24 August 2025
Team Australia announces 20-man roster for 2025 Under 18 World Cup
Australia’s roster for the 2025 World Baseball Softball Confederation (WBSC) Under 18 World Cup presented by RAXUS is locked in.
National selectors finalised the 20-man squad on Saturday evening after a week-long selection camp on the Gold Coast.
The camp, which was proudly supported by Invest Gold Coast, saw 34 athletes from across the country take part in an evaluation in advance of next month’s World Cup in Okinawa, Japan.
Team Australia named eight pitchers and twelve position players to the team.
“We have a very versatile team,” said manager Jason Pospishil after the camp.
U18 WORLD CUP HUB: Follow Team Australia in Japan
“Any time you wear an Australian jersey it’s an honour and a privilege. When you stand on that foul line and they play the anthem that’s when it hits you that what you’re doing isn’t done by everybody and there’s a responsibility for it.”

All seven state representative teams at the Australian Youth Championships (NSW, NSW Country, ACT, SA, WA, QLD, VIC) have players named to the U18 national squad.
The roster includes one return player from the 2023 U18 World Cup (Josh Nati) and one pitcher who has signed professionally with an MLB club (Mitch Evans, Detroit Tigers).
There are seven players who helped Australia qualify for the World Cup last December in a five-game series vs New Zealand. These players are Ethan Bickel, Mitch Evans, Deakin Filko, Damien Wilson, Cooper Teichmann, Ben Nesbit and Christian Lane.
“We want to see guys who are consistent in their performance. There are bench marks we need guys to be able to achieve but we also highlight that if a guy has a bad camp it doesn’t define them as a baseball player, they still have ample opportunity to develop later on down the road and potentially represent the country at 23U or the senior team level,” says Pospishil.
The 20 players will return to their home states for a week before flying to Okinawa Japan on August 31.
The U18 World Cup is scheduled to begin on September 5.
The likes of baseball superstars Yu Darvish, Francisco Lindor, Clayton Kershaw and Aroldis Chapman have all played in this tournament. Team Australia World Baseball Classic players – such as Rixon Wingrove, Jack O’Loughlin and Alex Hall to name a few of many – have also participated in the Under 18 global event.
Australia’s first game is against Germany. You can view the schedule via our World Cup Hub.
Broadcast details in Australia will be revealed in the next fortnight.
“Once we get on the plane our focus is on winning the world championships but in the background we are trying to instill those fundamentals and values that will help these kids represent Team Australia in the future, says Pospishil.
“There’s a systematic approach to how we want to develop players and for the behaviour and the bench marks and the standards we want to see is going to be consistent across all our national teams and I think that’s what leads to good culture.”
PLAYER INFORMATION – TEAM AUSTRALIA U18
C – Jordan Ellis (VIC) – From Geelong, Ellis built an impressive lead-in to last week’s camp. He was on the radar after he played well with the U16 National Squad at a tournament in Atlanta in 2024. A lower back injury kept him out of the U18 National Championships. But, some hard work saw health return. He can play multiple positions and will be a key cog in the name of versatility.
C – Cooper Teichmann (QLD) – Teichmann was rock solid behind the plate in the qualifying series vs New Zealand. He has been the Brisbane Bandits bullpen catcher for the last two seasons, trained overseas, and been a leader on Queensland’s U18 state squad.
INF – Ben Nesbit (WA) – Nesbit has starred at every level he’s played at through juniors. He was one of the leading hitters for Western Australia at the U18 Nationals, he helped lead the Eastern Phantoms to the 2024 Senior League World Series International Semi-Final, he played for Australia in Atlanta. All of this culminated in a call-up as a 17-year-old to the Perth Heat in the 2024-25 ABL season where he collected his first hit.
INF – Will Hardy (VIC) – Hardy has been a key part of the Baseball Victoria Performance Pathways program. Hardy was on the Melbourne Aces’ development list in the 2024-25 ABL season. He brings versatility, being able to play all three infield spots.
INF – Josh Nati (NSW) – Australia’s only return player from the 2023 U18 World Cup. He hit over .300 last tournament as a 15-year-old. Nati has already committed to NCAA Division 1 program Oregon State. He was a leader on New South Wales national U18 championship win in January. Nati is a Blue Sox Development Player and holds all of the exit velocity for his age and weight at Driveline facility in Washington.
INF – Eita Samukawa (WA) – A pretty cool moment for Samukawa, who just received his Australian passport and citizenship this season. From Japan, Samukawa grew up in the Western Australian system. He won a silver medal at the 2025 U18 Championships, starred in charter with the Eastern Phantoms and went away to Atlanta with U16 team.
OF – James McFarlane (SA) – A centerfielder with a high IQ both on and off the diamond. He is in talks with multiple Ivy League schools about playing NCAA Division I baseball in 2026. McFarlane had a big U18 National Championship as South Australia won a Bronze Medal while playing Division I locally.
OF – Devin Leahy (VIC) – A short, quick, outfielder with strong bat-to-ball skills. He is a 2024 U18 National Champion with Victoria. Leahy brings a different style of game play and energy to the national squad.
OF – Christian Lane (NSW) – One of seven return players from the U18 Qualifiers squad. Lane was one of the top hitters at training camp, which helped secure a spot on the team.
UTL – Matt Trainor (NSW) – This is your 2025 Australian U18 National Championship MVP. He won the award because of his ability to affect play in all aspects of the game. He can hit, he can pitch. Expect him to be used in multiple situations at the World Cup.
UTL – Lachlan Vella (NSW) – Vella led the U18 Nationals in homers and was right up there in almost every offensive metric. He can play first base and third base and will pitch some important innings from the bullpen, adding another layer of versatility to this dynamic group.
UTL – Ashton Kennedy (NSW) – Another two-way player for the coaching staff. He has a 90+ mph fast ball and was used as New South Wales’ closer during their 2025 U18 Championship run. He’s a bottom-age player who can impact the game on both sides of the ledger.
RHP – Ethan Bickel (NSW) – He was on the U18 Qualifying squad in December. He played for Team Australia U17 at the Perfect Game Fort Myers tournament in 2024. He can land multiple pitches for a strike and was the best strike thrower at camp.
RHP – Riley Puckett (NSW) – He didn’t give up a run at the U18 Australian National Championships en route to claiming the Pitcher of the Tournament Award. Another player who has confidence to throw a breaking ball in any count. A great competitor.
RHP – Patrick Crotty (QLD) – He just kept trending right direction and pushed his way on the side. While he wasn’t on Queensland’s U18 state team at Nationals, he proved to be the hardest thrower at national camp, sitting around 93mph. He went to Atlanta with the U16 National Squad in 2024.
RHP – Deakin Filko (SA) – A hard-thrower who proved to be the star pitcher for South Australia’s Bronze Medal team at the U18 Nationals. Filko played for Australia at the U16 exhibition series vs USA U15.
RHP – Kristian Haeusler (WA) – A story of resilience. Haeusler played for Australia at the U12 World Cup in 2019. But, later he had shoulder surgery causing him to miss last year’s nationals. He has a solid breaking ball he can land for strikes while also generating swings and misses on his change-up.
RHP – Nate Quigg (ACT) – Canberra’s only player on the team. Known for his work ethic, Quigg has spent 2025 working out and throwing bullpens with Team Australia catcher Robbie Perkins. Quigg made his ABL debut in 2025 with the Canberra Cavalry.
LHP – Mitch Evans (SA) – The team’s lone player who has already signed a professional contract. Evans velocity keeps increasing and he throws an off-speed for strikes. It’s one of the reasons the Detroit Tigers signed him. Evans allowed just one run in an epic start vs USA’s U15 squad in a series in 2024.
LHP – Damien Wilson (NSW) – A lefty who pitched well for Australia at the U18 Qualifiers. He was a key innings eater and delivered some big moments for New South Wales at the U18 National Championships.
















