13 August 2023
Canada wins World Cup thriller in last inning
Australia lost a heartbreaker at the Women’s World Cup.
The Emeralds erased a 4-0 deficit to take a late three run lead, but Canada put up crooked numbers in the final two innings to race home to an 11-7 in Group A action from Thunder Bay.
This contest was wild. It had more up-and-downs than a Gold Coast roller coaster.
Canada took a 4-0 lead in the third-inning but the Emeralds showed great resolve.
A dramatic five run fifth inning – complete with a pair of clutch two-out, two-strike, two-RBI knocks from Caitlin Eynon and Abbey Kelley – helped the Emeralds storm to a 7-4 lead.
The advantage didn’t last long. Canada scored three in the sixth to tie it and added four more in the last to win it.
Australia drops to 1-3 in Group A of the Women’s World Cup. They needed a victory to keep hopes of advancing to the Final Round.
In all likelihood, the loss eliminates them from advancing to next year’s championship round. There is a slim mathematical possibility, but Australia will need to beat Hong Kong and hope results go a wild way in Group B action in Japan next month.
Allie Bebbere had a standout pitching performance for the Emeralds, going 2.1 shutout innings of relief, allowing no hits.
Caitlin Eynon had a critical go-ahead two-out RBI in a 2-for-4 performance.
16-year-old Leah Cornish had a pair of hits and two RBI in her first World Cup start. Abbey McLellan had two hits as well.
Canada’s Alexane Fournier had a standout performance for the Red & White. She had three hits and 5RBI.
Eight different Emeralds had hits in the loss.
Canada, Mexico and the USA are guaranteed spots in the Final Round in 2024.
Australia finishes Group A action at 5:30AM AEST vs Hong Kong on Monday morning.
BOX SCORE: Click here.
GAME RECAP – AS IT HAPPENED
The game featured a highly anticipated pitching match-up between two of the best pitchers on the planet – Canada’s Allie Schroder and Australia’s Gen Beacom.
The Emeralds got off to a steady start. Gen Beacom held the Canadians hitless and struck out one to ease her side into the game.
Schroder responded with a hitless, scoreless inning of her own.
Canada pressured in the second. A hit and a walk had runners in scoring position, but Beacom struck out two batters to keep the game scoreless.
⚡🇦🇺 Great pitch by Gen Beacom to end the inning!#BaseballWorldCupW pic.twitter.com/ixKKrq2L9i
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 12, 2023
The Emeralds made a big decision to insert 16-year-old World Cup debutant Leah Cornish into the line-up. It paid off early, with the reigning Australian Women’s Championship Golden Bat knocking a single to the outfield on the firsts pitch see saw.
But Allie Schroder showed her might, inducing a 6-4-3 double play to help keep it scoreless through two.
Canada hit the scoreboard in the third with a big two out rally. Three critical walks loaded the bases. With two outs, Alexane Fournier had a two-out RBI single to put the home side up 2-0. A wild pitch later, and suddenly it was 3-0. A ground ball scored another insurance tally.
🇨🇦🔝 Canada take the lead! #BaseballWorldCupW pic.twitter.com/Ht2mN1BZhZ
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 13, 2023
In total, Canada scored four runs off one hit and four walks in the inning.
Australia pushed back with a mini-rally in the fourth. Hits to Carly Moore and Abbey McClellan and a walk to Abbey Kelly loaded the bases. Leah Cornish and Lili Cavanagh showed tremendous patience to earn a pair of walks and score the Emeralds first two runs of the game.
Maddi Tabbrett nearly tied it but a great diving catch from Ela Day-Bedard in left field denied some runs.
4-2 after three.
Allie Bebbere started her relief appearance well. She went the next 2.1 innings allowing just one walk, no hits and struck out three.
🇦🇺 Allison Steane with a ⚡ pitch to get the SO! #BaseballWorldCupW pic.twitter.com/898iP3V55X
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 13, 2023
Allie Schroeder, meanwhile, settled down after her third inning blip, retiring Australian bats in order in the fourth.
Schroeder was taken out in the fifth inning.
That’s when the Emeralds made a move. They remarkably scored five runs in the fifth to power ahead.
Ticara Geldenhuis started the party by reaching on an error, Morgan Doty walked, McClellan singled.
Bases loaded, nobody out.
Leah Cornish cashed in one run with a single to right field. 4-3.
Then, with two outs and the bases still juiced, Caitlin Eynon had a two-RBI single to put the Aussies in front.
The train kept rolling. Abbey Kelly had a two-out, two-strike, opposite field line drive to score another two innings. Just like that: 7-4 after five.
🇦🇺🔝 Australia take the lead! #BaseballWorldCupW pic.twitter.com/eSKrQHQJBL
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 13, 2023
Claire O’Sullivan took over on the mound in the sixth. Canada pegged one back on a sacrifice fly to cut the Aussie lead to two. She remained in the game for a couple outs, before being replaced by Leah Cornish with two outs and two runners on.
Canada tied it off an Alexane Fournier hard-hit ground ball to third which scored two runs. Knotted at seven.
It was Fournier’s fourth RBI of the game.
🇨🇦😲 It’s a new ballgame! #BaseballWorldCupW pic.twitter.com/cbbxCDwL3T
— WBSC ⚾🥎 (@WBSC) August 13, 2023
With the scores tied in the seventh and final inning, Australia sent closer Morgan Doty to the hill.
She did her job early in the inning by inducing consecutive ground balls, but Canada managed to reach on a few infield hits.
Canada loaded the bases.
Alizee Gelinas laced a ball to centre to score two. Fournier had her fifth RBI a couple batters later. 11-7.
Jordan Richardson got the final out for Australia in the seventh.
Australia pressured with a pair of baserunners in the bottom of the seventh but couldn’t guide anyone home.
Canada, Mexico and USA all clinch spots in the 2024 Final Round.
STANDINGS
- USA 4-0
- Canada 3-1
- Mexico 3-1
- Australia 1-3
- Hong Kong 1-3
- South Korea 0-4
EMERALDS GAMES
August 9 – USA 3 def Australia 2
August 10 – Mexico 16 def Australia 8 (extra innings)
August 11 – Australia 10 def Korea 3
August 13 – Canada 11 def Australia 7
August 14 – vs Hong Kong @ 5:30AM AEST
For full schedule and tournament information, visit www.wbsc.org.











Although associated with Glenelg Baseball Club, Phil actually originally suited up with East Torrens in the winter league and Norwood Redsox in the Night Baseball League in the summer, from 1965 – when just a teenager.
Although a veteran of the game, in 1982 Phil Alexander won the Capps Medal, and proved to be the ‘King of the Catchers’, with equal runners-up Mal Loveday from Port Adelaide and West Torrens’ Phil Burgess also playing the backstop position.

