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10 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

Australia announces roster change at World Baseball Classic

New South Wales pitcher Coen Wynne has been added to Team Australia’s 30-man roster.

He replaces Tim Atherton (personal reasons) on the list.

Wynne just finished a four-year career at Grand Canyon University in the NCAA. He returned to Australia for the 2022-23 ABL season.

The 23-year-old started 10 games for the Sydney Blue Sox, posting a 4.13 ERA in 48.0 innings pitched.

He has previous experience on the World Cup U23 national team.

Australia continues their World Baseball Classic vs China on March 11 at 2:00PM AEDT.

The Aussies beat Korea 8-7 on Thursday afternoon to open pool play.

09 March 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Australia upsets powerhouse Korea to open World Baseball Classic

by Eric Balnar

Team Australia just dropped a whole world of chaos on the World Baseball Classic and the international baseball scene.

Australia just knocked off baseball powerhouse and World #4 South Korea in one of the most famous victories in this country’s history.

The game itself was some kind of crazy. It took a whole team effort.

If you are an Australian baseball player named Robbie, you had a good one.

Robbie Perkins and Robbie Glendinning each had a monumental moment with the bat and a game saving moment in the field.

Let’s start with Robbie of the Glendinning variety. Down 4-2 in the seventh, and with two runners on, the Western Australian hammered a 410-foot homer to deep, deep left field to put the Aussies in front 5-4.

The very next defensive inning, Glendinning made a sensational heads up play at second to preserve the one-run lead.

Here’s what happened.

Powerhouse Korean slugger Baekho Kang melted a double off the wall to work himself in scoring position.

But Kang celebrated too early and stepped off the bag for a brief moment.

Glendinning tagged him out in one of the most heads up plays you’ll see.

Robbie Glendinning tags out a runner PHOTO: SMP Images

“I know from previously I’ve tagged guys when they have come off the base and I knew in that situation he might not have been thinking,” says Glendinning. “When I put the tag on, I knew for a fact that he came off the base.”

It was crucial because Korea had a base hit their very next batter. They would have scored a vital run and likely tied the game.

“It was a big turning point in the game,” says manager Dave Nilsson. “He let the dugout know what had happened, so that’s just a great moment by a great player.”

Then came the moment for the other Robbie – this one of the Perkins variety. Or moments, shall we say.

Canberra native Robbie Perkins delivered a monstrous three-run homer in the eighth inning to put Australia up 8-4 and in a strong position. Australia ended up needing all of those extra runs.

Then, Perkins later threw out a runner at second for the final out of the game.

That final out was one Australia sorely needed because South Korea was coming back. Hard.

In the eighth inning, off a series of walks and a fielder’s choice, Korea closed the gap and made it 8-7.

Enter Sam Holland and his moment.

The tall Queenslander entered the game with the bases loaded and 1200+ game KBO veteran Na Sung-bum at the plate.

Na ripped a ball of the left field wall. Korean fans went crazy. They thought they took the lead.

But the ball was called foul by a couple feet. Holland was given a second chance.

The very next pitch, Holland struck out Na to end the inning, stop the Korean threat and preserve an 8-7 lead heading to the last.

The win will go down as one of the most famous in Australian baseball history. It’s the Green & Gold’s third ever win at the World Baseball Classic in Australia’s fifth trip to the biggest international tournament.

“There’s a lot of relief right now. Very proud of the team, the resilience they showed,” says Dave Nilsson. “It was a very tough game, a very strange game. Had to stand out on defense for a long time, had to overcome a lot of emotions. Korea threw a lot of different challenges at us, but we responded like I knew we could and very rewarding for everyone involved.”

Korea put out a strong side littered with Korean Baseball League All-Stars and some high-end MLB talent. They have ended up on the wrong end of one of the biggest WBC upsets ever.

Australia got the better of them on one magical afternoon in Toyko – just.

“What I can tell you is right now that feels pretty significant. That feels like a pretty big moment, definitely,” says Nilsson.

Robbie Perkins celebrates in the eighth. PHOTO: Scott Powick

While Australia had to come from behind to win the game, they still struck first. They had a two-run lead at the midway point.

Logan Wade scored Darryl George on a sacrifice fly in the fourth inning to put Australia up early.

Tim Kennelly added to Australia’s tally with a solo shot in the fifth to put the Green & Gold up 2-0.

After a slow offensive start to the game, Korea’s bats woke up in a big way in the fifth and sixth innings.

To that point, it was struggle at the plate for the Asian baseball powerhouse. South Australian Jack O’Loughlin pitched a perfect first two innings. Western Australian Mitch Neunborn followed him up by retiring his first seven batters he faced.

It took 14 plate appearances before Korea finally got a runner on base by virtue of a walk in the fifth. Then they piled it on.

With two outs and two on, Korea’s Euiji Yang blasted a ball over the left field fence off reliever Dan McGrath to put them up 3-2.

The Tokyo Dome. Photo: SMP Images.

Korea added to their total in the sixth. ByungHo Park, a power hitter in the KBO for KT Wiz, drilled a ball off the top of the left field wall to drive in another run and give Korea a 4-2 edge.

Pitching wise for Korea, they started the game with Ko Young-Pyo – an All-Star KBO pitcher with the Hanwa Eagles. He went 4.1 innings, allowing four hits, two runs and hit two batters.

After that, Korea used seven different relievers to finish the game.

Australia emptied the bullpen, too. Australia used nine pitchers in the game. Lefthanded Victorian pitcher Jon Kennedy replaced McGrath for a key out in the sixth. Former MLB arm Warwick Saupold got two outs in the seventh.

Steve Kent and Will Sherrif pitched parts of the eighth before Holland got that clutch strike out.

Josh Guyer came in to close out the game. He had a daunting task, too. Guyer had to face two MLB stars in Tommy Edman and HaSeong Kim. He delivered.

But in what was a perfect ending for Australia, catcher Robbie Perkins threw out the runner for the final out.

It was a total team effort for the Australians, who used nine pitchers in the game. Nine of Australia’s ten position players used reached base. There were clutch moments from everyone.

“I think every guy just has their role to play and everyone played their role today to obviously result in a win against a tough team like Korea,” says Perkins. “Just guys coming in, doing the right thing, giving it their all, playing with heart for every play.”

Australia has the day off on Friday. They’ll play China at 2:00PM on Saturday.

Korea faces Japan tomorrow.

BOX SCORE – CLICK HERE

 

09 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

World Baseball Classic: Australia vs South Korea - How to Watch + Info

Australia starts their 2023 World Baseball Classic campaign in Tokyo with a tilt vs South Korea.

First pitch is at 12:00PM local time in Tokyo – that’s 2:00PM in Sydney and 11:00AM in Perth for reference.

Jack O’Loughlin, a 22-year-old lefthander from Adelaide, will get the start for Team Australia.

You can watch the game on ESPN on platforms like Foxtel, Fetch and Kayo.

Above: Jack O’Loughlin speaks at the WBC Press Conference

We will be providing game updates on our social media channels. Make sure you follow @TeamAustraliaBaseball on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

If you’re looking to read up on Team Australia, we have a log of stories on our #WBC23 Hub page found at www.baseball.com.au/wbc23.

For yesterday’s press conference, click here.

For player bios, click here. 

08 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

Jack O'Loughlin named starter for Game 1 of the World Baseball Classic

Jack O’Loughlin was announced as Team Australia’s opening game starting pitcher at the World Baseball Classic vs South Korea.

He says the feeling of being named the Game 1 starter of the world’s biggest international baseball tournament is a complete honour.

“It was the most unreal, breathtaking, speechless feeling when I found out,” says O’Loughlin. “I just sat there without anything to say when I was told. I was super excited, but lost, if that makes sense. This is stuff you honestly dream of, I can’t believe the stars aligned. Here I am now.”

The World Baseball Classic is the sport’s equivalent of the FIFA World Cup. The best players from the best baseball countries will go head-to-head over the next two weeks.

Australia is in Japan in a group with South Korea, Japan, China and Czech Republic. The Top 2 teams advance to the quarterfinals.

South Korea is an important game for Australia.

“Korea are so internationally respected and recognised,” he says. “You can’t single out any guy on the team. You just have to take it batter-by-batter and do your best to win each battle.”

Australia opens their campaign at 2:00PM AEDT. The game will be broadcast on ESPN.

O’Loughlin, a Detroit Tigers prospect, is no stranger to the big game.

The South Australian was the starting pitcher in the Adelaide Giants’ Game 3 win to win the ABL Championship in February.

“I definitely didn’t think my last six months would be like this,” he says. “All of a sudden I’m starting Game 1 in the Green & Gold”

Dave Nilsson says he is excited to see what the young pitcher can do.

“It’s a big moment for him and I’ll be excited to see how he responds,” says Nilsson. “I’m excited to see how the team responds.

07 March 2023 By Eric Balnar

By Eric Balnar

- Team Australia

Previewing South Korea - Australia's first opponent at the World Baseball Classic

Australia is just a day away from facing their first opponent at the World Baseball Classic. South Korea is up first for Australia on Thursday 9 March in Tokyo at 12:00PM local time.

The game will be broadcast on ESPN via Kayo, Foxtel, Fetch and online through their app in Australia from 2:00PM.

And it’s a big one.

Australia needs to finish Top 2 in Pool B to advance to the quarter-finals. The pool features Japan (#1 ranked in World), Korea (#4 ranked in World), Czech Republic (#15 ranked in World) and China (#30 ranked in World). Australia comes in at 10 on the rankings.

The odds suggest that Japan and Korea are the two neutral favourites to advance out of the group. That’s why this Korea-Australia game is huge. The winner is in great position.

Team Australia’s manager Dave Nilsson said in a press conference on Monday that “Australia will throw everything they have at Korea.” He knows the importance.

The South Korean camp has been quoted by saying this is their most important game of the tournament. Any team can beat any team, but they are aware Australia is their biggest threat to the Top 2.

So, who is on their team? What are their strengths? It’s essentially a super-star Korean Baseball Organisation (KBO) team mixed with some seriously good MLB talent.

 

There seems to be a lot of pressure on South Korea to advance. They went to the final of the 2009 World Baseball Classic but haven’t made it out of the group since. In 2017, they famously were upset by Team Israel.

This article by Elijah Evans of Just Baseball details their team perfectly. You can click here to read it.

On the surface, Korea’s middle infield is a massive strength. Tommy Edman and Ha-Seong Kim are current MLB players. Both are coming off big 2022 seasons.

Edman and Kim are both in the elite tier of defenders last season, and both spent the majority of their time at shortstop.

If their middle infield is about defense, their corners are about power.  Jeong Choi likely plays third and is one of the greatest KBO hitters of all time. He’s slammed 429 career home runs and an impressive .917 OPS in over a decade of KBO seasons. At first we could see ByungHo Park. He did play a season with the Twins, but is known for hitting 349 homers in the KBO.

In the outfield is a future MLB star. Jung-Hoo Lee just won the 2022 KBO MVP season and led the KBO in batting average and RBIs. He hit .349 last season with a .996 OPS and has a career batting average of .342 in his six KBO seasons. Lee is only 23 and will be posted to the MLB next season.

Pitching wise, you’d think their ace is KwanHyun Kim. He pitched for the Cardinals in 2020 and 2021. He had a 2.97 ERA in the Big Leagues before returning to the KBO where he dominated last season.

Keep your eye on their high-leverage arm out of the bullpen. Woo-Suk Go was the best closer in the KBO last season. He had 42 saves and a 1.48 ERA. He’s just 24.

If you missed any team Australia news, profiles and stories, check out our WBC23 Hub at www.baseball.com.au/wbc23.

07 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

How Australia's Big Leaguers are leading at World Baseball Classic training camp

An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar in Japan. Photos by SMP Images. Video by Hugh Whittle.


It’s four-degree weather at a suburban-baseball field in Tokyo. It’s the tail end of Japanese winter.

To state the obvious – It’s a bit cooler than the 30+ degree weather most Australians would be experiencing this time of year. The players at Australia’s pre-tournament camp are being run through an arduous week of high-intensity, over-speed training in frigid conditions.

But Warwick Saupold, one of Australia’s 35 humans to ever play MLB, is there with the rest of his team.

And he’s smiling. Laughing, even.

He’s photo bombing videos. He’s running around the outfield like a kid. He’s dropping one-liners. He’s working hard but keeping it light.

“See, guys like that…they know the balance,” says Team Australia’s general manager Russell Teichmann. “They understand there’s business to take of care and know when to lock in, but they also know this is just a game. They have to keep it light-hearted because that has a flow on effect to other younger players on the team.”

MISSED A STORY? View one of our daily stories on Team Australia here.

That light-hearted attitude is essential for Team Australia at the World Baseball Classic, which starts on Thursday vs Korea.

The tournament is serious stuff. It’s the biggest international tournament played in front of TV audiences in the millions and sold-out crowds of 55,000 in Tokyo.

The pressure is high but it’s important to have fun.

“You want to be successful and if you are successful, why not enjoy it,” says manager Dave Nilsson. “Success is hard. You have to work hard to get it. But you want to make sure you enjoy it when you get it.”

Finding that balance is a challenge, that’s why Australia is looking to some their more senior players to set the example. Teichmann says Australia needs their big leaguers to lead from the front.

Australia has two MLB players – Saupold being one and Aaron Whitefield the other. There are three other coaches with MLB time on the staff, Nilsson included.

Saupold played for the Detroit Tigers from 2016-2018 before joining the Hanwa Eagles in the top Korean league for two seasons. He’s also pitched in two World Baseball Classics, the Premier-12 and World Cup events.

Warwick Saupold at training (PHOTO: SMP Images / Scott Powick)

Whitefield has played two stints in the Big Leagues – in 2020 with the Minnesota Twins and in 2022 with the LA Angels.

These players have battled in front of 50,000 people on the biggest of stages. But you wouldn’t know it.

Teichmann says the difference is they act like normal guys. They don’t behave like they are “too big” for the team.

“They’re knock about Aussie guys,” he says. “They could be intimidating to other Aussie guys, but they’re not. It’s their responsibility to make guys feel welcome and bring out the best in the given individual.”

Saupold says he’s trying to use his own experience to better his teammates. He says he understands how to prepare your emotions for the big stage.

“Wherever you can help out possible, help out,” he says.

“If I’m walking down the hallway and I see someone up-and-about, I might be like: ‘Hey look we got a long day today, the game isn’t until seven. Do you want to go for a meal and have a chat?’ Or, some guys have come to me and asked how to deal with a situation I pass on my knowledge. I just keep an even keel and move on from there.”

Whitefield is about to play in his second World Baseball Classic. He was only 19 at his first one in 2017. Now, at 25, he’s made the MLB, won two ABL MVP awards, and is one of the most experienced players in the country.

Aaron Whitefield at a practice game in Miyazaki (PHOTO: SMP Images / Scott Powick)

He says he knows he needs to lead by example.

“I feel like in 2017 it was one of my first years in baseball,” he says. “Now I know I have to get the energy going before the game and to set the tone. For a lot of these guys [this experience] is going to be exciting. You have to take it in and know that okay this is fun and awesome, but we have a job today – let’s go do it.”

Whitefield says it isn’t just the MLB guys that need to set the tone. Players like Tim Kennelly, Steven Kent, Jon Kennedy and Tim Atherton are among many of the guys on this roster who have played in huge games for Australia.

There’s also players like Robbie Glendinning, who just returned from Royals Big League Camp, who is expected to take a big role.

“I’m lucky, I’m not the only one. I think there’s a lot of guys who showed me how to do it and now I’m trying to pass on the same,” he says.

Both MLB players are genuine in their reasons they are here. They’re here for a simple reason: they love, live and breathe Australian baseball.

“I wasn’t going to miss this. I get to play with all my boys,” laughs Whitefield. “For me, I’m here because it’s about showing the world that Australia is really good at baseball. We’re number 10 in the world. We don’t play this in school. Imagine what we would be with that? But we’re going to show the world that hey, we don’t have the same huge stadiums but we’re great at baseball and have huge heart.”

Whitefield with the Minnesota Twins in 2020 (PHOTO: Getty)

Saupold says there’s nothing more meaningful than playing for Australia – even when comparing it to his Big League experience.

“You get this tingly feeling – goosebumps,” he says. “Coming up, it was drilled into us that the biggest thing you can do in this sport is play for your country, even before the Big Leagues. I’m very grateful to do both but there’s no better feeling than wearing the Green & Gold.”

But for Teichmann it all comes back to balance.

“They know their responsibility and they embrace the fact that people look up to them, that there’s eyes on them,” he says. “It’s about being prepared. Being consistent. Showing the young guys what to do. Working hard. Keeping it light hearted.”

“They’re doing all of that – and more.”

 

06 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

Australian coaches are like "baseball chefs" in preparing for opposition at World Baseball Classic

An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar in Miyazaki, Japan. Photos by SMP Images


When it comes to game specific preparation in the World Baseball Classic, Team Australia coaching staff have assumed the roles of restaurant chefs.

Their ingredients aren’t fresh produce you may find at a market, but it’s a collection of baseball data, tendencies and reports on the opposition.

05 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

How the brotherhood of Australian baseball carries the national team

An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar, Fuchu City, Japan. Photos by SMP Images. Video by Hugh Whittle.


Liam and Josh Spence used to play catch in the backyard of their childhood home in Geelong.

“I might have to grab a glove have to have a quick throw with him,” Josh Spence semi-jokes, looking out at Liam Spence running with Australian teammates on a sunny left field at a Miyazaki stadium. “That would be pretty special.”

It would be.

Liam Spence grew up idolising his two brothers Nick and Josh – two baseball playing boys eight and ten years his senior.

Nick played college baseball and still coaches in the USA. Josh went on to play MLB for the San Diego Padres and now coaches in the minor leagues.

Liam has forged his own outstanding baseball career. He is on the national team, after all. The kid from Geelong became the King of Tennessee university baseball when he led the NCAA’s powerhouse South East Conference (SEC) in hits in 2021. He was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in 2021, has already played Triple-A and just won a Claxton Shield.

Liam Spence at Team Australia training in Miyazaki (PHOTO: Scott Powick / SMP Images)

But Liam and Josh have never been on the same team together. The closest they came was when a very young Liam Spence was the batboy for his older brothers at the family’s home club in Geelong, Victoria.

That all changed today as Team Australia’s preparation shifted to Miyazaki – a small surfing town in the South of Japan.

Josh Spence was one of nine new baseball bombshells who entered the Australian WBC villa.

“They’ve played the biggest of roles,” says Liam of his brothers. “My brothers are the reason I play the sport. To be here together is surreal.”

MISSED A STORY? CHECK OUT DAILY STORIES AND TOURNAMENT INFO AT THE WBC HUB. Click here.

Over the next three days in Miyazaki, Australia will train and play two exhibition games vs Japanese teams before the tournament starts for real on March 9.

Spence is one of six new staff members to join the team physically. He is working in analytics. Five Australian coaches from major league camps also joined the squad.

Three players – Robbie Glendinning, Kyle Glogoski and Aaron Whitefield – rounded out Team Australia’s roster after the trio left their respective MLB club’s spring training to join their baseball brothers in Japan.

 

“They know this is the group. There’s nobody else coming and we’re moving forward,” said manager Dave Nilsson. “Now it feels a bit more fun.”

While Josh and Liam are literal brothers re-united, the family feeling is powerful between Australian teammates here in Miyazaki.

They aren’t related by blood, but they may as well be. They are related by the blood, sweat, tears and the common experience of playing Australian baseball.

“Playing in the Big Leagues is one of the greatest things I’ve ever done but coming here it’s different,” says Whitefield, who’s appeared in MLB games with the Minnesota Twins and LA Angels.

Whitefield says the common roots between Australian teammates separates the experience of playing in a World Baseball Classic and in the Big Leagues.

“Here, you’re playing with guys who eat meat pies like you did, have ice coffees like you did,” he says. “It’s being able to relate to everything that you grew up to believe in, how you grew up, and then going out and shedding blood with your brothers – and that’s what they are.”

Whitefield grew up playing club baseball in Queensland. He busted into the Australian Baseball League as an 18-year-old and won an MVP nearly immediately. He joins teammates he played junior baseball with, club baseball for, and guys he played against in the ABL.


Aaron Whitfield (sitting) surrounded by his Australian teammates in Miyazaki (PHOTO: SMP Images)

He says it makes him feel part of something bigger.

“It’s something different than playing in the states where maybe it feels a little more selfish. We’re here and playing for each other. Playing for each other’s families and for the country we come from.”

Kyle Glogoski says joining the team was “revitalising.”

“Everyone is so helpful and wants what’s best for the team. The team camaraderie is like nothing I’ve been part of before,” says Glogoski.

Robbie Glendinning just came from MLB camp with the Kansas City Royals where he started his spring in hot form. He says he couldn’t wait to join his teammates in Japan.

“The baseball community in Australia is so small. We all band together and just love being around each other,” he says.

You could feel that rejuvenated energy at lunch after training. Team Australia gathered in a small cafeteria for really felt like a big family dinner. Green & Gold jerseys sprawled throughout the long tables surrounded by sounds of laughter and a feeling of excited anticipation.


Dave Nilsson addresses the team before Miyazaki Camp (PHOTO: Scott Powick / SMP Images)

Aaron Whitefield, Jordan McArdle, Warwick Saupold and Jarryd Dale all sat together at the end of the tables. Four players – from four different Australian states – cracked jokes, shared stories and reminisced about old games.

Saupold, a former MLB pitcher himself, says the camaraderie of the national team is the difference between the WBC and the Big Leagues.

“We’re all mates, that’s more of it,” says Saupold. “You play in the States and you might know guys in the system and then you play in the Big Leagues with them. But it’s [not the same].”

“Here you grow up playing juniors with them, you go through the ranks with them, and then you get to the men’s team together and you know you’re here for a reason.”

Saupold – now 33 – has been on a long baseball journey with many of his teammates. One of them is Steve Kent.

The two of them went to an elite baseball academy together as teammates and are now about to pitch in their third World Baseball Classic as a pair.

“It’s just different when you go through the system with them all. It’s a different feeling because we’ve all been through such a similar experience,” he says.

Saupold played club ball for South Perth, battling in games on weekends vs the likes of Tim Kennelly over at the Melville Braves. He and Kennelly won ABL Championships together and are now on their third WBC roster.

Warwick Saupold at training (PHOTO: SMP Images)

“We’ve been around these guys our whole baseball career. You go through transitions, you see how guys evolve and you’re very much part of their story,” he says.

That brotherhood between players extends between newer members of the team and guys who have been there for over a decade.

Saupold says its as much about seizing the moment know as it is paving the way for the future.

He says he’s using his time on the World Baseball Classic roster to help pave the way for future players.

“You always root for other Aussie players. It doesn’t matter who it is. You want to see more Australians in the Big Leagues,” he says. “I think it’s a special thing being an Australian baseball player because you know the whole of Australia will be behind you. Hopefully some of the younger guys can use this tournament to take the next step in their careers.”

04 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

Three players from MLB camps join Team Australia as preparation shifts to new city

An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar


Australia’s full 30-man roster will finally be together as World Baseball Classic preparation shifts to a new Japanese city.

Aaron Whitefield (LA Angels), Robbie Glendinning (Kansas City Royals) and Kyle Glogoski (Cincinatti Reds) have all left their respective MLB Spring Training camps and will join their Australian teammates on Saturday

“They’ll bring a lot of energy, that’s forsure,” says manager Dave Nilsson. “They’ve been over there with major league teams. There’s no concern about them. They know the group, they know the drill, they’ve been here before.”

Whitefield was Australia’s starting centrefielder at the Premier-12 event in 2019. He appeared in the Big Leagues for Minnesota in 2020 and the Angels in 2022.

MISS A STORY? Catch up at our #WBC23 Hub. Click here.

Glendinning is coming off a full-season of Double-A baseball with the Kansas City Royals. Glogoski already has Triple-A experience and is on the Cincinatti Reds 40-man roster.

“It will be great to get that energy back with us,” says infielder Logan Wade. “We’ve actually been facetiming them throughout this camp. They’ll bring that Big League feel. We’re coming from an environment where everything is repetition and fast pace. I think when you combine it all together it’s the perfect recipe.”

The team will work out together as a group on March 5.

On the March 6 and 7, Australia will play two exhibition games vs Japanese teams from Ivy Stadium in Miyazaki in their final tune-up for the World Baseball Classic. The tournament starts with a blockbuster vs Korea on March 9 at the Tokyo Dome.

“The competition is about to get better, and then it will happen again when we get to Tokyo,” says Nilsson. “We’ll slowly start focusing on the opposition.”

Nilsson says he was happy with how his team focused on little things, and attention to detail, at the camp in Fuchu.

“We won’t really reference that anymore, hopefully that just happens naturally,” he says. “From a coaching standpoint we’re going to continue to turn up and come together as a team.”

Stay tuned to all Team Australia baseball channels for more updates throughout the day.

03 March 2023 By Staff Writers

By Staff Writers

- Team Australia

As Fuchu training camp ends, Australia hopes that from little things, big things grow at WBC

An Aces Sporting Club report by Eric Balnar, Fuchu City, Japan. Photos by SMP Images. Video by Hugh Whittle.


Third baseman Darryl George puts it in a way nearly every Australian can understand – through a lyric of one of the country’s most acclaimed musicians.

“I think you mean ‘From little things, big things grow,” George laughs, referencing the Paul Kelly classic from 1991. “But it’s true.”

Australia’s nine-day World Baseball Classic training camp in Fuchu City concluded on Friday afternoon after another fast-paced practice day.

The team hopes a large amount of time spent on the game’s smaller details will pay a pretty dividend on international baseball’s biggest stage.

“That’s the difference between a win and loss,” says manager Dave Nilsson of the ‘little things’.

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The theory is simple: Practice the small, routine moments of a baseball game and it becomes second nature. If you practice the fundamentals hard, and at speed quicker than the game, you won’t have to think when your moment comes.

“When it speeds up and the game gets big and the lights are on, we will fall back on our training. I think we’ll be in a good position,” says George.

From the first minute of the Fuchu camp, everything was done with pace. There was a big focus on defense, bunt-plays, non-verbal communication, relays and tempo was evident. The message is clear – execute the little things well and the rest will take care of itself.

Pitcher Sam Holland spent part of Friday’s training at the edge of the infield taking in Australian infielders take ground balls and run through a wide range of scenarios. He would cheer loudly when a routine play was made.

Pitching coach Jim Bennett comes for a look too.

“You stay sharp, you have a shot,” he says. That’s the culture and attitude that has spread throughout Team Australia camp heading into this tournament.

“The plays that are hard to make need to become like a reaction play,” says infielder Logan Wade. “That’s why we are here. Just to do the fundamentals right and make great throws. When the big moment comes, we’ll be more relaxed for that.”

Logan Wade fields a ground ball at Training Camp (PHOTO: SMP Images)

The team even spent part of training with loud Japanese crown noise pumping through the stadium’s sound system. There have been team-building exercises – like veterans taking new players out for dinner – to help bring the group closer.

No detail is too small when it comes to preparing for the World Baseball Classic. Nor should it be. International baseball is decided by tiny moments that have a massive influence on the outcome of the game.

Take the 2019 Premier-12, for instance. Australia needed to beat Canada by two runs to advance to the Super Round. They used a flawless defensive effort, lockdown pitching and a crucial bases clearing triple from infielder Logan Wade in the eighth inning to win 3-1. It was a focus on the fundamentals that carried them through.

“Well, a baseball game is made up nine innings and there’s 27 outs. Then there’s how many pitches in an inning,” says Darryl George. “You just gotta break it down and win the battle pitch-by-pitch and then that adds up. If you can execute on the smaller things it should translate to the bigger picture of the game.”

Darryl George prepares to take a ball in training (PHOTO: SMP Images)

Australia has been on the wrong end of tiny moments, too.

In that same Premier-12, Australia was narrowly leading Japan 2-1 in the seventh inning of a Super Round game. With two outs and a runner on third, Japan laid down a bunt that froze the Australian defense and scored the tying run. Then, in the eighth, Japan put pressure on Australia with two outs and nobody on. They went double, intentional walk and walk to load the bases. Then, Australia walked in the winning run.

Japan won the small moments and eventually the game by a score of 3-2.

That’s why this camp matters. George says he’s hoping extra time spent together focusing on the details will help flip the script in close games.

“It’s a lot of stuff, I think, maybe in the past we haven’t been able to focus on because purely we haven’t been able to get together,” says George.

Those small details of focus aren’t just left on the field either. What happens off the field at these camps are just as important, says Logan Wade.

For years, Wade has been scooping up balls at shortstop and firing them across to first to the glove Donald Sutherland – a long time national squad member and Logan’s teammate with the Bandits.

Now, there are three new faces on the senior national team receiving his throws – Perth breakout player Jake Bowey, Phillies prospect Rixon Wingrove, and ABL Championship Series MVP Jordan McArdle. Wade says he’s spent time getting comfortable with how each of the first basemen play and what they’re like off the field.

“When I field a ground ball, I look up and the first person I see is the first baseman,” he says. “I have to feel comfortable. From comfort builds confidence.”

Rixon Wingrove is one of the new players on the team that will play a big role in Australia’s execution (PHOTO: SMP Images)

Wade says he’s feeling good about the way the team has been assembled, and confidence is there already between players.

Nilsson can see it too. The Australian coach says he’s been happy with the way the playing group has battled through an intensive camp.

“Mentally, the guys are really locked in. They’re a lot more comfortable working at the speed we pushed them too,” he says. “Now it’s more natural.”

Now, the focus shifts to getting ready for the tournament opener on March 9 vs South Korea. They have five more days to prepare.

They’ll spend March 4-7 in Miyazaki – an island town in Japan’s south – for an MLB-coordinated training camp.

Centrefielder Aaron Whitefield (LA Angels), infielder Robbie Glendinning (Kansas City Royals) and pitcher Kyle Glogoski (Cincinatti Reds) will meet the team in Miyazaki. Each of those players have been at MLB Spring Training with their respective clubs and are in game-ready condition.

Warwick Saupold, who pitched three seasons in the MLB and in two previous World Baseball Classics, says he’s really pleased with the tempo the trainings. have been in. He says guys have embraced the culture of going hard.

“If you do things fast, it slows down when the pressure is on,” he says. “We’ll be ready.”

Dave Nilsson (left) talks with catcher Robbie Perkins during training (PHOTO: SMP Images)

 

03 March 2023 By

By

Corporate News

SHAYNE BENNETT JOINS THE BASEBALL AUSTRALIA BOARD

Former MLB player, business owner and long-time contributor to baseball, Shayne Bennett has been appointed to the Baseball Australia Board of Directors.

The South Australian native made his major league debut with the Montreal Expos in 1997, becoming the seventh Australian to play in the Major Leagues. Bennett was also a member of the Australian team that competed at the Sydney Olympic Games in 2000.

His post playing career has seen a successful business career in the building industry in multiple roles, prior to becoming a director and business owner almost a decade ago.

Contributions on multiple baseball boards including the Adelaide Bite advisory board, Baseball Australia technical committee and the Baseball SA board have been a staple of his contributions to baseball in his post playing career. He had a major impact as President of Baseball SA and was a key driver of the development of the West Beach complex.

Baseball Australia President, David Hynes said – “Shayne comes to the BA board with a wealth of baseball and business experience. As a former State President, he brings multiple perspectives on how baseball is operated across every level of the sport.”

“We are thrilled to add Shayne to the board and excited to see the impact he can have both through his baseball and business experience”

Shayne Bennett said – “To have an opportunity to assist in providing opportunities to our current and future female and male players is an opportunity that I couldn’t pass on”.

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