02 March 2026
- Team Australia World Baseball Classic
Australia adjusts on the fly as rain washes out WBC tune-up vs Japanese Champs
Australia opens the World Baseball Classic in three days.
Having an exhibition against reigning Japanese champions SoftBank Hawks cancelled due to rain is less than ideal in terms of tournament preparation.
After all, the likes of Korea and Japan are training under the roof at Osaka Dome, unaffected by the weather.
Australia, Czechia and Chinese Taipei are all based in Miyazaki — and all lost a day of games.
With the opener looming, every opportunity to sharpen matters.
The disruption was inconvenient but not defining. For manager Dave Nilsson, there was no overreaction.
“This is what we do and who we are,” Nilsson told the team before training. “We are the team that deals with challenges and adversity. We have the right attitude and we adjust.”
Nilsson acknowledged the obvious in his daily media press conference when asked about the weather.
“There was an impact. Our pitchers didn’t get to pitch in a game and our hitters didn’t get to hit in a game,” he said. “But we make the most of it and move on.”

Instead of nine innings against NPB opposition, Australia shifted to a neighbouring indoor facility for a morning of workouts.
The schedule pivoted quickly.
Position players met to talk defence and situational awareness before rolling into a game simulation. Players worked the cages and fielded some ground balls.
The focus was to make it as competitive as possible — particularly for the arms.

WBC HUB: Archived stories and interviews at www.baseball.com.au/wbc
Everything in camp is mapped toward March 5. Every planned inning matters.
Five pitchers had been scheduled to cover the game, including recent arrivals Mitch Neunborn and Blake Townsend, who had just joined camp from their respective MLB clubs.
Jon Kennedy, Warwick Saupold and Lachlan Wells were also meant to pitching the game.
Rather than scrap the workload, the staff built a live, intrasquad simulation.
Pitching coach Jim Bennett made the intention clear.
“It’s a game of adjustments, and so that’s what we did today,” Bennett said. “We treated it like a real game so they still can get ready for three days from now. That way, they still have some competitiveness instead of just throwing a bullpen.”
Bennett was particularly encouraged by what he saw from Blake Townsend and his development since the Premier12.
“Blake has really come a long way in the past year. It’s almost night and day,” Bennett said. “Not only his stuff and his competitiveness, but the conversations we have are at a whole different level. He’s gone through highs and lows, not having a job, getting a job, having a great year. That experience matters. He sees the game differently now.”

Box checked for Jim Bennett.
Townsend said he felt sharp in the simulated outing.
“I’ve got confidence in the zone and confidence that my stuff is good enough to compete,” he said. “Guys treated it seriously and tried to bring that game intensity. It was great to see. Every moment matters.”
Scheduled starter Lachlan Wells also threw a couple of simulated innings as part of the indoor session and embraced the change in plans.
“We still faced hitters and treated it like a little game,” Wells said. “It’s about being adaptable. Nothing’s ever going to run perfectly, especially this time of year. You just adjust, get your work in and make sure you’re ready when it counts.”
Wells said pitching against players like Curtis Mead, Travis Bazzana and Jarryd – who just returned from Major League or Korean camps – offered a new level to throw to.
“I felt sharp and in command,” he said of his action.

For the position players, shortstop Jarryd Dale saw the rainout as part of the tournament build.
“It’s a game of adjustments,” Dale said. “I think we’d all like to play, but once it was called off we put it out of our mind and focused on what we can control and how we can make the most of the opportunity together.”
With another exhibition against the Tokyo Giants scheduled for 11:00AM tomorrow morning, Australia still has one more opportunity to sharpen before the tournament begins. The game will not be broadcast.
“Tomorrow looks like we’ll get a game in, but if not, we’ll do the same thing again. It’s just about preparing for March 5,” says Bennett.
QUOTABLES
After training, Travis Bazzana and Dave Nilsson spoke to multiple Japanese outlets in a press conference.
Blake Townsend, Lachlan Wells and Jarryd Dale all had media availability too.
Here are some quotes and notes from the post-training media sessions.

Travis Bazzana on his Spring Training with Cleveland leading into the WBC:
“Camp in the USA has been going well. My defensive work and at-bats have been quality. I think I’m in a good place to have success with the team. In a short tournament it’s not about personal goals. It’s take every day as it comes and try to win every game we can. I just want to win every pitch and bring good energy around the guys.”
Jarryd Dale on why he prioritised the WBC despite his KBO contract with the Kia Tigers:
“It’s just that pride of being Australian. Being young and watching my father be a part of these teams, it’s something that’s bigger than baseball. I really wanted to be here. It might cut my training short with Kia, but these are big games and it means a lot to represent everyone at home.”
Blake Townsend on joining WBC Camp after watching Fuchu from afar:
“It sort of helped light the flame for me a little bit. Getting that FOMO and watching the guys from the States and seeing the fun they were having in Fuchu. It just shows you why you’re part of the team and why you want to be a part of the team.”
Dave Nilsson on a potential line-up on March 5:
“I know that Travis Bazzana will be playing second base and leading off. But it’s difficult to announce a line-up when we don’t know who our opposition pitcher will be. When we know the starting pitcher, I’ll finalise my line-up.”
“We’ll really start to focus on Chinese Taipei over the next few days but right now we are really worrying about ourselves and what we do here. We have a lot of data and information come through about the teams we play, so I think we have a pretty good idea about who our opposition is.”
































