15 January 2026
Australian Youth Championships
Award winners announced at 2026 Australian Youth Championships
The 2026 Under 16 and Under 18 Youth Championships is in the books.
Here are your final standings and award winners from each division.
15 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
The 2026 Under 16 and Under 18 Youth Championships is in the books.
Here are your final standings and award winners from each division.
15 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
Victoria piled it on late in their four run comeback to claim a 9-4 Gold Medal Game victory over Western Australia at Essendon Baseball Club.
Here’s how it all happened.
You can watch the recap free on Baseball+.
The game story by Raff Casey and the mini-match highlights are below.
Follow us on socials at baseball.com.au for Australian Baseball news.
Tournament Hub: www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026
14 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
Three one run ball games in the Under 18 Finals at Essendon. There were also two walk offs.
Our Gold Medal match is set.
The recaps, with mini-match highlights, are posted below.
Don’t forget to follow us on socials via baseball.com.au and through our Hub at www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026 for up-to-date news.
Here is the schedule and format for the remainder of the tournament:
Qualification Final: Western Australia 3 def Victoria 2 | WA advances to Gold. Victoria plays in the Preliminary Final.
Elimination Final: NSW 3 def SA 2 | New South Wales advances to preliminary final against Victoria
Preliminary Final: VIC 10 def NSW 9 | Victoria advances to Gold Medal Game. New South Wales wins bronze.
GOLD MEDAL GAME: Victoria vs Western Australia, 2:30PM on Thursday 15 January at Essendon.
Watch live and free on Baseball+. All games at Essendon Baseball Club.
Consolation Game: Queensland 16 def ACT Roos 3
This one had it all.
Clutch pitching. Big time hits. Double plays. And a walk-off.
Let’s set the stage of the last inning. 2-2, bottom of the seventh. With one out and a runner on first and second, Lenny Golding grounded into what could have been an inning ending double play to force the game to extras.
Victoria made the first out at second, but Golding hustled down the line and there throw to first was not in time.
It allowed Cam Bahr to fly around third and slide in safe for the winning run.

Moments earlier, Jake Bertucci tied the game at 2 for Victoria, with his team down to their final out in a dramatic top of the seventh.
The game was tight throughout. Each team was stifled by a tremendous pitching performance.
Riley Peoples tossed 3.1 innings in his start for Victoria. He allowed six hits, one run and four strikeouts. Cooper Busch allowed one unearned run in his 2.2 innings of relief. Cooper Bishop-Worn took the loss.
Luan Van Splunder threw 4.2 innings, allowing just three hits and one unearned run in his start for Western Australia. Dylan Palethorpe threw 2.1 innings, allowing three hits and one run.
There were no runs until the fourth inning, when they each traded a pair. WA took the lead briefly in the fifth inning and led 2-1 until the last.
Western Australia advance to the Gold Medal Game. Victoria have another chance to get the gold but they’ll need to beat either South Australia or New South Wales.
Western Australia will now play for Gold.
Watch the highlights below:
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Hits (10): E. Samukawa, Q. Fatai, C. Bahr, C. Branch (2), L. Golding (2), C. Barber, H. Wooden, C. Benseman
RBI: Wooden, Williams
VICTORIA
Hits (6): Jake Bertucci (2), Bishop-Worn, Coote, Brodie
RBI: Bertucci
By Raff Casey
Ashton Kennedy put up an MVP worthy performance in NSW’s win over South Australia. He pitched a complete game that secured at least a bronze medal for his state.

He became the first pitcher to record ten strikeouts this tournament.
After sitting down the first six SA batters, NSW took the lead from Ben Sawyer’s RBI single.
Kennedy struck out another two hitters in the third alongside a great throw by catcher Draven Fatu to catch the South Australian runner stealing.
In the fourth South Australia found a run of their own. Following is Single, Harry Taintey went on to steal second and third, before crossing the plate on a wild throw. 1-1.
NSW were quick to take back their lead.
Ryan Chou worked a walk before being brough in to score by a long Draven Fatu double.
Sam Galpin turned an excellent un-assisted double play to end the inning.
Liam Worne added to NSW’s advantage with a single. 3-1.
The South Aussies engineered one more run via a sacrifice fly off the bat of Owen Couzner, but were unable to tie the game.
Ashton Kennedy proved to be almost unstoppable. He pitched all 7.0 innings allowing just three hits and one earned run. He struck out ten SA hitters. He also cashed in a hit of his own.
Toby Kortekaas stepped on the mound for SA to throw the remaining 1.1 innings. He allowed one hit and no runs, striking out three.
New South Wales moves onto the preliminary final against Victoria live on Baseball+.
NSW
HITS: K. Cusbert, A. Kennedy, L. Worne, F. Clarke, D. Fatu (2), B. Sawyer (2)
RBI: L. Worne, D. Fatu, B. Sawyer
SA
HITS: H. Taintey, O. Hayes, J. Wilton
RBI: O. Couzner

One of the most chaotic games of the tournament’s most climatic moment came in the bottom of the penultimate inning.
Mitch Langworthy launched a solo shot for Victoria to tie the game at nine.
It gave Victoria a chance to score the winning run, and that they did, on a wild pitch in the last inning, to walk off New South Wales and head to the Gold Medal Game.
This game was a pure slug fest.
NSW took an early lead in the first thanks to RBI’s from Tahlan Cavill and Frank Clarke. 3-0. All runs were scored before Victoria registered an out. Windsor Breckenridge came in relief and stopped the damage at three.
It allowed Victoria to take control and reply with six runs of their own in the bottom of the inning. 6-3 after one.
Sam Walk begun the rally with an RBI single, and was backed up by Coote, Shanks, Brodie, and Bishop-Worn.
Back and forth was the name of the game as NSW scored five more to take the lead in the second.
Cusbert drove in one on a single before Liam Worne hit a comedic bases-clearing double that he scored on via throwing errors. 8-6.
Once again, Victoria had a response in the bottom of the second.
Sam Walk knocked in another RBI before later crossing the plate himself to tie the game. 8-8.
In the third, Liam Worne once again drove in a run on a single, giving NSW the 9-8 lead.
With time running out, Victoria needed a run to keep the game going.
Mitch Langworthy stepped up to the plate and crushed a solo-homerun to bring the game to a tie once more.
After holding New South Wales scoreless in the fifth, Victoria had a chance to walk it off.
A single, intentional walk, sacrifice bunt and a wild pitch allowed the winning run to cross the plate.
Victoria will face WA in the gold medal game LIVE on Baseball+.
VIC
HITS: C. Bishop, B. Stokes, M. Langworthy (2), S. Walk (2), R. Coote, R. Shanks (2), H. Brodie (2)
RBI: C. Bishop, M. Langworthy, S. Walk, R. Coote (2), R. Shanks, H. Broke (2)
HR: M. Langworthy
NSW
HITS: K. Cusbert (2), A. Kennedy (2), T. Cavill, L. Worne (3), F. Clarke, R. Chou, D. Fatu, B. Sawyer, R. Reekie
RBI: K. Cusbert, T. Cavill, L. Worne (3), F. Clarke (2)
Queensland scored early and often in their consolation win.
They scored two in the first thanks to Lachlan Pawsey and Coleby Ryerson base hits.
ACT Roos took a 3-2 lead in the top of the second thanks to two Kai Ueki RBI.
Then Queensland took off. They scored seven in the second and seven in the fourth.
Cooper Reed had three hits to lead all players. Cody Harrison also had three RBI.
Blake Pearce and Tom Calvert combined to allow just two hits with seven strikeouts.
QUEENSLAND
Hits (11): Reiss McDermott, Lachlan Pawsey (2), Paddy McLouglin, Coleby Ryerson (2), Axel Strachan (2), Cooper Reed (3)
RBI: L. McKenna (2), R. McDermott, L. Pawsey, P. McLoughlin, C. Ryerson (2), A. Strachan (2), Cooper Reed (3)
ACT Roos
Hits (2): F. Starkey, C. Lewis
RBI: K Harris
13 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
photos by Hugh Whittle, story by Eric Balnar
Congratulations to New South Wales, your 2026 Under 16 Australian Youth Championships Gold Medal Winners.
They defeated Victoria 12-1 at Essendon to secure the chocolates. You can read the recap and watch the mini-match below.
Meanwhile, two Under 18 Finals were played.
The recaps are sorted by division and in order of completion. Looking for something? Keep scrolling.
Don’t forget to follow us on socials via baseball.com.au and through our Hub at www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026 for up-to-date news. You can find the FULL SCHEDULE there.
U16 Division
– GOLD MEDAL: New South Wales 12 def Victoria 1
– Consolation: NSW Country 7 def Western Australia 3
– Consolation: Queensland 14 def South Australia 6
U16 Game Changer Scoring Link: Click here
U18 Division
– Finals Game 1 (G1): Victoria 9 def New South Wales 2
– Finals Game 2 (G2): Western Australia 10 def South Australia 1
– Consolation: New South Wales Country 10 def ACT Roos 4
U18 GameChanger Scoring Link: Click here
REMAINING U18 FINALS SCHEDULE & BRACKET
WEDNESDAY
– 11:30AM: Qualification Final: Victoria vs Western Australia
– 2:00PM: Elimination Final: New South Wales vs South Australia
– 4:30PM: Preliminary Final: Winner Elimination Final vs Loser Qualification Final
THURSDAY
– 2:30PM: Gold Medal: Winner Preliminary Final vs Winner Qualification Final,

By Raff Casey
Noah Nash had a game he will remember for a long time.
He had four hits, two RBI, a diving catch, two shutout innings pitched and a save, as he helped lead New South Wales to a dominating 12-1 in the Under 16 National Championship Final.
Nash was named tournament MVP.
The rest of his team was excellent, too. They tallied 19 hits.
Jack Phegan tossed 5.0 innings, allowing one run. He won the Golden Arm Award.

NSW wasted no time getting started, scoring three runs in the first inning before an out was recorded.
Noah Nash’s two-run triple was the biggest blow. He was later brought in by Mitch Howay on a single.
Howay knocked in another single in the second inning to add two more to their advantage. Owen Hart and Alex Bennetts backed him up with RBI hits of their own.

While the score may not show it, the pitching and defense from both sides was incredible.
NSW starter Jack Phegan shoved 5.0 innings allowing eight hits but just one run. He struck out three.
Victorian reliever Cale Morris threw 4.0 innings. He saw just one run cross the plate and also sat down three on strikes.
Many great defensive plays were made from both sides, highlighted by a sliding catch by Noah Nash. He went through contact with his teammate and held onto the ball. Tom Hill also had a great catch to deny Stockdale of a double.
Not only did Nash stay in the game after the collision, but he also stepped onto the mound to throw the remaining 2.0 innings for New South Wales.
It was two no-hit innings. He also added a strikeout to his tally.

NSW added five more runs in the seventh inning to secure their win. Beau Stockdale, Mitch Howay, Nicholas Turley, and Austin Murdoch all had RBI contributions.
New South Wales accumulates nine-teen hits in the game, where six different athletes had a multi-hit game. They stole six bases, two of them via Beau Stockdale.
TOURNAMENT AWARD WINNERS:
MVP: Noah Nash (NSW)
Golden Arm: Jack Phegan (NSW)
Golden Bat: Buzz Mecham (QLD)
Golden Glove: Daniel Price (NSW)
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits: B. Stockdale (3), J. Kelly (2), N. Nash (4), M. Howay (3), O. Hart (2), A. Bennetts, N. Turley, A. Murdoch (2), C. Smith
RBI: B. Stockdale (2), N. Nash (2), M. Howay (3), O. Hart, A. Bennetts, N. Turley, A. Murdoch
VICTORIA
Hits: O. Shimakura (2), J. Northfield, J. Burton (2), J. Thomas, J. Tayler (2)
RBI: T. Hill





Liam Puncher came through with perhaps the best pitching performance of the 2026 Under 18 Championships so far.
The Victorian starter tossed 5.0 innings, allowing three hits, no earned runs and two walks with nine strikeouts.
Both New South Wales runs were unearned.
It allowed the bats to take flight.
After trailing 2-0 early, Victoria ripped off three runs in the second to take a 3-2 lead. They added a pair more in the third and four in the sixth to round out the scoring.
Brody Stokes led the charge, going 3-for-4 with 2 RBI. Harrison Brodie went 2-for-3 with 3 RBI in a tremendous effort.
Roman Coote and Cooper Bishop-Worn also had two hits.
Kobe Cusbert, Jake Shorey, Christian Morrison and Griffiths shared the pitching load for New South Wales, who were very careful to not go over their pitching restriction limits.
Victoria will play in the Qualification Final on Wednesday morning vs the winner of South Australia and Western Australia. The winner of the Qualification Final goes directly to the Gold Medal Game.
New South Wales will play the WA / SA loser in an Elimination Final tomorrow afternoon with their tournament lives on the line.
VICTORIA
Hits (12): Brodie Stokes (3), Cooper Bishop-Worn (2), Mitch Langworthy, Sam Walk, Roman Coote (2), Riley Shanks, Harrison Brodie (2)
RBI: Stokes (2), Coote, Shanks (2), Brodie (3)
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits (3): Liam Worne, Kobe Cusbert, Ryan Reekie
RBI: Liam Worne
Dylan Bandy provided a solid base for his Western Australian team mates to lift off vs South Australia.
Bandy tossed 6.0 innings, allowing six hits, one run and two walks to help Western Australia advance to the Qualifying Final vs Victoria. It’s another excellent outing in the tournament baseball career for the reliable pitcher.

Western Australia capitalised off a couple miscues to take an early 2-0 lead. Carlton Branch continued his huge tournament with a 2-RBI double in the third. 4-0.
Eita Samukawa hit his third homer of the week to expand the lead to 5-0.
Sam Galpin made sure South Australia got on the board in the fifth with a solo shot of his own. 5-1.
Western Australia sealed the deal with a five run sixth. Tom Williams provided a 2-RBI single, before Lenny Golding drove in a pair on his double.
Williams led all batters with two hits.
Zac Tibbits tossed 3.1 innings, allowing four earned runs for South Australia. Toby Kortekaas followed with 1.2 shutout innings.
Jack Wilton had two of South Australia’s six hits.

Western Australia will play in the Qualification Final on Wednesday morning vs Victoria. The winner of the Qualification Final goes directly to the Gold Medal Game. They can’t finish worse than third.
South Australia will meet New South Wales in an Elimination Final tomorrow afternoon with their tournament lives on the line.
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Hits (8): T. Williams (2), E. Samukawa, Q. Fatai, C. Bahr, C. Branch, L. Golding, C. Benseman
RBI: T. Williams (2), C. Branch (2), L. Golding (2), C. Bahr, E. Samukawa
HR: Samukawa
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Hits (6): J. Wilton (2), O. Couzner, S. Galpin, W. Tanner, L. Manson
RBI: Galpin
HR: Galpin
Trailing 3-0 in the bottom of the sixth, New South Wales Country ripped off seven runs to secure their third win over the tournament.
Dustan Evans delivered the biggest blow of the inning, driving in two runs on a double. Tennyson Bragg led all Country batters with a 2-for-4 effort with 2 RBI.
There were some nice pitching efforts in this game.
Corey Daniels started for Country. He gave up five hits and three runs over 3.2 innings. Cooper Stark threw 3.1 innings of no-run ball in relief for County.
Archie Moffat tossed 4.1 shutout innings with just three hits allowed for Western Australia.
NSW COUNTRY
Hits (8): T. Bragg (2), H. Kelly, K. Gilbert, L. Gardner, D. Evans, A. Turner
RBI: D. Evans (2), T. Bragg (2), L. Gardner,
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Hits (6): R. Lines, C. Humble, A. Samukawa, H. Ostazewskyj
RBI: R. Lines, T. Massamini, H. Ostazewskyj
13 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
The Group Stage of the 2026 Australian Youth Championships is complete in the Under 18 Division.
All seven teams have played six games against each other.
Finals begin Tuesday live and free on Baseball+. The U16 Gold Medal Game is played at 2:30PM
Here’s a look at the leaders after the minor rounds.
A massive thank you to all our scorers for their hard work this tournament.
12 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
That was perhaps the best day (so far) of the Australian Youth Championships.
At the start of the day, New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia woke up battling for two spots in the Gold Medal Game across three games in the Under 16 division.
In the Under 18s, it was the final day of Pool Play. Queensland and South Australia had a game to decide who would go through in the Top 4. Western Australia played for top spot. The finals are now set.
Eric Balnar and Raff Casey have a recap below. We also have FULL MINI MATCH HIGHLIGHTS in the recap below of the Under 16s finals
The recaps are sorted by division and in order of completion. Looking for something? Keep scrolling.
Go Bills.
Scroll for schedule, scores and recaps from both divisions.
Don’t forget to follow us on socials via baseball.com.au and through our Hub at www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026 for up-to-date news. You can find the FULL SCHEDULE there.
U16 Finals Bracket and Schedule
– Qualification Final (QF) – Victoria 14 def New South Wales 12
– Elimination Final (EF) – South Australia 11 def Queensland 9
– Preliminary Final (PF) – New South Wales 8 def South Australia 3
– Consolation: NSW Country 7 TIE A.C.T. Roos 7
– GOLD MEDAL GAME: Victoria vs NSW, 2:30PM on Tuesday at Essendon
Under 18 Division Scores
– Queensland 9 def A.C.T. Roos 2
– New South Wales 11 def NSW Country 0
– South Australia 9 def Queensland 1
– Western Australia 10 def Victoria 9
U18 GameChanger Scoring Link: Click here
FINAL POOL PLAY STANDINGS – U18
*clinched finals spot
1. Western Australia 6-0*
2. Victoria 4-2*
3. New South Wales 4-2*
4. Queensland 3-2
—
5. South Australia 2-3
6. NSW Country 1-5
7. ACT Roos 0-6
U18 FINALS SCHEDULE
TUESDAY
– Finals Game 1 (G1): Victoria vs New South Wales, 9:00AM, Essendon
– Finals Game 2 (G2): Western Australia vs South Australia, 11:30AM, Essendon
WEDNESDAY
– Qualification Final: Winner Game 1 vs Winner Game 2, 11:30AM, Essendon
– Elimination Final: Loser Game 1 vs Loser Game 2, 2:00PM, Essendon- Preliminary Final: Winner Elimination Final vs Loser Qualification Final, 4:30PM, Essendon
THURSDAY
– Gold Medal: Winner Preliminary Final vs Winner Qualification Final, Thursday 2:30PM
Victoria started and finished strong.
They scored seven in the first and seven in the last in a game that got a little crazy.
Their reward: a spot in the Under 16 Gold Medal Game on Tuesday afternoon.
The final seven run inning was crucial. It stopped a sting of five unanswered runs for New South Wales, who had just cut the deficit to 7-5. It put them up 14.
New South Wales did score seven runs in the bottom of the seventh, even though they couldn’t mathematically win the game due to he seven-run per-inning rule.
In the first, Jackson Burton and Tom Hill doubled in the first two runs. Bodhi Evans and Jack Northfield followed with 2-RBI singles in the first.
Hill, Parks Halasz, Evans and Burton all had RBI base hits in the last to put a bow on the game.
Burton and Halasz both finished with three hit games. Burton and Evans led the team with 3-RBI.
New South Wales scored two in the third, one in the fourth and one in the sixth as part of their five unanswered runs. They added a pair of runs in the seventh when the game was ‘technically’ over.
They were kept in the game thanks to a wonderful relief pitching performance from Nick Rowley. The reliever threw 5.0 innings, allowing three hits and three runs.
Jack Kelly had three hits. Noah Nash, Dan Price, Cooper Smith and Mitch Howay each had two hits.
New South Wales actually out-hit Victoria 16-13, but Victoria were aided by two double plays.
Victoria will play for Gold on Tuesday at 2:30 PM. New South Wales will await the loser of Queensland and South Australia in the Preliminary Final later today.
VICTORIA
Hits (13): O. Shimakura, J. Northfield (2), J. Burton (3), T. Hill (2), P. Halasz (3), B. Evans (2)
RBI: Shimakura, Northfield (2), J. Burton (3), T. Hill (2), P. Halasz (2), B. Evans (3)
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits (14): B. Stockdale (2), J. Kelly (3), N. Nash (2), M. Howay (2), C. Smith (2), O. Hart, A. Bennetts, D. Price (2), A. Murdoch
By Raff Casey
Despite seeing their nine-run lead whittled down by the end, SA held off for a crucial win that secured a bronze medal and a spot in the Preliminary Final.
It came down to the wire. Queensland had the tying run at the plate in the final inning. It was almost an improbably comeback.
SA took an early lead in the first inning after Hugo Costa and Olli Breach both grounded out to plate a run each.
After holding Queensland scoreless in the first two innings, they gave themselves a perfect opportunity to score some insurance runs. And that they did.
A huge seven run inning followed.
Hugo Costa, Ollie Alexander, Arky Vingelis-Plant and Liam Trembath all hit singles that scored a run. Hugo Costa came back to the plate in the same inning and knocked another RBI single to bring the score to 9-1.
Queensland had a quick reply, scoring four runs thanks to Buzz Mecham, Logan Lokeni, Archer Peterson, and a wild pitch.
Logan Stephens and Vingelis-Plant both brought in a run for SA in response. 11-4.
Queensland went on to score five unanswered runs. Buzz Mecham knocked in another single, while Logan Lokeni ripped an RBI double.
But SA did just enough to hold the lead.
An amazing double play turned by Riley Ferris in the sixth inning ended the game.
The South Aussies will face New South Wales in a Preliminary Final where they are guaranteed at least a bronze medal.
View the mini match recap here: Highlights | SA vs Queensland | 2026 Under 16 Australian Championship Elimination Final
SA
HITS: R. Ferris, H. Costa (2), O. Breach, L. Burns, L. Stephens, O. Alexander (3), A. Vingelis-Plant (2), L. Trembath (3)
RBI: R. Ferris, H. Costa (3), O. Breach, L. Stephens, O. Alexander, A. Vingelis-Plant (2), L. Trembath
QLD
HITS: T. White, B. Mecham (2), L. Lokeni (2), A. Petersen, I. Carrington
RBI: B. Mecham (2), L. Lokeni (2), A. Petersen, I. Carrington, Z. Leigh
By Raff Casey
It was close until it wasn’t. Really close.
NSW trailed for three innings in a close game, before the sixth inning six-run explosion came.
SA took the lead early after catcher Arky Vingelis-Plant’s RBI single. He had caught a full game behind the plate thirty minutes before the start of this preliminary final.
Mitch Howay tied it up for NSW with a single of his own, before a huge Logan Stephens double regained the lead for the South Aussies. 3-2.
The pitching took over in the fifth, with both sides going scoreless.
NSW reliever Jack Phegan threw the last two innings and allowed just one hit and no earned runs.
SA’s starter Ricky Ferris threw 3.0 innings, allowing four hits and just two earned runs while striking out two. – His stats don’t do his performance justice. He managed to work his way out of multiple bases-loaded situations after his field had made errors.
A very brave performance from New South Wales starter Owen Hart. He threw five innings total, three of them after he was drilled in his throwing hand by a line drive. He allowed just one earned run.
Then came the sixth inning. After holding SA scoreless, NSW drove in six runs and completely took control. Cooper Smith, Beau Stockdale, Mitch Howay and Austin Murdoch, all had RBI singles.
While the bats were hot, NSW’s base running was incredible.
Coming into the game with more than fifty stolen bases in the tournament, SA knew what was coming.
But there was nothing they could do about it. Their nine stolen bases in this game helped turn one-run singles into two-run hits, and kept them safe from double plays. Jack Kelly led the team with two steals.
View the mini-match recap here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcH_5C-we4k
NSW
HITS: B. Stockdale, J. Kelly, N. Nash (2), M. Howay (2), A. Murdoch (2), D. Price, C. Smith
RBI: B. Stockdale (2), N. Nash, M. Howay (2), A. Murdoch, C. Smith
SA
HITS: O. Breach (2), L. Stephens, O. Alexander, A. Vingelis-Plant, L. Trembath
RBI: L. Stephens, A. Vingelis-Plant
They went back and forth but eventually ended in a draw.
Country scored first. Tyler Sims quickly tied it for the ACT Roos with an RBI single in the second.
The Roos took a 5-1 lead in the third thanks to key hits from Blake Brennan and Tyler Lessard.
Country plated three in the bottom of the third. 5-4. The Roos responded with a pair in the top of the fourth.
Country came from behind to tie it at 7 in the bottom of the fourth thanks to a single by Dustan Evans and a walk by Aaron Hseih.
Archer Wals pitched a clutch 1.1 innings to finish the game for the Roos, allowing just a walk. Cooper Stark closed it out for the Roos, pitching 1.2 innings, allowing no runs and two hits. Both those pitchers were key in closing out the game.
Dustan Evans led NSW Country with a three hit game while driving in 2 runs.
Tyler Sims, Blake Brennan, and Lincoln Barrett all had two RBI for the ACT ROOS.
NSW COUNTRY
Hits (8): S. Allen, C. Daniels, R. Coombes (2), D. Evans (3), J. Cruz
RBI: Evans (2), Cruz, A. Hsieh
ACT Roos
Hits (7): F. Scargill (2), B. Brennan (1), T. Sims, S. Letton, L. Barrett (2)
RBI: Sims (2), Brennan (2), Barrett (2), T. Lessard

Queensland have their third win of the tournament large in part to a five-run fifth inning. Blake McPherson doubled in a pair of runs while Max Stefanutto and Leo McKenna drove in a run each in the big inning.
Coleby Ryerson opened the scoring with a triple in the first. Cooper Reed and Warrick Scotland drove in a run in the second to push the lead to 3-0. McPherson’s first RBI made it 4-0 in the third.
Reiss McDermott turned in a nice start on the mound. He surrendered two hits in four shutout innings with five strikeouts.
McPherson and Stefanutto led the game with two hits. McPherson had three RBI.
The Roos scored a pair in the top of the fifth off some errors to cut the deficit to 4-2.
Then Queensland pulled away.
Queensland will play South Australia at 2:00PM. The winner goes to the finals, the loser is eliminated.
QUEENSLAND
Hits (8): B. McPherson (2), M. Stefanutto (2), L. McKenna, L. Pawsey, C. Ryerson, C. Reed
RBI: McPherson (3), Stefanutto, Reed, Ryerson, McKenna
ACT Roos
Hits (5): R. Watson, O. Kelly, N. Richards, P. Rawson, K. Harris
New South Wales finished their Group Stage of the tournament with a 4-2 record thanks to an impressive performance on the mound.
Trystan Crynes, Max Phegan, Christian Morrison and Fletcher Willard combined for 6 shutout innings, allowing just two hits. Crynes and Phegan tossed two innings while Morrison and Willard each threw one.
New South Wales charged ahead with a six run third inning. They added three more in the sixth.
Ryan Chou led all hitters with three hits. Draven Fatu had three RBI.
New South Wales will likely finish third in the pool and play the loser of Western Australia and Victoria tonight in the first game of finals.
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits (10): R. Chou (3), H. Gibson (2), T. Cavill (2), R. Reekie, D. Fatu, C. Howay
RBI: Fatu (3), Chou (2), Gibson (2), Reekie, J. Griffiths
NEW SOUTH WALES COUNTRY
Hits (2): C. McCarthy, J. Garnero
It was SA’s six-run first inning that set the tone.
Ollie Hayes, Jack Wilton, Owen Couzner, all had singles that drove in a run. Will Tanner capped off the inning with a two-RBI double.
The pitching took over in the middle innings and held both sides scoreless. Young prospect Deakin Filko started on the mound for the South Aussies. He threw 3.0 innings allowing three hits. He struck out four.
Filko was backed up Kody Delbridge and Ollie Hayes who both did not allow a run to cross the plate. Hayes threw 1.2 innings of no-hit baseball.
SA went on to score three more runs thanks to another Jack Wilton RBI. Harry Taintey (pictured below) hit an RBI triple in the fifth where he also came around to score on the same play due to an error.

The South Aussies secure their top four position and will participate in playoffs. Queensland’s tournament is now over.
SA
HITS: L. Manson, H. Taintey (2), T. Bird (2), O. Hayes (2), J. Wilton (2), O. Couzner (2), W. Tanner
RBI: H. Taintey, O. Hayes, J. Wilton (2), O. Couzner (2), W. Tanner (2)
QLD
HITS: L. Mckenna (2), L. Pawsey, A. Griffin, B. Mcpherson
RBI: B. Mcpherson
WA rode a seven-run inning to take the win despite Victoria’s strong comeback attempt.
Victoria took the lead in the top of the first after Mitchell Langworthy’s RBI double, but WA were quick to take the advantage for themselves thanks to wild pitching.
Langworthy knocked his second double of the day to tie it up 2-2.
Then Came WA’s big third inning.
Tom Williams knocked in two runs with a single before Victoria’s pitching started to struggle. Four Walks and many wild pitches allowed WA to bring the score to 9-3.

Ryley Shanks put some spark back into his team as he launched a huge three-run homer. 6-9.
He pushed across another un in the fifth as he flew out on a sacrifice fly. 7-9
Brody Stokes tied the game with his two-run single.
In the bottom of the sixth, WA needed just one run to end the game.
Carlton Branch started the last inning with a long triple. Quinn Fatai walk it off with a sacrifice fly to bring Branch home.
WA
HITS: C. Branch (3), L. Golding, T. Williams, C. Benseman, B. Hannan (2), J. Vlasic
RBI: Q. Fatai (2), T. Williams (2), H. Wooden, C. Benseman, B. Hannan
VIC
HITS: C. Bishop (2), B. Stokes (2), M. Langworthy (2), C. Busch, R. Coote, S. Walk (2), R. Shanks
RBI: B. Stokes (2), M. Langworthy, R. Shanks (4)

11 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
The Group Stage of the 2026 Australian Youth Championships are complete in the Under 16 Division.
All seven teams have played six games against each other.
Finals start on Sunday at 2:15PM live and free on Baseball+.
Here’s a look.
A massive thank you to all our scorers for their hard work this tournament.
HUB: Follow the Tournament (U16 and U18)

Team Averages
QLD – .378
VIC – .374
WA – .359
NSW – .348
SA – .338
NSW COUNTRY – .313
ACT ROOS – .250
Team ERA
NSW – 4.12
VIC – 5.40
SA – 6.26
QLD – 6.84
WA – 9.51
ACT ROOS – 15.00
NSW COUNTRY – 16.39
Fielding Percentage
NSW – .943
QLD – .937
WA – .936
VIC – .933
COUNTRY – .928
ROOS – .923
SA – .917
HITS
1. Oscar Shimakura (VIC) – 11
1. Buzz Mecham (QLD) – 11
3. Sebastian Bravo (SA) – 8
3. Beau Stockdale (NSW) – 8
3. Noah Nash (NSW) – 8
HR
Buzz Mecham (QLD) – 1
Noah Nash (NSW) – 1
Sam Stafilis (VIC) – 1
Archer Petersen (QLD) – 1
RBI
1. Buzz Mecham (QLD) – 8
1. Noah Nash (NSW) – 8
3. Alex Bennetts (NSW) – 7
3. Daniel Price (NSW) – 7
ON BASE PERCENTAGE
(Min 12 Plate Appearances)
1. Chayce Humble (WA) – .769
1. Buzz Mecham (QLD) – .750
3. William Bain (QLD) – .750
4. Beau Stockage (NSW) – .722
5. Flynn Hennessy (WA) – .714
EXTRA BASE HITS
1. Beau Stockage (NSW) – 7
2. Noah Nash (NSW) – 5
3. Oscar Shimakura – 4
ERA
min 3.0 IP
1. Jet Creamer (NSW) – 0.00 in 4.2 IP
2. Flynn Hennessy (WA) – 0.00 in 3.1 IP
2. Tyler Wilson (QLD) – 0.00 in 3.1 IP
4. Jack Phegan (NSW) – 1.24 in 5.2 IP
STRIKE OUTS
1. Jet Creamer (NSW) – 7
2. Thomas Hill (VIC) – 6
2. Kobi Scaife (WA) – 6
2. Austin Turner (NSW COUNTRY) -6
11 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
It’s Day 5 of the biggest baseball championship in Australia.
Read about how the day unfolded below.
In the Under 16s, two finals were played. In the Under 18s, three teams locked up a spot in the finals with one position still up for grabs.
We posted a recap of each game – with photos and highlights – below.
The recaps are sorted by division and in order of completion.
Scroll for schedule, scores and recaps from both divisions.
Don’t forget to follow us on socials via baseball.com.au and through our Hub at www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026 for up-to-date news. You can find the FULL SCHEDULE there.
07 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
The Under 16s completed four games in sweltering morning conditions to start the Australian Youth Championships on Wednesday morning.
With a forecast of 43 degrees by 3:00PM, play was called around 12:45PM at both Preston and Essendon.
Below are mini recaps of the day.
Don’t forget to follow us on socials via baseball.com.au and through our Hub at www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026.
For select highlights, visit us on YouTube. You can watch replays on Baseball+.
Day 1 Schedule – January 7
– Queensland 13 def Roos 3
– Victoria 5 def South Australia 4
– New South Wales 12 vs New South Wales Country 1
– Victoria 9 def Western Australia 4
STANDINGS
1. Victoria 2-0
2. New South Wales 1-0
3. Queensland 1-0
4. South Australia 0-1
5. Western Australia 0-1
6. New South Wales Country 0-1
7. ACT Roos 0-1
Watch games from Essendon live and free on Baseball+ via App Store or plus.baseball.com.au.
It wasn’t as easy as the scoreline suggested but Queensland started their tournament with a come-from-behind win in 30+ degree heat at 8:30 in the morning.
The Roos tested Queensland early, poking out to a 3-1 lead in the second inning. Then, Queensland scored twelve unanswered runs, plating seven runs in the third, three in the fourth and two in the fifth.
Their seven run third was the critical inning.
Logan Lokani, Beau Cole, Chase Crew, Tyson Weavell, Thomas White, and Buzz Mecham all recorded hits. Weavell’s pinch-hit two-RBI single put Queensland up 4-3 and Mecham cashed in a pair of runs to reach the seven run maximum.
Zavier Leigh had a standout game. He went 3-for-3 with 2 RBI, a walk and a great over-the-shoulder catch in right field.
All 20 players hit the field for Queensland. Ambrose Ryan (2.0 IP), Sammy Plum (2.0 IP) and Xavier Honsa (1.0 IP) did not allow an earned run. Honsa led the team with two strikeouts.
For the Roos, Owen Monaghan, Ethan Everett and Hamish Willemsen all had hits. Willemsen had a nice catch and an RBI.
ROOS
Hits (3): Monaghan, Everett, Willemsen
RBI: Willemsen
QUEENSLAND
Hits (10): Leigh (3), Mecham (2), White, Lokeni, Cole, Crew, Weavell
RBI: Lewis Hill (2), Weavell (2), Mechem (2), Bain, Crew
Victoria battled back from two runs down in the last inning to narrowly edge South Australia at Preston.
Entering the sixth and final inning down 4-2, the tournament hosts turned it on. Oscar Shimakura delivered an RBI single to cut the score to 4-3. Jackson Burton tied the game with a single of his own.
Parks Halasz provided a sacrifice fly to give Victoria a 5-4 advantage. Shimakura registered the save, recording the final two outs.
The game was an epic arm-wrestle.
Arky Vingelis-Plant opened the scoring in the second for South Australia with an RBI single.
Sam Stafilis hit the first homer of the tournament for Victoria to tie the game at one.

Oliver Breach gave SA the lead, 2-1, in the bottom of the third.
Halasz had his first RBI of the day to tie the game at two in the fifth.
South Australia scored two in the bottom of the fifth to lead 4-2. Then came the late game dramatics.
Jackson Burton led Victoria with three hits. Shimakura and Halasz each had two.
Sebastian Bravo led South Australia with two hits.
James Dallman tossed 3.2 innings for South Australia, allowing just one run.
Thomas started for Victoria, allowing one earned run in 3.1 innings.
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
Hits (8): Sebastian Bravo (2), James Dallman, Liam Trembath, Oliver Breach, Hugo Costa, Arky Vingelis-Plant, Levi Burns
RBI: Dallman, Vingelis-Plan
VICTORIA
Hits (10): Jackson Burton (3), Oscar Shimakura (2), Parks Halasz (2), Jacob Tayler, Sam Stafilis, Ollie Allen
RBI: Halasz (2), Stafilis
HR: Stafilis
Victoria are the only 2-0 team after sweeping double-header at Preston.
The Vics systematically built a 9-0 advantage through four innings and never turned back. They did all their scoring off of just five hits.
Jack Thomas had two hits and two RBI to lead the charge.
Western Australia scored all four runs in the fifth and final inning.
Victoria’s pitching was dominant up until that point. They no-hit WA through the first four innings. Cruize Chase tossed 2.1 innings with two strikeouts, and Jack Northfield followed with two shutout innings of his own.
VICTORIA
Hits (5): Jack Thomas (2), Daniel Hwang, Oscar Shimakura, Jackson Burton
RBI: Thomas Hill (4), Jack Thomas (2), Shimakura, Burton
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Hits (4): Chayce Humble, Flynn Hennessy, Riley Lines, Jake Corey
Noah Nash led a New South Wales offensive onslaught in their tournament opening win.
Nash homered to open the scoring the first inning to open the account and New South Wales never looked back. Nash finished with three hits and two RBI in the dominating victory.
Alex Bennetts drove in a pair of runs to push the lead to 3-0 after one. Daniel Price and Mitch Howay each knocked in two runs in a four-run second. 7-0.
Nash and Bennetts padded their stat lines by each driving in a run in the third. Bennetts finished with two hits and a game-leading three RBI.
Owen Hart walked four times for New South Wales.
Brock Moore drove in Country’s only run.
On the mound, Jet Creamer struck out four in 1.2 innings. Jack Phegan tossed 2.1 perfect shutout innings. Seyeon Kim tossed an inning, allowing just one run.
NEW SOUTH WALES COUNTRY
Hits (4): Liam Gardner, Tennyson Bragg, Brock Moore, Cooper Stark
RBI: Moore
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits (10): Noah Nash (3), Alex Bennetts (2), Daniel Price (2), Austin Murdoch, Mitch Howay, Jack Kelly
RBI: Bennetts (3), Nash (2), Howay (2), Price (2), Harrison Thomas-McLean (2), Austin Murdoch
HR: Nash
05 January 2026 By Eric Balnar
By Eric Balnar
Australian Youth Championships
Baseball Australia has made the proactive decision to adjust the start of the 2026 Australian Youth Championships in Melbourne.
With heat forecasted of 40+ degrees on Wednesday 7 January, Baseball Australia has shortened Day 1 of the tournament and altered the schedule. Game times have also been moved up earlier in the day.
The new schedule can be found here, or in the image below. Make sure you follow the Tournament Hub at www.baseball.com.au/ayc2026 for full tournament coverage and updates.

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