12 March 2023
Ohtani's mammoth three run homer highlights Japanese win over Australia
by Eric Balnar, photos by SMP Images
Team Australia felt the power of Japanese baseball on Sunday night.
A sold-out Tokyo Dome of 41,000 people in the baseball frenzied country of Japan asked for a “Sho” and boy, did they ever get one.
Not even 10 minutes into the game, baseball’s biggest star Shohei Ohtani crushed a monster three-run homer. The ball landed deep in the right field stands, and world number one Japan used that first inning shot to power to a 7-1 victory over Australia.
Ohtani had four runs batted in on the day before being pulled in the seventh inning. Alex Hall had a solo shot in the ninth inning for Australia’s lone score.
It was fun to be part of. The crowd chanted, hollered and sang throughout the evening in a special atmosphere.
Japan finishes Pool B play with a perfect 4-0 record and wins the group. They officially advance to the quarter finals. They outscored their opponents of Australia, Korea, China and Czech Republic by a score of 38-7.
They’ll face the runner up of Group A in a March 16 quarter final in Tokyo.
Australia’s record falls to 2-1 with one game remaining.
The equation is simple for Australia: beat the Czech Republic on Monday afternoon and advance to their first ever World Baseball Classic quarter final. If they win Monday, they’ll face the winner of Group A in Tokyo on March 15.
Monday’s game vs the Czech Republic will be played at 12:00PM Tokyo time (2:00PM in Melbourne).
It has the potential to be one of the more significant moments in Australia baseball history. No Australian team has ever made it past the group stage at the World Baseball Classic.
There’s no shame in losing to Japan. They are the world’s number one ranked team for a reason. Their team has a combined salary of $110,000,000 USD.
Japan’s 7-1 victory is the lowest margin of victory they’ve had in their four games.
The fans have been going mad for the World Baseball Classic in Japan. An estimated 46% of Japanese households watched the WBC opener, and Japan has a population of 125,000,000. You do the match.
It was surely an experience the Aussies will never forget.

20-year-old Will Sherriff started the game for the Green & Gold. After allowing the three-run bomb to Ohtani, he settled down by getting Japanese League home run king Murakami to fly out. He then struck out eight-year NPB veteran Okamoto.
Luke Wilkins took over from there. The veteran arm went the next 2.2 innings, allowing just two runs.
Japan added two more runs in the second inning to push their lead to 5-0. Lars Nootbar and Kensuke Kondoh had the RBIs off back-to-back hits.
In the fourth inning, Japan had bases loaded, nobody out, and Ohtani at the plate. But a timely double play anchored by Robbie Glendinning helped limit the home side to just one run off a bases-loaded walk.
Japan would cash in another run in the sixth to make it 7-0.
It total, Japan tallied 10 hits on the day.
Australia only had five hits on the night but there were a couple nice highlights that will be remembered for a long time. Alex Hall’s homer in the ninth was one of them.
Todd Van Steensel had a great moment on the mound. The ABL veteran struck out Ohtani swinging in the sixth inning. Van Steensel ended up going 2.0 innings without allowing a run and striking out three.
It wasn’t just the powerful Japan line-up Australia got a taste of. Japan’s pitching was pretty good, too.
Yoshinobu Yamamoto, the NPB’s highest paid player, tossed 4.0 innings of one hit, no-walk, shutout ball with eight strikeouts.
Keiji Takahashi, Taisei Ota, Atsuki Auesa and Hiroya Miyagi combined to blank the Australians.
For Australia on the mound, Mariners’ prospect Blake Townsend and Dodgers’ hopeful Liam Doolan seized some play time. Townsend worked two key outs in the fourth, while Doolan allowed one run in the fifth.
Van Steensel pitched the sixth and seventh.
Josh Guyer pitched a clean eighth. Sam Holland pitched a 1-2-3 ninth with a pair of punch outs.
Dave Nilsson took the opportunity to let his full roster play in the hectic atmosphere.
Other Australian players hit the field for their World Baseball Classic debut including Cubs prospect Liam Spence at third, who replaced Darryl George in the fifth. Ryan Battaglia came in for a pinch hit in the eighth. Jarryd Dale entered in the middle stages of the game, too, and even collected a hit.
Australia’s tournament continues on Monday with the big clash vs the Czech Republic.
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Warwick Saupold at training (PHOTO: SMP Images / Scott Powick)
Aaron Whitefield at a practice game in Miyazaki (PHOTO: SMP Images / Scott Powick)
