06 February 2026
Roster, Schedule and Hub | Team Australia at the 2026 World Baseball Classic
FOR FULL COVERAGE, LINKS TO FEATURES, INTERVIEWS, STORIES AND SCHEDULE PLEASE VISIT THE 2026 WBC HUB AT www.baseball.com.au/wbc
—
This roster announcement is presented by Four’N Twenty
Team Australia has unveiled its 30-man roster for the 2026 World Baseball Classic, assembling a balanced squad blending experience with emerging talent as the green and gold prepare to compete on baseball’s biggest international stage.
The World Baseball Classic is the premier global tournament for the sport, bringing together the world’s top baseball nations in a high-stakes competition. Australia will open tournament play in Tokyo as part of Pool C, where they will face Chinese Taipei (March 5), Czechia (March 6), Japan (March 8) and Korea (March 9).
The top two teams advance to the quarterfinals in Miami.
The tournament begins March 4, with Team Australia aiming to build on a historic 2023 campaign that saw the nation reach the quarterfinals for the first time.
Here are some notes on the roster:
Roster Notes: Continuity and Youth

Seventeen players return from the 2023 World Baseball Classic squad, including nine position players and eight pitchers, providing valuable tournament experience.
Media Guide: Read more about each player
The roster also signals a strong future for Australian baseball:
– 13 players are aged 26 or under
– 12 players will make their World Baseball Classic debut
– 10 players are set for their senior Team Australia tournament debut
– Five players bring Major League Baseball experience: Curtis Mead, Alexander Wells, Warwick Saupold, Jack O’Loughlin and Aaron Whitefield
– All 30 players have strong ties to Australian Baseball League clubs;
– Seven players are currently affiliated with an MLB or KBO organisation
– Four players — Lachlan Wells, Coen Wynne, Warwick Saupold and Jarryd Dale — have KBO experience
HUB: Follow Team Australia at the World Baseball Classic
For media enquiries, contact Eric Balnar at eric.balnar@baseball.com.au
TEAM FIRST APPROACH
Team Australia manager David Nilsson has emphasised a team first approach. He believes the roster’s strength lies in collective execution rather than individual star poser.
“I think the strength of the team is it is built around the sum of parts. It’s not about individuals. It’s about having a sum of parts that can execute towards a collective goal and by playing as a team,” Nilsson said.
“For any team to have success in an international baseball tournament, you need to be fundamentally sound pitching and defensively. That will be one of our strong focus. We have great players who we know can succeed.”
Roster versatility was another priority.
“In such a short tournament you want to have some roster flexibility. You don’t know how things will play out so you try to cover as many different unseen happenings,” said Nilsson. “I think that’s really gone into the selection of the position players.”
Nilsson credited a detailed and collaborative evaluation process.
“Every month the selection committee would meet. As it got closer, the meetings became more frequent. The ABL season absolutely influenced decisions. But, we have eyes everywhere. There are people everywhere that contribute to these decisions,” said Nilsson.
High-profile Australian Liam Hendriks has not been named to the 30-man roster but has been included in the designated pitcher pool as a reserve.
The veteran right-hander continues his recovery from a significant injury and is focused on preparing his body to face the best hitters in the world during the 2026 MLB season.
Nilsson said he is excited to see how roster competition develops over the next month.
“My job and my responsibility is to have the best team on the field on March 5. There’s a lot that can happen in the next four weeks,” said Nilsson.
Planning for the roster began well before this announcement.
“It started back in 2023 during the tournament and honestly before. You’re always trying to read guys. You always have your eyes on the future,” Nilsson said. “You follow every level. As you get closer, you narrow it down. It never stops. We’re already looking at 2028 Olympics. The cycle never stops.”
Nilsson will be supported by an experienced and well rounded coaching staff.
Nilsson has been at the helm of the senior men’s team since 2018 and has helped lead Team Australia to consistent results, including a Super Round appearance at the Premier12 (2019), a World Baseball Classic quarterfinal (2023) and seventh place finish at the 2024 Premier12.
Baseball Australia CEO commended Nilsson and his staff for the selection process.
“The opportunity to represent Team Australia at the World Baseball Classic always brings out the best in our playing group,” said Williams. “Final selection decisions are never easy, and the selection panel has done an outstanding job through a lengthy and detailed process. They’ve tackled what is a very difficult task head-on, gathering, considering and weighing information from all sources to select the strongest possible team for the WBC. These are really exciting times ahead.”

WHAT’S NEXT: TRAINING CAMP IN FUCHU
Read more: Fuchu City to host Team Australia pre-tournament camp
23 players on Team Australia will depart to Fuchu City for a two week training camp.
Seven others – Lachlan Wells, Jarryd Dale, Curtis Mead, Travis Bazzana, Max Durrington, Mitch Neunborn and Blake Townsend – will attend their respective professional club’s Spring Training.
Nilsson says the training camp will sharpen their preparation. It’s an important step in ensuring the group is ready for the intensity of international competition.
“Fuchu is about preparation. We need to be as prepared as we can for elite level baseball,” Nilsson said. “The camp is about hard work, and everyone really understanding where they fall in the team, connecting and narrowing down on their roles. There is a large emphasis on process to get better and on game speed.”
SCHEDULE: WORLD BASEBALL CLASSIC
All times AEDT (Sydney)
– March 5, 2:00PM: Australia vs Chinese Taipei
– March 6, 2:00PM: Australia vs Czechia
– March 8, 9:00PM: Australia vs Japan
– March 9, 9:00PM: Australia vs Korea
All games broadcast in Australia on ESPN / Disney+.





























