04 March 2026
- Team Australia World Baseball Classic
Game 1 Preview: Alexander Wells named starter for World Baseball Classic opener
Media day is done and dusted at the Tokyo Dome.
Australia took batting practice and ran team defence in front of more than 100 media members, followed by a press conference in a packed room, as preparations finished for the world’s biggest baseball tournament.
Australia opens the tournament against world No. 2 Chinese Taipei at 2:00pm Sydney time (watch on ESPN).
We also know the starting pitcher.
2025 Helms Award winner Alexander Wells has been named Australia’s Game 1 starter.
It was a surreal moment for Wells. He is one of Australia’s 38 Major Leaguers, last pitching in the big leagues with Baltimore in 2022.
But after his Major League career ended and injury kept him sidelined, Wells stepped away from the game for two years.
The spark just wasn’t there.
“I needed some time away from the game to gather my thoughts and clear my head a little bit,” Wells told MLB.com. “To come back and play in the Australian Baseball League and now be here with the national team, it’s pretty cool. I never thought I’d be back here. I just wanted to enjoy the game again, and through enjoying the game it’s brought me here. It’s awesome.”

He returned in 2024, pitching for the Sydney Blue Sox in the ABL, and went on to win the league’s MVP honours. He looked every bit the Major Leaguer he did when he broke through in 2021.
“I’m nervous, excited and ready to go out there and represent my country the best I can,” Wells said at a press conference.
WATCH: Team Australia meets the media
And what about the kid who first fell in love with baseball? I asked Wells what the 10-year-old version of himself would say to the 29-year-old version standing on the mound before his first World Baseball Classic start.
“Go out there and have fun. Enjoy the moment. Take it all in.”
Great stuff.
Understandably, Travis Bazzana was also the talk of the Tokyo Dome during batting practice.

I asked Bazzana the same question. What would eight-year-old Travis say if he turned the corner and saw himself standing inside the Tokyo Dome?
“He would tell me to be yourself. Play with the fire you have. Know that the journey has brought you here and trust it,” Bazzana said. “He would be proud and looking for the next win. Now is the time.”
It’s clear Bazzana doesn’t want this moment to be about him. It’s about something bigger than any one player — and bigger than baseball in many ways.
It’s a chance to show the broader Australian public what this team represents.
“I want to show Australia that this is a really strong group. It is a byproduct of what Australian baseball has been [constantly] building. I’m playing with people I watched growing up. Hopefully one day I’ll play with people who grew up watching me.”

“There are a lot of cool stories in the room. Some guys went to college, some play in the ABL, some play professionally, some play in Korea. But we’re all in the same room, and that’s what makes Australian baseball special.”
Game on.
First pitch is Thursday at 2:00pm.
Now, let’s talk about the opposition.
PREVIEWING: CHINESE TAIPEI
HUB: All things Team Australia

Dave Nilsson knows how good Chinese Taipei are. They are the number two team in the World and Premier12 champions for a reason.
“They are a very good team. We have a lot of respect for the Chinese Taipei baseball program, and it’s always a great clinic every time we come up against them,” he said. “As far as their starting pitcher and all their pitchers, we have a lot of information, and the hitters have been working through that. I think we’re going to represent really well tomorrow.”
Their starter is Hsu Jo-Hsi. His resume includes time in Japan with the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, and he pairs a 95–96 mph fastball with a sharp breaking ball. When healthy, he’s a real competitor who can miss bats on both sides of the plate.
Here are five things to know about Chinese Taipei:
1. They’re fresh off a gold-medal shock
Chinese Taipei arrive in Tokyo riding serious momentum after winning their first ever senior-level gold medal at the 2024 Premier12 tournament. In the final at the Tokyo Dome, they stunned reigning champions Japan 4–0 — handing Samurai Japan their first senior team loss since 2019. It was the biggest result in the nation’s baseball history.
2. A new manager with a winning touch
Hao-Jin Tseng, who was the hitting coach at the 2023 WBC, now takes over as manager. Under his watch, Chinese Taipei claimed that Premier12 title. He’s stepping into his first WBC as boss with expectations higher than ever.
3. They were one game away in 2023
The last Classic was a roller-coaster. Playing at home, Chinese Taipei finished 2–2 in Pool A but were eliminated on a tiebreaker despite being level with every other team. It was a brutal exit that still stings — and they haven’t advanced past pool play since 2013.
4. Yu Chang is the heartbeat
Former MLB infielder Yu Chang has been their big-game performer. He hit .438 with eight RBIs at the 2023 WBC, earning Pool MVP honours, and then starred again in qualifying to get them back into the 2026 tournament. If Chinese Taipei are going deep, Chang will likely be central to it.
5. The world ranking says they belong
Despite having to re-qualify for this tournament, Chinese Taipei are ranked No. 2 in the world by the WBSC. That places them among the elite — and well above Australia’s current ranking — underlining the scale of the challenge.
Pitchers to Watch
Ruei-Yang Gu Lin (SP) – Gu Lin leads the staff as the most polished arm on the roster, featuring a fastball up to 98 mph and coming off strong seasons that include CPBL MVP honours and a solid stint in Japan’s NPB. His presence anchors Chinese Taipei’s rotation and gives them an innings-eating, strikeout threat to lean on.
Yu-Min Lin (LHP) – Lin, a top Arizona Diamondbacks prospect, brings MLB upside with a quality changeup and a 9.8 K/9 rate through the minors. He projects as one of the team’s higher-leverage starters or multi-inning pitchers. He was crucial for Chinese Taipei in their Premier12 victory.
Hsu Jo-Hsi (SP) – Hsu’s resume includes time in Japan with the Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks, and he pairs a 95–96 mph fastball with a sharp breaking ball. When healthy, he’s a real competitor who can miss bats on both sides of the plate.
Jyun-Yue Tseng (Reliever) – Tseng profiles as the backbone of the bullpen. A proven CPBL closer with late-inning dominance, he’ll be one of the key late-game options if Chinese Taipei has a chance to hold tight leads.
Position Players to Watch
Yu Chang (INF): Chang is the namesake leader of this lineup and will be counted on for big swings and leadership. He was a standout in previous international play and has MLB experience, giving Chinese Taipei a legitimate threat up the middle offensively.
Kungkuan Giljegiljaw (C/1B/OF): A multi-year CPBL power hitter who has led his league in homers and RBIs, Giljejiljaw gives Taipei a feared left-side presence in the heart of the order.
Tsung-Che Cheng (INF): Cheng’s experience in the Pirates organization and brief MLB time make him a valuable infield cog. While not a big bat, his defense and pedigree add versatility to the lineup.
Chieh-Hsien Chen (OF): One of the most decorated players in the CPBL with multiple Best Ten and Gold Glove awards, Chen is also the reigning Premier12 MVP and provides both defensive excellence and run-making ability.
Stuart Fairchild & Jonathan Long (OF): Fairchild brings MLB outfield experience and power potential, while Long — a Cubs prospect with strong Triple-A numbers — adds another left-field bat with offensive upside.

MORE FEATURES
Eric Balnar is in Japan covering Team Australia. Here are some written stories:
– Ahead of second World Baseball Classic, left-handed pitcher Blake Townsend has found himself
– Australia adjusts on the fly as rain washes out WBC tune-up vs Japanese Champs
– Competing at Everything: Inside Team Australia’s Relentless Fuchu Camp
– The shoe finally fits: Inside Josh Hendrickson’s Three Year Battle to Team Australia






































