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18 January 2024 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Aussies Abroad Aussies Sign Pro

18-year-old South Australian pitcher Jack Bushell signs contract with Major League Baseball's Detroit Tigers

18-year-old Adelaide pitcher Jack Bushell wasn’t going to pass up the opportunity to become a professional baseball player.

“I had the opportunity now, and if I didn’t take it I couldn’t live with myself – I had to take it,” says the South Australia, who just signed with the Detroit Tigers on Tuesday. “It’s been my dream for a while now.”

The contract Bushell inked on Tuesday puts a nice bookend to a wild 12-months.

He’s put in some serious work – and hardcore air mileage – since January of 2023.

In started in January, 2023 when Bushell impressed for South Australia at the U18 National Championships.

“That’s when the conversations started with the Tigers,” says Bushell, who says he also chatted to other MLB outfits.

The rest of 2023? Buckle up.

He graduated high-school. He trained “six to seven” days a week. He attended a national junior camp.

AUSSIES ABROAD: Read stories on all the latest Aussies to sign pro.

He played Division 1 for Goodwood in the South Australian State League. He went to an U18 World Cup. He made his Australian Baseball League debut with the Adelaide Giants. He pitched for Team Australia at the Tokyo Dome vs Japan at the Asia Professional Baseball Championship.

Bushell is also a newly turned 18-year-old with friends, family and a social life to balance.
The life of a baseball player with professional ambitions.

“Honestly, it’s been such a whirlwind. It’s stuff you think about but you don’t imagine would actually happen. I just try to take a step back and enjoy everything as it comes,” he said in an interview in Tokyo last year.

Bushell has been on the radar of baseball folks in South Australia for ages. He was a star Little League and junior player with Goodwood Baseball Club, winning multiple MVPs while rising the system as a two-way player.

In the last 18-months Bushell has been tinkering and enhancing his pitching arsenal.

While he can hit 91-92mph on the radar gun, Bushell says he’s been working hard at his sinker and change-up to baffle opponents.

“About November last year I started pitching last year with [former Team Australia pitcher Josh Tols,” he says. “We figured out my fastball didn’t have as much spin as I’d like. We tinkered with a sinker which has been working well for me alongside my changeup, which is probably my best pitch.”

Those pitches baffled opponents internationally.

Bushell was the star of Australia’s U18 squad at the 2023 World Cup in Taiwan, leading the team in innings pitched, strike-outs, ERA (1.40) and wins.

The World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) even called an athletic play of his the #3 overall play of 2023 in a World Cup event.

“I think that tournament was great for me. It sort of showed me I belong,” said Bushell in an interview in Tokyo late last year.

He is now one of five members of that U18 team who have signed professional, joining Declan Speirs, Adam Bates, Drew Davies and Jayden Kim.

Bushell’s World Cup performance was strong enough to become the youngest player selected on Australia’s Asia Professional Baseball Championship squad. Bushell started a game in front of nearly 50,000 singing fans at the Tokyo Dome and struck out the #2 home run hitter in the Japan professional league.

“My experience at the Tokyo Dome was crazy. Pitching in front of that many people was wild – I was so nervous, I was so pumped up. Crazy,” he says.

Things are about to get crazier for Bushell. The grind is about to begin.

Bushell will likely report to Florida for spring training. He’ll then attempt to work his way up a rigorous and ruthless minor league system in an attempt to make the Major Leagues.

Bushell will remain with the Adelaide Giants in the Australian Baseball League as they attempt to win their second straight Claxton Shield.

“I really have to thank Mum and Dad,” says Bushell. “I had a glove and bat in my hand before I could walk. I played at Goodwood so I need to thank everybody there – that’s where Dad played. I started playing juniors, then seniors and now the Giants. It’s been good for me with the Giants to see the pro guys here and give me a big taste of what’s to come.”

Tag Cloud:
#AussiesAbroadAussies SigningJack Bushell

30 August 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Here's how family - both literally and metaphorically - connects the U18 National Team

On the night players from Australia’s Under-18 roster were informed they made they made the prestigious World Cup squad, longtime senior team member Sam Holland surprised the group for a chat.

He brought with him something incredibly special and deeply personal to this country’s baseball community – an Australian flag with a unique history.

“What I showed the players was the Senior Team’s Australian flag. It has the signatures of our past and present senior team players, with the earliest dating back to 2004,” says Holland. “It is there at all Team Australia names and embodies the respect and passion we all share when we put on the uniform.”

The message was simple. From a senior Team Australia member to the up-and-coming players in our sport – you are part of family, and nothing will change that.

“It was awesome to share this small piece of our country’s more recent baseball history with the U18 group. It was also mentioned that there is plenty of space left to be filled and if they continue to play the game the right way and represent our country with pride and passion, they may one day get the privilege of adding there names right there beside some of our nation’s greats,” says Holland.

When you’re part of Australian baseball community you’re part of a family.

This is represented on the national team’s uniform, with an indigenous designed emblem telling exactly that story and presenting a message of community, gathering and sharing knowledge between generations.

This Under 18 World Cup squad playing this week in Tawian has more than a few more family links. This is in the literal and metaphorical sense – the next generation is quite literally coming through.

Let’s look at infielder Nic Paparella. The South Australian infielder is about to put on the Green & Gold at World Cup for the first time. He’s following in the footsteps of his father Mark, who also played for Australia’s Under 18 team in 1995.

Mark flourished in the 1995 World Cup, helping Australia to a Bronze Medal, and being named to the tournament’s All Star team.


Above: Mark Paparella in 1995.

“It’s pretty uncanny,” said Mark to an Adelaide newspaper this week. “Chinese Taipei has always been huge in baseball – we actually played against them in the bronze medal games all those year ago.”

Mark says Nic has the potential to do more damage than himself.

“Nic’s a bit bigger than me,” says Mark. “He’s got a bit more pop.”

Other generational links from South Australia? Jack Bushell’s father James played baseball for the Adelaide Giants in the 1990s. His mum Selena won a bronze medal in softball at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

“The reason I started playing was because dad played baseball and mum played softball, I didn‘t really have an option,” Jack Bushell told CODE Sports earlier in the week.

The most famous link of all comes from the West.

Under 18 member Jai Hewitt is following in the footsteps of his dad Jason, who doesn’t need much of an introduction to Australian baseball fans.

Jason became the youngest player selected for the Australian National Team in the 1994 Baseball World Cup held in Managua, Nicaragua. He also played for Australia at the 1996 Olympics, was an ABL All Star in 1998 (Perth Heat), a Heat MVP and a three-time Claxton Shield winner.

“My dad definitely influenced me to play,” says young Jai. “My goal is to play for the Perth Heat in the ABL, [like my Dad].”

Victorian infielder Jayden Kim comes from great stocks, too. His dad David played in the Australian Baseball League and is now a scout for the Pittsburgh Pirates.

He wasn’t forced into anything, but fell in love with the game. After exploring other sports, Jayden landed on baseball, he told a local newspaper.

“I began playing when I was 10 years old after a short stint playing soccer and tennis. I like them both but I love baseball,” he said.

Jack Ratcliffe’s (VIC) father played for Team Australia at a World Cup too.

“I first started playing baseball at age 6 at Upwey Ferntree Gully Baseball Club [in Vic],” Ratcliffe says.  “I wanted to follow my dad’s footsteps and aspire to be like him and represent Australia.”

How about the literal brotherly connection? Josh Nati’s brother James played for an U15 Australian side a few years ago. Jimmy now plays college baseball in the USA at high-end Pac-12 program Stanford.

But family links don’t just have to come from past Team Australia members. There are other ways people found their way into the game. And once you’re part of the Australian Baseball community, you become family.

Koby Chesterton’s father played baseball so he signed up his son to play t-ball in the ACT. Now he’s the only U18 national team member from the Capital.

Benjamin Karakasis (NSW) watched his brother play. That’s how he started.

Other kids like Tom Chessell had their parents sign them up. Now, he’s in Taiwan playing for his country.

Lachlan Smith stumbled upon the game when at a friend’s ninth birthday party. Who would have thought that part would have led Smith to representing Australia?

“You never know where baseball can take you,” says Baseball Australia’s high performance manager Andrew Riddell. “The powerful thing here is that when you put on that Green & Gold you are forever and always part of that special family. Teams are bonded by it.”

Riddell says the night of the team selection was moving.

“It was a big deal,” he says. “We had a cool video where we had previous players from U18 teams – guys from 2019 and 2022, some of them are playing pro now – send us a video congratulation the players on making the team and wishing them luck. You could just tell how much it meant.”

This family goes to battle as a unit starting Thursday night in front of an anticipated full house vs tournament hosts Taiwan. Australia plays five games in the six-team Pool A of the Under 18 World Cup. They need to finish Top 3 to advance to the Super Round to contend for a medal.

You can watch all games via the WBSC’s streaming service at www.gametime.sport.

First pitch is 8:30PM AEST Thursday night vs. Taiwan. You can read all our stories on the U18 team at our International Hub.

Tag Cloud:
#U18WorldCup2023 U18 World CupJack BushellJai Hewitt
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  • - Aussies Abroad about 2 years ago 18-year-old South Australian pitcher Jack Bushell signs contract with Major League Baseball's Detroit Tigers
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