26 February 2023
How Australia is approaching pitching in the World Baseball Classic
An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar, Fuchu City, Japan. Photos and video by Hugh Whittle.
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The pitching rotation and schedule for Team Australia arms at the World Baseball Classic is easy to understand.
“Everybody needs to be ready to pitch in the first inning of the first game against Korea. Literally,” says Team Australia pitching coach Jim Bennett.
“It doesn’t matter what your role is in a normal season, any one of them could pitch at the beginning of the game. That is what they are preparing for: to be ready at all times.”
There are fifteen pitchers on Australia’s roster. Bennett says if he has to use all of them in the first game vs South Korea to get the win, he will. There’s no holding back in tournament baseball.
Of the rostered pitchers, five of them have pitched in a World Baseball Classic, the last one in 2017. All fifteen play professionally somewhere in the world. Twelve of them have played MLB-affiliated baseball, including four right now.
There are 21 Claxton Shields combined between the staff. Warwick Saupold has pitched in the Big Leagues for the Detroit Tigers. Tim Atherton has beat USA in an international game. Todd Van Steensel has won championships on nearly every continent.
There is plenty of experience and pedigree to draw from. There’s also a nice mix of young blood like recent college graduate Liam Doolan, or 20-year-old Will Sherriff, or 21-year-old Mariners’ prospect Blake Townsend.
“Every pitcher has a great strength,” said manager Dave Nilsson in a podcast yesterday. “We’ll be calling on all of them at some point.”
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Former MLB pitcher Warwick Saupold deals at Fuchu training camp (PHOTO: Scott Powick / SMP Images)
This pitching group will have to navigate Team Australia through four group stage games vs South Korea, China, Japan and Czech Republic. Australia will likely need to win three of them to advance to the quarter finals.
It’s win at all costs and runs have to be held off the board – it’s an important tiebreaker in tournament baseball. There’s no holding back.
“We’re going to win [these games] collectively. It’s not going to be one guy,” say Bennett.
One of those guys trusted to get it done is Steve Kent – a 33-year-old veteran who has pitched professionally for a long time.
Kent has 14 seasons of professional baseball under his belt, reaching as high as Triple-A with the Atlanta Braves and winning a Claxton Shield with the Canberra Cavalry of the ABL. He’s pitched in big games before.

Steve Kent in action in an exhibition game in Fuchu City, Japan. Photo: Scott Powick | SMP Images
He says “be ready” is the message he’s trying to reinforce in the dugout.
“My role is to be ready whenever my name is called. Whether that’s starting, the second, the eighth, the fifth. I am getting ready for any situation,” he says. “For a lot of guys that’s something different they are going to have to get used to. But part of this training camp is about doing something different and preparing that.”
Bennett agrees.
“It’s about being comfortable in an uncomfortable situation,” he says. “That’s what this camp is about. It’s putting guys out of their comfort zone.”
Australia is trying all the tricks in the book to push players out of their comfort zone.
A mid-camp hotel switch, simulated crowd noise, practicing game situations, training at a fast pace, short turnaround between activities, and even living in a foreign country for two weeks before Game 1 helps get the players ready for a truly different experience.
That experience? Playing in a game with huge TV audiences, in a stadium that fits 50,000+ people, in a short tournament, with it all on the line.

The WBC will be played at one of the most iconic baseball venues in the World.
Kent says the key is to not shy away from anything you feel.
“Don’t hide from it. You’re going to be there and you’re going to be nervous. You can’t escape it,” he says. “It’s about embracing it. Take in that moment, have a look around, don’t run away from it. You have to say: ‘This is what I fight my entire life to achieve. There’s nothing to lose. Do the best I can to help the team…and have faith that you can.”
For Bennett, it comes down to trust.
“Everybody is different and has completely different strengths and traits. You have to embrace who you are,” he says. “You have to know your best stuff and trust it. We’re going to win this thing by a collective, not because of an individual.”
NEWS AND NOTES
Giving back to Fuchu
After a full morning of training – which consisted of a few live at-bats, a mini-scrimmage, fitness and batting practice – Team Australia was officially welcomed to Fuchu City.
The mayor of Fuchu and many Japanese dignitaries were on hand for a half-hour ceremony that featured drum performances and speeches. Some of Australia’s players even tried the drums!
After the ceremony, the team ran a special baseball clinic for nearly 200 local kids.
“It’s an opportunity for us to give back,” said pitcher Luke Wilkins yesterday. “We look forward to stuff like this.”

Tomorrow – Practice + Shrine Visit
Team Australia have another big morning of training. In the evening, they’ll head to a visit to a local shrine.
Australia is in Fuchu City until March 4. They’ll then head to Miyazaki for exhibition games vs WBC teams.
First pitch of the World Baseball Classic is March 9.

































