12 April 2025
2025 Women's Championships Day 1 | Scores, Recaps, Results
photos by Izzy Lilburn (@izzygrace_media)
Day 1 of the 2025 Australian Women’s Championships is in the books.
Here’s how it unfolded. Scroll down for mini-recaps, stats and stories from the day.
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TOURNAMENT HUB: www.baseball.com.au/women
You can find roster, previews & stories via our Tournament Hub above.
SCORES
Queensland 10 def South Australia 6
New South Wales 11 def Western Australia 2
Western Australia 19 def Queensland White 2
Victoria 6 def New South Wales 4
CURRENT STANDINGS
Victoria 1-0
Queensland 1-0
New South Wales 1-1
Western Australia 1-1
South Australia 0-1
Queensland White 0-1
RESULTS
All Day 1 games broadcast live & free on Baseball+: plus.baseball.com.au
9:00AM – Queensland Maroon 10 def South Australia 6
All nine players in the starting line-up had a base hit in a total team effort for Queensland.
We may as well list them off for you. Queensland’s bats were that good.
Hits: Charlotte Stokes (2), Lila Hall (2), Ruby Orchard, Shiori Hoshino, Molly Paddison, Kya Foxwell, Grace White, MacKenzie Rogers, Taliyah Paolo.
Their finest work came in a five-run third winning which pushed the scoreline to 6-0. Paddison, Stokes, Foxwell, White and Lila Hall all rattled off RBIs in succession.
At one point, Queensland raced out to a commanding 9-1 lead.
Their starter, Shiori Hoshino, was excellent. She tossed 5.0 innings with seven strikeouts, allowing five hits, one earned run.

“It’s so good catching Shiori,” said catcher Lila Hall, who was playing in her first open women’s game. “She just pounds the zone. Nothing in the dirt. This was my first time catching to her.”
16-year-old Hall was making her debut after winning medals with Queensland Youth the last two years. She reached base four times.
Charlotte Stokes also starred in her Open Women’s Debut, tallying two hits including a huge RBI double.
Ruby Orchard stole two bases in the win.
South Australia did spark a late comeback, scoring five times in the sixth and seventh innings.
Georgia Davis led the charge with three hits and two RBI for South Australia. Sarah McMahon also had two hits.
Check out GameChanger for the full box score.
South Australia
Hits: Georgia Davis (3), Sarah McMahon (2), Syd Horton, Bianca Ramsey, Jess Maslin, Amara Quinn, Bri Hosie
RBI: Georgia Davis (2), Bri Hosie, Sarah McMahon, Bianca Ramsey
Queensland
Hits: Charlotte Stokes (2), Lila Hall (2), Ruby Orchard, Shiori Hoshino, Molly Paddison, Kya Foxwell, Grace White, MacKenzie Rogers, Taliyah Paolo.
RBI: Molly Paddison (2), Kya Foxwell (2),MacKenzie Rogers (2) Lila Hall, Charlotte Stokes
NEW SOUTH WALES 11 def WESTERN AUSTRALIA 2

Claire O’Sullivan starred with the bat and ball in hand during a 11-2 opening game victory over Western Australia.
On the mound, the long-time Emerald tossed 4.0 innings of one-hit shutout ball with five strikeouts.
She compounded her massive day by going 3-for-3 with the bat.
“You always have some pre-game nerves. I just really wanted to focus on doing the best I could for the team and getting us off to the best start and that was a great start for us,” said O’Sullivan. “Just happy to be here and be part of it.”
Fellow Emerald Maddi Heath opened the scoring with a bases clearing triple in the first to put NSW up 3-0 early.
New South Wales piled it on in the third with a seven run inning. Lisa Nakashio had the cherry in the inning, doubling on a fly ball to plate two.
“I think we’re really focused on what our goal is. We just want to be the best team we can be. We’re strong and determined and ready to play baseball,” added O’Sullivan. “We have a lot of depth, a lot of arms, and a lot of confidence anyone can go out there and get the job done.”
Western Australian scrapped a couple runs back in the sixth inning before the game ended.
New South Wales will rest up and face Victoria in the night cap at 5:15PM. Western Australia face Queensland White.
New South Wales
Hits: Claire O’Sullivan (3), Maddi Heath, Ticara Geldenhuis, Cayla Johnston, Lisa Nakashio
RBI: Maddi Heath (3), Cayla Johnston (2), Breanna Green (1), Elise Grenfell (1), Geldenhuis (1)
Western Australia
Hits: Caitlin Eynon, Chloe Atkinson
RBI: Sam Thrush, Peyton Newman
WESTERN AUSTRALIA 19 def QUEENSLAND WHITE 2

Five Western Australians had three hits or more in a bounce back victory.
Caitlin Eynon (3-for-4, RBI), Chloe Atkinson (3-for-3, 1BB, RBI), Meghan Haggart (3-for-3, 2BB, 4RBI), Jess Knight (4-for-4, 3RBI) and Bella Clarke (3-for-3, 2RBI) were blistering with the bat.
Western Australia jumped out to a 7-0 early lead and never looked back.
Haggart was particularly impressive, tallying a single, double and a triple.
Ava Tyson tossed 4.0 innings, allowing two hits and two runs.
Felicity Clissold had a big moment for Queensland White, driving in a pair of runs with a booming triple.
Western Australia tallied 19 hits in the game.
Western Australia
Hits: Jess Knight (4), Caitlin Eynon (3), Meghan Haggart (3), Bella Clarke (3), Peyton Newman
RBI: Haggart (4), Lines (3), Knight (3), Clarke (2), Eynon, Atkinson, Bree Wright
Queensland White
Hits: Ebony Sutherland, Felicity Clissold
RBI: Felicity Clissold (2)
VICTORIA 6 def NEW SOUTH WALES 4

A comeback. Top notch defensive plays. Late game heroics.
Victoria and New South Wales delivered an opening day classic.
Saeko Suzuki broke a 4-4 deadlock in the penultimate inning with a clutch two-out RBI single for her second hit of the day. It helped cap off a scrappy comeback from a Victoria side that found themselves down 2-0 and 3-1 early.
“I think that could have gone either way. That’s pretty much one of the most elite games you could ask for at a national championships for both teams, especially at defense,” said Victoria manager Samantha Hamilton.
There were a number of defensive standouts for Victoria.
Belinda Cannington was involved in 13 plays at first base. Narumi Kametani made two momentum altering plays at second. Abbey Kelly was automatic in her return to shortstop.
New South Wales came to play too.
“Ticara at centrefield was outstanding. She makes things happen,” says Hamilton. “Then you have Claire and the way she hit and fielded at first base. New South Wales have something they want to prove. They’ve come to play.”
Offensively for New South Wales, Maddie McGuire led the charge with three hits. Claire O’Sullivan and Ticara Geldenhuis each had a pair of base knocks.
Suzuki and Kira Kuwamoto had multi-hit efforts for Victoria.
Also starring for Victoria was a stellar appearance from Paula Doherty on the mound for Victoria. The 17-year-old entered the game in the fifth and helped Victoria escape a bases loaded jam and her team in touch. She allowed just two hits and no runs in 2.1 innings of work.
“Wow. What can I say about Paula Doherty,” says Hamilton. “She was huge for us. She moved all the way from Queensland. She has done do much to get here, it really was her game to finish and she did it in style.”
Here’s how the game unfolded.
Claire O’Sullivan drove in the games first run on her fourth hit of the day. Maddi Heath cashed in O’Sullivan to give New South Wales a 2-0 lead after one.
Kira Kumamoto doubled in a run for Victoria in the second. 2-1.
O’Sullivan restored a two run lead for New South Wales with an RBI double in the third.
Victoria kept bouncing back. Belinda Cannington’s sacrifice fly cut the deficit to 3-2 in the bottom of the third.
Jasmine Bentley tied the game in the fourth with a clutch two-out double.
But the teams kept trading runs.
Maddie McGuire doubled home a run to put New South Wales up 4-3 in the fifth.
Victoria responded again. Ruby Dale put the ball in play and tied the game on a New South Wales error.
4-4.
All the while, both teams benefited from some big time defensive efforts.
Victoria’s Narumi Kametani made two stellar plays in the third at second base, aided by a wonderful Belinda Cannington stretch.
Lisa Nakashio rolled out a couple big time plays at shortstop and Claire O’Sullivan chipped in with a diving stop.
Allie Bebbere tossed 4.2 innings with eight hits and four earned runs for Victoria. Paula Doherty entered and tossed 2.1 innings, allowing just two hits and no runs. It was a fantastic debut for the 17-year-old who played for Queensland last year.
MacKenzie Jackson pitched 4.0 innings for New South Wales, allowing four hits and three runs. Maddie McGuire threw 2.0 innings allowing two runs.
Victoria broke the deadlock in the sixth. Back-to-back hits from Saeko Suzuki and Abbey Kelley helped seal the deal.
Doherty closed the door in the seventh, again benefiting from another nice defensive play with the Victoria field picking off a New South Wales runner trying to advance to third.
NEW SOUTH WALES
Hits: Maddie Mcguire (3), Ticara Geldenhuis (2), Claire O’Sullivan (2), Maddi Heath, Elise Grenfell, Lisa Nakashio
RBI: Claire O’Sullivan (2), Maddie McGuire, Maddi Heath
VICTORIA
Hits: Saeko Suzuki (2), Kira Kuwamoto (2), Abbey Kelley, Ruby Dale, Jasmine Bentley
RBI: Abbey Kelley, Bel Cannington, Kira Kumamoto, Jas Bentley, Saeko Suzuki
DIGITAL PROGRAM: Rosters, Numbers, Schedule for AYWC and AWC 2025
CARVE PERFORMER OF THE DAY
CARVE Eyewear are rewarding peak performance at the 2025 Australian Women’s and Youth Women’s Championships.
For the first day of the tournament, CARVE is awarding a ‘Performer of the Day’ for each team.
The winner of each team will receive sunglasses courtesy of CARVE.
Award winners will be given a voucher to be able to redeem a pair of sunnies. A member of baseball Australia staff will bring you the voucher.
Here are your Day 1 winners:
Queensland Maroon – Lila Hall: 2-for-3 with a double, two RBI and reached base four times in her senior women’s debut, while catching.
Queensland White – Felicity Clissold: A two-RBI triple to score their only runs of the game
Western Australia – Chloe Atkinson: Co-led Western Australia with four hits. She had one of two WA hits in a game one loss to New South Wales, and three hits in a 19-2 win over Queensland White. She scored five runs and had two doubles.
South Australia – Sarah McMahon: A two-hit effort in her return to the national championships with an RBI.
New South Wales – Claire O’Sullivan: Threw four shutout innings with one hit in Game 1, while going 3-for-3 with the bat. Had two hits and two RBI in game two.
Victoria – Paula Doherty: In her debut for Victoria, Doherty closed out the game by tossing 2.1 shutout innings to keep Victoria in the game.












































