04 November 2025
- Team Australia College Baseball
Team Australia U18 pitcher-catcher combo Riley Puckett and Cooper Teichmann commit to Galveston College
Australia’s battery at the 2025 Under 18 World Cup will attend college together.
Queensland catcher Cooper Teichmann and New South Wales pitcher Riley Puckett both confirmed their commitment to Galveston College this week.
They both join a growing list of Australians attending the Texas based junior college. Nic Paparella (SA), Ben Karakasis (NSW) and Flynn McKee (SA) are already in the program.
“I mean it’s pretty special,” says Teichmann. “To have a guy who I first met at the U18 World Cup training camp to then have him throw to me at the World Cup for our country to now getting the opportunity to get to the next level together, I think it’s something not many people get to do. It’s going to be a lot of fun.”
Both Teichmann and Puckett are promising prospects.
Puckett (below) is a crafty right-handed pitcher out of MacArthur Orioles. He has a six pitch mix in his arsenal – a four-seam fastball, sinker, cutter, knuckle curve, change-up and slider.
It was Puckett’s ability to keep batters off balance that helped him win the Golden Arm at the 2025 U18 Australian Youth Championships en route to helping NSW win a gold medal and earning an invite to the U18 national selection camp.

He says he hopes to take his game to the next level at junior college.
“I’m super excited to work with the coaches at Galveston to continue to develop strength and velocity,” says Puckett. ” My strengths are being able to make batters feel uncomfortable and reading hitters. I am hoping to extract the most out of my body whilst continuing to maintain great control over my pitches. I think the coaches there will help me achieve this.”
Teichmann is a reliable catcher out of the Pine Hills Lightning in Queensland. He threw out multiple runners for Australia at the U18 World Cup.
“My strengths are my arm strength, power with the bat and game IQ when it comes to quick thinking,” says Teichmann, who will study Sports Psychology.
Teichmann grew up close family friends with legendary Australian catcher and Team Australia Manager Dave Nilsson, calling him one of his idols and mentors. Teichmann has grown up around the Brisbane Bandits and was their bullpen catcher the last two seasons.
He says he hopes to become more well rounded at college.
“I want to improve overall game play, fitness and further develop my bat-to-ball skills for my overall toolset as a catcher,” he says.
After the U18 World Cup in September, both players attended the MLB International College Showcase Tour.
Both trips played a key part in their recruitment.
“Riley and Cooper were both on the MLB trip this year and with the relationship that Baseball Australia has formed with the coaching staff at Galveston, they come across to Arizona to see our players every year,” says Andrew Riddell, Baseball Australia’s Player Development Manager. “They loved what they saw from both of them and immediately started the process with their families to get on calls to discuss scholarships.”
The two new recruits both think the trips helped develop themselves as players and people.
“I think the World Cup and the MLB trip helped prepare me the best because I knew what the talent was going to be like,” says Teichmann. “To see myself be able to compete at those levels helped me to believe I was ready for the next step.”
For Andrew Riddell, there is high praise for both players.
“Both Riley and Cooper have come a long way and overcome adversity as players and as young men in the last 12-18 months to get to this point,” he says. “Riley missed out on NSW selection as a first-year U18’s player and did a really good job for Country New South Wales in 2024 while still under-sized and at a relatively low velocity. He then went away and got more physical with his body which translated into an uptick in velocity and we saw the hard-work he put in all year by throwing 12 shutout innings at AYC the next year and winning the Golden Arm.”
As for Teichmann, Riddell says he is blown away by his progression too.
“Cooper was with the U16 National Squad last year in Atlanta and is one of those players who was a first year U18 this year. He also currently is in Year 12 so he needed to put in a lot of work on both his body and his game to be successful this year. He definitely did both of them, which we saw at our national camp, the World Cup and the MLB trip where he put on a show throwing runners out in-game and was also able to drive in some huge runs in pivotal situations with the bat.”
Both players are incredibly thankful to their communities for their development.
“I’ve had many coaches and mentors all of whom I am extremely grateful for,” says Puckett. “They’e all helped me out in so many ways – from my early days with the Macarthur Colts, to the more recent years with the Macarthur Orioles, NSW Australian Youth Championship Teams and the national U18 team. Thanks to my mum, dad and sister for all the sacrifices they made to give me this opportunity.”
Teichmann says he’s super thankful for all the opportunities from his community but was quick to highlight his dad Russell as his biggest baseball influence.
MORE COLLEGE STORIES
- Team Australia U18 star pitcher Damien Wilson commits to New Mexico Junior College
- Team Australia U18 infielder commits to JUCO powerhouse Weatherford College
- South Aussie Max Stagg off to Division I program UC Santa Barbara
















