a breakthrough.

They even had a couple base runners in the final inning.

“Credit to the Europe Africa team,” says George. “They were solid with the bat and definitely have positioned themselves as real contenders in how they execute offensively.”

Cooper Barber and Harry Wooden each had RBI. Riley Lines led the team with two hits.

Barber started on the mound, tossing 2.2 innings, giving up ten hits, four earned runs with two walks and four strikeouts.

The relief combination of Jaxon Elliott and Lachlan Firth kept Czechia in touch. Elliott threw 2.1 innings with one hit, one unearned run and a strikeout. Lachlan Firth chucked a near perfect sixth inning and even picked off a base runner who reached on an error.

Australia dropped their first of the allowable two losses in the double elimination bracket.

Their tournament is on the line tomorrow vs Guam. The winner advances, the loser’s run is done. First pitch is Tuesday morning at 9:30AM AEST / 7:30PM AWST / 7:30PM local.

“Whilst the double elimination format means tomorrow’s game is do or die, our preparation doesn’t change,” says George. “We just need to ensure that we capitalise early and be tighter in the field. Back to basics and playing Wanneroo Baseball.”

“Once again, our support back home and in the grandstands were well heard and we’re thankful for their support of our players.”

WANNEROO GIANTS STATS

Hits (9): Quinn Fatai, Cooper Barber, Chayce Benseman, Blake Thompson, Harry Wooden, Jaxon Elliott, Riley Lines (2)
RBI (2): Barber, Wooden

Pitching:
– Cooper Barber: 2.2 IP, 10 H, 5 ER, 4 R, 2 BB, 4 SO
– Jaxon Elliott: 2.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 1 SO
– Lachlan Firth: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 SO

GAME 1 – AUSTRALIA 5 def MEXICO 4 – Bend but don’t break performance advances Australia to next round at Senior League Series

Bend but don’t break.

That seemed to be the modis operandi for Australia in their first game of the Senior League World Series during their 5-4 victory over Mexico.

The Aussies escaped three bases loaded jams across the afternoon and even stranded the winning run on-base in the bottom of the last inning.

Quinn Fatai, Sebastian Beazley and Blake Sexton all produced early game RBI to help build a 5-0 lead.

But it was a gritty pitching and defensive effort that sealed victory.

Dylan Bandy delivered an inning-ending, bases-loaded double play in the first. Cooper Barber had a twin killing with bases loaded in the fifth. Barber struck out a pair with the bases juiced in the sixth. Kobi Scaife picked a runner off at first in the seventh while Mexico left the winning run on board.

What an effort.

“We’re all so proud of the boys and the grit and determination they showed,” says team manager Chris George. “We’re pleased for the start and to gain an early lead but we knew they would fight back hard – and they did. Our relievers did their jobs and we closed out. In hot and steamy conditions, the boys backed each other up and pushed hard to get the job done.”

Here’s how it unfolded:

If the humid 33 degree weather at the ballpark didn’t make you sweat, the game would have. It was tense.

Dylan Bandy delivered a hard-working, shutout start for the Australians. He threw 3.2 innings with four strikeouts, allowing five hits, one walk and no runs.

Bandy produced some timely ground balls, including a bases loaded inning-ending double play in the first.

His efforts on the pound propelled the offense to an early lead. Australia scored the first five runs of the game.

They scored the first run off an error in the first. Their best inning, however, was the third. Australia plated three runs.

Sebastian Beezley and Quinn Fatai each produced RBI singles to put Australia up 4-0.

Dylan Bandy gave his team an excellent chance to win with 3.2 shutout innings on the mound. Photo: Bailey Thompson.

Blake Sexton made it 5-0 with an RBI single in the third.

Mexico scored their first two runs in the fifth. Moises Juarez ripped a 2-RBI line-drive single.

They were pressing for more. With bases loaded, Cooper Barber induced an inning-ending double play to keep the score at 5-2.

Mexico pressed again in the sixth. They took advantage of a series of walks and singles to cut the lead to 5-4.

Mexico even had bases loaded with one out. But Barber produced some magic again – this time with back-to-back strikeouts to help Australia escape the jam.

The Mexicans came right back at Australia in the bottom of the seventh.

Kobi Scaife walked the lead off man, but instantly took the danger away by picking off the runner at first.

A hit and a walk put runners on the corners with two outs, but Scaife induced a game ending ground ball to second.

George praised the supporter base for helping Australia get across the line.

“It was great having the parent base that travelled all the way here cheering loud, as well as those supporting back home. The amount of messages to our players and coaching staff is certaintly appreciated,” he says.

Australia win and advance to the next round of the tournament. They’ll play Czechia at 6:00AM AEST / 4:00PM AWST on Monday morning.

WANNEROO GIANTS STATS

Hits (4): Quinn Fatai, Chayce Benseman, Sebastian Beazley, Blake Sexton
RBI: Fatai, Beazley, Sexton

Pitching
– Dylan Bandy: 3.2 IP, 5H, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4SO, 61P
– Brayden George: 1.1IP, 1 H, 2ER, 2BB, 0SO, 27P
– Cooper Barber: 2.2IP, 2H, 2ER, 1BB, 2SO
– Kobi Scaife: 1.0 IP, 1H, 0ER, 2BB

HOW THEY QUALIFIED


Age Group: 13-16

Wanneroo qualified by winning the 2025 Australian Senior League Championships in Geelong in May. They qualified for that event by winning  the WA State Championships.

At the WA State titles, the Giants rolled through the competition unbeaten in Western Australia, finishing 6-0 with a 92-17 run differential. They beat the Western Tigers 15-2 to advance to the Gold Medal Game and clinch a ticket to Geelong.

In Geelong, Wanneroo went through the tournament unbeaten. They defeated Brisbane Metro 7-2 in the Gold Medal Game.

Quinn Fatai led the team with a .500 batting average. Chayce Benseman had the most RBI with eight.

Dylan Bandy served as the team’s “Ace”, chucking 10.2 innings with no earned runs and 13 strikeouts.

But as a team, they were the most impressive of the bunch. They scored the most runs (70) and allowed the least (23). That effort does not happen without a tremendous line-up from top-to-bottom.

You can view archived results, scores and highlights via the Senior League Hub at www.baseball.com.au/seniorleague.

MEET THE WANNEROO GIANTS


All players are from the same club – a unique instance in the Australian charter baseball landscape.

Now they prepare for the best in the world.

The Giants have been training several times a week, according to Team Manager Chris George.

“[The goal has been] to maintain the focus and skills execution, with batting sessions and more in-depth fielding sessions,” he says. “Being out of season, Wanneroo have relied on intra team game scrimmage, as well as games against the Baseball WA High Performance training squad, to constantly refine their match play.”

The Giants are off to Atlanta one week early to  assist in acclimatising to the local time zone and weather, as well as watch a game against the Braves and Giants thanks to previous Wanneroo club member and current Boston Redsox Liam Hendriks.

The coaching personnel are also in the stages of securing several high school scrimmage games before transiting to Easley for final preparation for the Senior League World Series tournament.

“For the team, the majority of the group have been together over the last five years experiencing Bronze in LL 2021, Gold in IL 2022, Gold in JL 2023, Silver in SL 2024 and Gold again this year in 2025,” says George. “The opportunity and honour to represent Australia in the World Series is not lost and certainly appreciated by players and coaches alike in what has been an amazing journey by this bunch of fine young men and testament to the effort and focus that they have respectively put in.”

Tag Cloud:
2025 Senior League2025 Senior League WS

31 July 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

15-hit explosion leads Australia to comeback win over Czechia at U12 World Cup | Recap & Highlights

recap by Eric Balnar, photos and videos via WBSC and @rc_rainecreative

Team Australia had combined for just seven hits in five games before today.

Team Australia piled on 15 total hits this afternoon during an 11-2 win over Czechia at the Under 12 World Cup in Tainan.

Two five run innings – one in the fifth and one in the sixth – was the exclamation mark o a fun afternoon.

Nine different Australians had hits. 11 reached base. Harvey Ninnis and Phil Toye led Australia with three base-knocks each.

Toye, Billy McCarthy and Preston Taylor combined on the mound to keep Czech bats at bay. The three-headed pitching monster allowed just three hits.

The win is significant. It equals their most ever wins in a U12 World Cup and could prove to give an edge over Czechia in key world ranking points.

Tag Cloud:
2025 U12 World Cup

30 July 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Australia finishes Group Stage with 1-4 record after loss to Cuba | U12 World Cup Recap & Highlights

recap by Eric Balnar, photos and videos via WBSC and @rc_rainecreative

A relentless Cuban outfit rolled to a 19-2 victory in Australia’s final Group Stage game at the Under 12 World Cup in Tainan.

Cuba scored runs in all five of their batting innings during the run rule victory.

Australia finishes the Opening Round with a 1-4 record and will advance to the Placement Round to figure out who finishes between 7-12.

Germany and Cuba also move to the Placement Round from Pool A.

EVENT HUB: Follow Team Australia at the 2025 U12 World Cup

Cuba flexed their muscles early. Yuceider Torres hit a two-run homer in the first inning to build a 3-0 lead.

Torres finished the day with two hits and five RBI to lead all Cuban players.

Cuba totalled twelve hits on the morning. They slammed the door shut with an emphatic five-run fourth and six-run fifth.

Australia hung tough even when the scoreline started to pile up. Team Manager Matt O’Neill would feel good about a plucky fourth inning where his team brough nine batters to the plate and cashed in a couple runs.

Ethan Uncle and Billy McArthy had RBI singles.

Australia used six pitchers in the loss. Ethan Uncle looked in command, pitching 1.0 innings allowing one hit, no walks and no runs.

Now Australia shifts their attention to the Placement Round with five other opponents. It begins tomorrow.

All teams record vs opponents from which they’ve played carries over. So, Australia begins the Placement Round with a 1-1 record with games upcoming vs Panama, Czechia and South Africa. The full standings can be found below.

STATS / BOX SCORE


Click here for the official box score. 

 

STANDINGS AFTER GAME’S CONCLUSION


Top three teams advance to Super Round. Bottom three teams move on to Placement Round

Pool A

Japan 4-1
Mexico 4-1
Chinese Taipei 4-1
—
Cuba 2-3
Australia 1-4
Germany 0-4

Pool B

Korea 5-0
United States 4-1
Dominican Republic 3-2
—
Panama 2-3
Czechia 1-4
South Africa 0-5

PLACEMENT ROUND STANDINGS

7 – Cuba 2-0
7 – Panama 2-0
9 – Australia 1-1
9 – Czechia 1-1
11 – South Africa 0-2
11 – Germany 0-2

UPCOMING GAMES:

– TBD

MORE LINKS


  • WBSC Event Hub
  • Team Australia Tournament Hub 

 

Tag Cloud:
2025 U12 World Cup

29 July 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Little League

Mexico wins back-and-forth game, ends Hills time at Intermediate League World Series | Following Hills

Sydney’s Hills have just finished their run in Livermore, California while representing Australia at the 2025 Intermediate League World Series.

They are one of 12 teams (six international, six American) who will compete in the tournament.

It’s the second straight year this group of Hills players will represent their country after competing in the Little League World Series in 2024.

This is where you follow their journey. Here you will find:
– Game Recaps & Highlights;
– Schedule;
– How they qualified;
– Roster (at bottom);

Here is what you need to know:

Tag Cloud:
2025 Intermediate League2025 Intermediate League WS

29 July 2025 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Japan tosses 4 perfect innings in 15-0 win over Australia | U12 World Cup Recap & Highlights

recap by Eric Balnar, photos and videos via WBSC and @rc_rainecreative

If you give a well polished team like Japan an inch, they will take a mile.

That seemed to be theme in Japan’s 15-0 run-rule win over Australia on Tuesday at the Under 12 World Cup.

Let’s start with their pitching. The trio of Toshiki Maruyama, Ryota Shimizu and Jota Shimohira didn’t allow a hit or walk while striking out six in their 4.0 innings of work. Perfect.


Their offense was opportunistic.

Headlined by a ten-run fourth inning, Japan tallied 12 hits and nine walks. In true Japanese fashion, only one of those hits was for extra-bases.

Luku Masuda started well for Australia. He threw 1.2 innings and kept a donut on the board in the first inning.

Japan took the lead for good in the second. After a pair of Japanese baserunners reached off a walk and a misfield, two runs were scored off an RBI single and a wild pitch.

It could have been more, but Izaac Johnson worked his way out of a jam in relief.

EVENT HUB: Follow Team Australia at the 2025 U12 World Cup

A single and three walks to start the third gave Japan more than ample opportunity to add to their scoreline. A bases-loaded walk, a ground out to first and a sacrifice fly increased the lead to 5-0.

Through it all, Felix Moncrieff entered the game and retired all three batters he faced.

Japan pulled away with a damaging ten-run fourth inning. Nine singles and three walks pushed the game into run-rule territory.

Japan (4-0) secured their spot in Super Round with their fourth victory of the tournament.

Australia, destined for the placement round, falls to 1-3. They play Cuba (1-3) next on Wednesday in a make-up game from Tuesday’s washed out contest. The time has yet to be confirmed.

STATS / BOX SCORE


Click here for the official box score.

STANDINGS AFTER GAME’S CONCLUSION


Top three teams advance to Super Round. Bottom three teams move on to Placement Round

Pool A

Japan 4-0
Mexico 3-0
Chinese Taipei 3-1
—
Australia 1-3
Cuba 1-3
Germany 0-4

Pool B

Korea 4-0
United States 3-1
Dominican Republic 2-1
—
Panama 2-2
Czechia 0-4
South Africa 0-4

UPCOMING GAMES:

– July 30, Time TBD:  Australia vs Cuba (0-3)

MORE LINKS


  • WBSC Event Hub
  • Team Australia Tournament Hub 

 

Tag Cloud:
2025 U12 World Cup
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