25 February 2026
- Team Australia World Baseball Classic
5 Minutes Apart: The absurd odds that brought Brisbane brothers Connor and Callum MacDonald together in Fuchu
A feature story from Fuchu brought to you by Aces Sporting Club. Written by Eric Balnar.
The odds are almost absurd.
Two brothers from Brisbane. Two professional athletes. Two different sports played on opposite sides of the world.
Yet today, Connor and Callum MacDonald find themselves in the same Tokyo suburb of Fuchu.
One is preparing for the World Baseball Classic with Team Australia, the other playing professional rugby in Japan.
After years chasing their careers across continents, the brothers are now living just five minutes walking distance from each other.
To reach this point required an almost impossible chain of events.
Australia first had to choose Fuchu as its World Baseball Classic training base.
Connor then had to fight through Australia’s competitive baseball pathway, reinvent himself from professional hitter to full-time pitcher, and earn selection to the national squad.
At the same time, Callum had to build a top-level rugby career, secure a long-term contract in Japan, and end up playing for a club based in that same Tokyo suburb.
Separate journeys, different sports, different timelines – all somehow leading both brothers to the same place at the same moment.
A Brisbane Household Built on Sport
For the MacDonald brothers, competition has been part of life from the beginning.
Connor is one of four boys (Connor, Callum, LJ and Liam) raised in a sporting Brisbane household.
Their father, Ken, is a legend of. Australian Baseball – both in the professional competition, for Team Australia and for Queensland in the Claxton Shied.
“It was awesome,” Connor said of their upbringing. “It started with coming home from school and playing cricket in the backyard and that translated to any sport. It was always me, the oldest, and Liam, the youngest, against the two middle boys in LJ and Callum. We didn’t have a PlayStation or anything, so we were encouraged just to get outside and play.”
That environment helped shape the work ethic that would carry all four brothers into high-level sport.
“We had a home gym and it’s hard to get up early, so I would ask my younger brother Liam to work out with me. It was a competitive household in a good way. We always pushed each other to be better.”
Dave Nilsson, Team Australia’s manager, played with Ken in the ABL. He’s also known the four MacDonald brothers since they were babies.
“He’s a hard-working country guy,” said Nilsson. “He passed on a lot of his qualities to his boys. Worth ethic, the way you interact people. I see a lot of him in the boys.”
Different Roads Around the World
As adults, their careers took them in completely different directions – although they all played baseball at some point.
Connor pursued baseball professionally, spending time in the Houston Astros organisation before continuing his career in Australia and eventually transitioning full-time to pitching just three years ago — a move that helped open the door to his Team Australia debut.
Callum followed rugby, first playing in Canberra before moving to Japan five years ago to pursue a professional contract, eventually landing with Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo in Fuchu.
For most of that time, the brothers were “passing ships” while living in different countries while chasing their respective careers.

But the connection never faded.
“We are super close. My brothers are my best mates. We talk all the time. We wouldn’t go three days without calling,” said Connor.
Now, for the first time in years, their professional journeys have crossed in the same place.
While Team Australia trains in Fuchu, Callum has become Connor’s local guide.
“He’s been showing me all the restaurants, little spots, and the sights and scenes of Fuchu. It’s been amazing to have my home here and spend some time with him that I don’t always get,” he said.
Even Connor admits the situation still feels surreal.
“It’s crazy it’s worked out this way. I don’t think I truly appreciated the things that have had to happen for us both to be doing what we love at a high level for this to happen. I want to make the most out of it while he is five minutes down the road.”
Connor says his younger brother’s journey in Japan has been a major source of inspiration.
“My brother inspires me because rugby is such a gladiator sport. The mentality he has to get into for a game is so different than what I have to get into,” he said.
“He moved his whole life to Japan by himself. When I was in pro ball, I had other Aussies with me and they speak English in America. He came here alone and even had shoulder surgery here. That takes amazing strength. I admire that, not just physically but mentally.”
For Connor, the responsibility of being the eldest brother has always carried meaning beyond the field.
He hopes his own journey shows the younger boys what persistence looks like.
“I hope I set a good example for my brothers. Just always keeping focused on your goal, always working hard. Champions are made when nobody is looking, and I hope I set that example for them.”

Baseball Still Runs in the Family
Back home in Brisbane, the MacDonald baseball legacy continues.
Connor and youngest brother Liam shared the field this season with the Brisbane Bandits — a moment Connor calls one of his proudest.
“His first hit was a grand slam. That was one of my proudest moments,” Connor said. “Just seeing him do that, showing people he belongs… it was indescribable. I was so proud of him because I’ve seen how hard he works and how much the Bandits mean to him. Our dad played, I played, so to share the field . Yeah, that was pretty special.”
Team Australia pitching coach Jim Bennett says the family’s reputation in Brisbane baseball is well earned.
“The MacDonald family…that’s Brisbane baseball right there,” said Bennett, the Brisbane Bandits’ manager. “The pride all the boys have is amazing…Connor puts a lot of thought into everything he does. It means so much to him and now Liam is following in his footsteps.”

Bennett added that Connor brings both leadership and flexibility to Australia’s pitching plans for the tournament.
“He gives us a lot of options at the WBC. He can pitch an inning, he can pitch a few, and you know he’s going to compete. He’s a big-time strike thrower and an excellent human being to have in our group,” he said.
In Tokyo, With Love
For Connor, the rare chance to share the same city as his brother – even briefly – is something he refuses to take for granted.
“So many things had to happen for this to work out,” he said. “And while he’s five minutes down the road… I just want to make the most of it.”
And the coincidences don’t stop there.
Professional rugby schedules only allow a handful of bye weeks each season, yet Callum’s happens to fall during the exact week Australia plays its World Baseball Classic Pool C games at the Tokyo Dome.
Which means when Connor takes the mound on one of baseball’s biggest stages, his brother will be there in the stands.
MORE STORIES
Eric Balnar is writing features from Fuchu, thanks to Aces Sporting Club.
Here are some more:
– Competing at Everything: Inside Team Australia’s Relentless Fuchu Camp
– The shoe finally fits: Inside Josh Hendrickson’s Three Year Battle to Team Australia































