11 August 2024
2004 Olympic Baseball: Meet the Aussies looking for a medal at the 2004 Athens Olympics
There’s no doubt about it. This 2004 Olympic team is one of the most iconic baseball rosters ever assembled in Australian history.
They also accomplished something remarkable – a 2004 Olympic silver medal, Australia’s only hardware from an Olympic Games.
There’s just one problem -itt’s really hard to find succinct game stories, photos, box scores and information about this incredible Olympic run.
Until now.
Over the next fortnight, we will be relieving the 20-year-anniversary of this team in all its glory. In fact, we’ll just pretend like the tournament is happening “now”.
Australian baseball writer & historian Robert Laidlaw will provide a game recap with quotes from some of the players who lived the games themselves to help paint a picture. We’ll have a mini-booklet to distribute at the end of it.
From August 15-25 on baseball.com.au and Team Australia Baseball social media accounts, we will wind back the clock.
We’ll post each recap based on the schedule below. There will also be a preview before the tournament “begins.”

There’s no doubt the competition would be stiff. Only the top four teams can advance to the medal rounds after playing each other once.
Looking back, this Australian team was loaded with pedigree. There were ten Major Leaguers on this team, seven of them pitchers.
There were six returning from the 2000 Olympic squad.
Stay tuned for an official preview. Let’s meet the squad.

POSITION PLAYERS
C David Nilsson: Arguably Australia’s most prolific player, Nilsson captained the side in 2004. Nilsson spent eight years in the Major Leagues with the Milwaukee Brewers in the 1990s and was an MLB All-Star in 1999. He was part of the 2000 Olympic squad and a real leader for baseball in Australia. Nilsson also played a season in Japan’s top league.
C Andrew Utting: The 26-year-old reached as high as Triple-A with the Orioles in 1998 but has been out of professional baseball since 2000. He has been playing Claxton Shield with the Queensland Rams.
C Ben Wigmore: A 22-year-old South Australian rising through the ranks in his home state, with the opportunity to provide some depth to the squad.
1B Brendan Kingman: The 31-year-old reached as high as Double-A in his career back in 1999. He is the Australian Baseball Leauge’s single season record holder in homers with 27. Currently playing for NSW in the Claxton Shield.
2B Gavin Fingleson: After playing three years of independent league professional baseball in the early 2000s, 27-year-old Fingleson played a season of independent baseball in the North East League to prepare for the Olympics.
SS Rodney Van Buizen: A versatile infielder, 23-year-old Van Buizen spent the season in High-A in the LA Dodgers organisation. He hit .326 in High-A in 2003.
3B Glenn Williams: The 27-year-old signed a hefty contract as a teenager in 1994 with the Atlanta Braves. In 2004, he was in the middle of his third straight Triple-A season with the Toronto Blue Jays, hitting .264 and knocking on the door of the Major Leagues. Williams eventually reached the Major Leagues with Minnesota in 2005.
UTIL Craig Lewis: A member of the national team since 1997, Lewis has transitioned from being a reliable pitcher to a hitter. He hit .261 for the Brockton Rox in 2004, an independent league
UTIL Brett Tamburrino: The 22-year-old, who can play both infield and outfield, spent 2004 in High-A with the Minnesota Twins where he hit .271.
UTIL Paul Gonzalez: The 35-year-old returns to the Olympics from the 2000 team as a leader. He reached as high as Triple-A in the 90s with the San Diego Padres and played in the top-level of Japanese baseball in 1999. Currently with the Queensland Rams in the Claxton Shield.
OF Tom Brice: The 22-year-old hit .310 in A-Ball with the Chicago White Sox in 2004. In 2005 he played in the top level of Taiwanese baseball.
OF Brett Roneberg: The 25-year-old spent 2004 in Double-A with the Boston Red Sox where he hit .279. He previously had reached as high as Triple-A with the Marlins. Roneberg had a lengthy 11-year career as a minor leaguer.
OF Trent Oeltjen: A young 21-year-old future MLB player who hit .278 in High-A with the Minnesota Twins in 2004. Oeltjen would make his MLB debut five years later in 2009 and play parts of three seasons in the Show.
OF Nick Kimpton: 20-year-old Kimpton was in the midst of a fine season in A-Ball with the Anaheim Angels, hitting .290.
PITCHERS
LHP – Jeff Williams: The 32-year-old had already pitched parts of four seasons in Major League Baseball with the LA Dodgers, but he really made his name in Japan. In 2003 with the Hanshin Tigers in the top level of Japanese baseball, Williams posted a 1.54 ERA in 52.1 innings of relief.
LHP – Ryan Rowland-Smith: The 21-year-old from Newcastle feels destined for the Major Leagues. In 2004, he was in the middle of a season in High-A with the Seattle Mariners. By 2007, Rowland Smith would make his MLB debut. He went on to pitch over 120 games in the Major Leagues.
RHP – Rich Thompson: The newly turned 20-year-old from Hornsby was enjoying success in High-A with the Angels. Thompson would eventually make his Major League debut in 2007 and pitch parts of six seasons and 104.1 innings.
RHP – Wayne Ough: The 25-year-old reached his highest level of minor league baseball in 2004 – Double-A with the New York Mets. After his minor league career ended, Wayne Ough embarked on almost a two-decade career playing all over Europe and in Australian in the ABL.
LHP – Graeme Lloyd: The 37-year-old had just finished a 10-year Major League career which included two World Series rings. Lloyd pitched over 500 MLB innings for the Milwaukee Brewers, New York Yankees, Toronto Blue Jays, Montreal Expos, Florida Marlins, New York Mets and Kansas City Royals.
RHP John Stephens: The 24-year-old was in the midst of a Triple-A season with the Boston Red Sox. Stephens, from Sydney, had already made his Major League debut in 2002 with the Baltimore Orioles.
LHP Craig Anderson: From Gosford, Anderson was 25-years-old at the time and enjoying some success at Triple-A in the Mariners organisation. His professional career extended an illustrious two decades, with nine seasons in the minor leagues and ten in the Australian Baseball League.
RHP Chris Oxspring: In 2004, Oxspring was a 27-year-old knocking on the door of the Major Leagues in Triple-A. He made his Big League debut in 2005 with the San Diego Padres. Oxspring eventually pitched in top-level Japan and Korea. He pitched an inning of professional baseball in the 2023-24 ABL season.
RHP Phil Stockman: The 24-year-old split time in Double-A and Triple-A in the Arizona Diamondbacks organisation in 2004. He ended up pitching parts of two seasons with the Atlanta Braves in 2006 and 2007.
LHP Adrian Burnside: The 27-year-old was in Triple-A at the time of the Olympics. He ended up pitching four seasons in Triple-A. Burnside made his mark in Japan, pitching in the top level for the Yomuiri Giants for three seasons. He also pitched a year in Korea.




















