01 April 2026
Women's Preview: Are the Roos a legitimate top four chance at Women's Nationals?
The Roos arrive at the 2026 Australian Women’s Championship as the ultimate wildcard.
As a brand new national composite team, built from players across the country who narrowly missed state selection, they are difficult to project. There is talent, there is opportunity, but there is also uncertainty.
So the question is real: Are the Roos a legitimate top four chance?

On paper, there is a case.
The roster blends youth with experience.
Two players on this squad have played in a World Cup. Maddy Patrick represented Australia at the 2023 edition, while Bronwyn Gell is a five-time Emerald.
Gell is handy on the hill. She won the Victorian Women’s Premier League Pitching Award for season 2024/25.
Players believe that international exposure could bring a steady presence in key moments.
“Maddy Patrick, her experience and knowledge of the game makes her a strong teammate and opponent,” said pitcher Mackenzie Prentice-Evans .
Around her is a wave of emerging talent. A large portion of the roster is 19 or younger, or players stepping into the open women’s level with upside and something to prove.
READ MORE PREVIEWS VIA OUR TOURNAMENT HUB: www.baseball.com.au/awc2026.
In fact, nine of them are teenagers.
They are headlined by 16-year-old Reagan O’Rielley – last year’s MVP at the U16 championships.
That hunger to prove themselves is part of what makes this group dangerous.
“The Roos are here because we got a second chance, we’re here to show people that we got this,” said Lily Dal-Corobbo, who won a national title with South Australia’s U16 squad in 2024 and 2025.
There is also a diversity of background that could work in their favour.
“We’re a composite team from everywhere in Australia,” Libby Price said.
“Because we are a combination of all states, we have to have an ability to adapt to one another,” added Mariam Arifaki, also moving up from the AYWC in 2025.
If that adaptability clicks quickly, the Roos could present a different look to any team in the tournament. Players coming from different systems, different styles, different strengths.
That same factor is also the biggest question mark.
This is not a group that has grown up together through state pathways. Many are meeting for the first time in this environment.
“Too hard to tell [what our strength is] yet because I’ve never played with half of them,” said youngster Macy Priamo.
Manager Dave Paddison has been clear about the challenge.
“We don’t get to train as a team. it is a team that is full of youthful exuberance that has experience at the helm.”
Without regular team camps, preparation has leaned heavily on individual work and mindset.
“We are focusing on mental preparation,” Paddison said.
That places a premium on how quickly the group can come together once the tournament begins.
There are signs that it can.
“We have all come from different states but we are all very excited to be on a team together,” said Reagan O’Rielley.
And, there is a shared understanding of what this opportunity represents.
“Being a team focused on development means a lot of learning and getting to meet and learn from new people,” Prentice-Evans said.
From a pure talent standpoint, they may have enough.
From a cohesion standpoint, they are behind the established state programs.
So can they finish top four?
If they find rhythm early, can find steady pitching in big games, limit walks, if the energy translates into execution, and if their experienced players steady key moments, the Roos have a pathway to contend.
If not, the lack of time together may show.
Either way, they will be one of the most fascinating teams to watch.
“This is a team of passionate women who are keen to play and develop on the biggest stage for women’s baseball in Australia,” said Paddison.
And in a tournament where momentum can build quickly, that passion might be enough to turn a second chance into something more
READ MORE PREVIEWS VIA OUR TOURNAMENT HUB: www.baseball.com.au/awc2026.




















