18 November 2024
Premier12 | Australia's tournament ends with 5-2 loss to Korea as team awaits final standing
Australia wrapped up its 2024 Premier12 campaign with a 5-2 loss to Korea at Tianmu Stadium in Taipei on Monday afternoon.
Three errors in the field, missed opportunities and a massive performance from Korean All-Star slugger Kim Doyeong led to the Korean victory.
Kim was an imposing force in the batter’s box. He went 3-for-4 with four RBI and a critical two-run homer in the sixth to sail Korea ahead.
Not long before the dagger home run, Liam Spence (below) had just pulled the Aussies back within one with his second hit of the afternoon.

Australia had their chances. They had bases loaded with nobody out in the fifth, and runners on the corners with one out in the sixth. Australia scored just one run each of those innings.
Meanwhile, Korea capitalised off Australian miscues.
Only one of their first three runs were earned. Australia made three errors in the first four innings which helped extend Korean innings.
“Defense and limiting free bases has not been where it needs to be the last two nights,” said Australia’s hitting coach Chris Adamson at the post game presser. “It’s going to continue to be a focal point for us and something we need to clean up.”
Australia finishes the Premier12 with a 1-4 record. They will have to await the outcome of tonight’s Japan / Dominican Republic & Cuba / Chinese Taipei games to see where they finish.
If Chinese Taipei & Japan both win, Australia will finish fourth in the group, and seventh overall in the tournament.
“Overall, we’re disappointed. That’s not where we wanted to be or think we should be,” said Adamson. “But there’s a lot of good foundations and young players coming through.”
Liam Spence led Australia in batting, collecting two of Australia’s five hits. Tim Kennelly, Rixon Wingrove & Darryl George had the other base knocks.
Australia used seven pitchers in the loss: Tim Atherton, Steve Kent, Josh Guyer, Warwick Saupold, Sam Holland, Coen Wynne and Todd Van Steensel. They combined to allow 10 hits, three walks and three earned runs.
BOX SCORE: Click here
HOW IT UNFOLDED
Some sloppy play hurt the Australians.
Three Aussie errors in the first four kept extending batting innings for Korea and helped put runs on the board.
Of Korea’s first three runs, only one was earned. Australian pitching had its moments.
Tim Atherton had a huge bases loaded strikeout in the second to keep the game scoreless, bailing out a defensive error.
Darryl George also kept a run off the board off a funny deflection.
That’s one way to get an out 👀
📹: @WBSC pic.twitter.com/vWl8o9igD0
— Team Australia ⚾️ (@TeamAusBaseball) November 18, 2024
Kim Doyeong picked up his first RBI in the third, a single up the middle against Steve Kent.
Korea had their breakthrough in the fourth inning, to no fault of pitcher Josh Guyer.
In wet conditions, Chang-Ki Hong dribbled a ball down the line off a half-hearted swing.
It hugged the foul line between home and first, keeping the inning alive.
Guyer induced a weak ground ball to Shin Minjae. The ball rolled between first base and the pitcher but a slightly arrant throw from Rixon Wingrove allowed Minjae to reach and a run to score.
The next batter Kim Doyeong singled to left. 3-0.
Australia loaded the bases in the fifth with no outs.
But an Ulrich Bojarski strike-out, Jarryd Dale ground out, and Aaron Whitefield left them juiced. Travis Bazzana picked up the RBI with a bases-loaded walk to push the lead to 3-1.
Australia pressured again in the sixth. They had two on and one out. Liam Spence was able to grab his second hit of the night in his first Premier12 start.
“In a word, ‘no’, I am not surprised with Liam today,” said Adamson. “He is the ultimate professional and he took the opportunity presented with two hands and I think he’s going to be a large part of this team going forward.”
It didn’t take long for Korea to return serve after the Spence RBI.
Kim Dayeong continued his impressive day, launching a two-run homer off Sam Holland to extend the advantage back out to three. It was his fourth RBI and third hit of the day.
Coen Wynne kept Australia in the fight from there. Wynne, in his third appearance of the tournament, tossed 1.1 innings allowing just one hit with one strikeout.
Todd Van Steensel also pitched a perfect eighth inning.
Australia was sat down without a baserunner in the final two innings.
“Overall I think it’s a bit of a changing of the guard,” said Adamson in summary of the tournament. “We have some young talent, and we have some older players, and young pitchers like Coen Wynne continues to go strength to strength, so there’s a lot to build on. There’s exciting talent coming through.”
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