Category Archives: International baseball

News from the European Leagues, International tournaments and the fortunes of the Great Britain National Team

Great Britain compete in European Championship qualifier this week

GbHlSqTeam GB are in Israel this week as they aim to qualify for the 2012 European Championships.

Starting on Tuesday, Great Britain will face Lithuania, Israel and Georgia before the final is played on Friday.  The team head into the qualifier as favourites to progress, but Sam Dempster’s team will know better than to treat any opponent lightly.

The group in Israel is one of five taking place this week, with the winner of each group qualifying for the 2012 Euros that are scheduled to take place in the Netherlands next September.

Great Britain fell into the qualifying stage due to a disappointing 2010 European Championship showing. 

They were knocked out in the first round with a 2-3 record despite getting a win in their first game against Croatia.  A 4-3 loss against Greece condemned the team to an early exit, one all the more frustrating due to the team’s positive showing at the 2009 World Cup.

Sam Dempster has taken on the roll of manager since last year’s event and he will see this qualifier as a way to get the team heading in the right direction once again.

Great Britain’s schedule is as follows:

Tuesday 26 – Lithuania (15.30 local time, 13.30 BST)

Wednesday 27 – Israel (19.30 local time, 17.30 BST)

Thursday 28 – Georgia (15.30 local time, 13.30 BST)

The Confederation of European Baseball’s website isn’t the most up-to-date or visually impressive, but I’ve always liked their no-frills tournament coverage.  The section for Great Britain’s qualifying group will have all the box scores and play-by-play details and, hopefully, the ‘Live’ option at the top of the page will live updates of the games in progress.

Good luck to the team.

New GB player eager to seize Tel Aviv opportunity to keep up a family tradition

For Muhlenberg College catcher Brett Rosen, it seemed that the 2011 baseball season would be a short one when less than two-fifths of the way through the 38-game NCAA Division III schedule he received news that he had a glandular fever infection. Despite 2011 being his freshman year, he’d seen time behind the dish in seven of those first 15 games; however, the news brought a sudden end to that promising start.

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Great Britain chosen for World Baseball Classic qualifiers

Team GBGreat Britain baseball received the exciting news on Wednesday that the senior national team has been invited to qualify for the 2013 World Baseball Classic.

The first two WBC tournaments, the premier international event endorsed by Major League Baseball, have been a big success.  Rumours were already circling during the last tournament in 2009 that the number of entrants for the next event would be increased from the previous sixteen. 

As expected, that expansion has come in the form of an additional qualification round and Great Britain are one of twelve new teams to have been invited to be part of it.

The qualification round will involve sixteen teams in all, the twelve newcomers and the four teams that failed to win a game in the 2009 WBC (Canada, Chinese Taipei, Panama and South Africa).  The teams will be split into four groups of four, with each qualifying group likely taking the structure of a double-elimination event. 

The qualification round will take place in the latter part of 2012 and further details (the venues and which teams will be grouped together) are expected to be announced at the end of this year.

You can read the article on MLB.com here, and the British Baseball Federation website has an interesting news article including quotes from MLB Commissioner Bud Selig and Major League Baseball Players Association Executive Director Michael Weiner.

We’ll have more reaction to the news over the coming week.

Great Britain baseball signs a new uniform deal

GbHlSqThe Great Britain National Baseball Programme has signed a three-year deal with Hawk Sport to provide uniforms for all age-levels in the national set-up. 

Hawk Sport will be known to many within the British baseball community. 

They supply customised uniforms for a growing number of baseball and softball teams in the UK and have recently signed deals to supply uniforms for the British University Baseball Association and the Manchester Softball league.

Agreeing  a contract to kit-out the national teams is their most prestigious achievement so far since forming in 2007, with Hawk Sport Managing Director John Irving stating that the company is “absolutely thrilled to have the opportunity to support our country’s national baseball teams”.

The deal has an additional benefit to British baseball fans. 

Joe Gray’s blog post last Sunday about the very fetching, if pricey, retro 1938 jersey referred to it as “this year’s must-have British baseball fashion item”.  This served as a reminder that people who wanted to support the national team effort couldn’t get their hands on the replica jersey that the current team wears.

That will change under the deal with Hawk Sports.  Great Britain baseball uniforms will be available to buy from April and the company has pledged to donate a share of the sales of all Great Britain baseball merchandise back to the British Baseball Federation. 

So you can support the BBF, Hawk Sports and the national team and make a few more Brits aware that we do have a national baseball team in the process.  Further details about the items available will be publicised by Hawk Sports in due course.

Team GB to take a Tel Aviv tour to qualify for the 2012 European Championships

Team GBIf you missed the news on Twitter, first reported by Mister-Baseball.com, the Great Britain Senior National Team now know what route they need to take to qualify for the 2012 European Baseball Championship.

Team GB will head to Tel Aviv, Israel, at the end of July for a four-team tournament including the host nation, Lithuania and Georgia.

The many Brits who think of baseball as ‘that rounders game played by Americans’ would scarcely believe such an event could take place. 

Finding out that Great Britain has a team is often a surprise in itself.  Adding Israel, Lithuania and Georgia into the baseball mix would leave people doubting your sanity, but it’s a great example of the varied and diverse baseball culture that, unknowingly to many, exists in Europe.

The news story on the official Great Britain website provides some additional details, for instance noting the respective IBAF world rankings of the four teams.  They would lead you to believe that Great Britain should qualify comfortably.  Certainly they will go into it as favourites and should be confident of progressing, but new Head Coach Sam Dempster will know that taking any baseball team lightly is the first step towards a humbling defeat. 

I’ve no doubt that Dempster and General Manager Jason Greenberg will have the team well-prepared for the trip and to re-start the national team’s rise after a disappointing 2010 campaign.

The final paragraph in the Great Britain story also raises the possibility that the games might be streamed live on the internet.  Tel Aviv’s time zone is two hours ahead of British Summer Time so we could be able to follow the games at a convenient hour.

Dempster takes charge as appointments are made in the Great Britain national set-up

GbSeveral exciting appointments have just been made within the Great Britain baseball coaching structure as part of a review of the national team set-up by the British Baseball Federation Board.

Sam Dempster has been appointed as the new Head Coach and Performance Director for Great Britain Baseball, taking over from Pat Doyle who took charge for the 2010 European Baseball Championships. 

Will Lintern has been promoted to Head Coach of the Great Britain Junior National Team, while Brendan Cunliffe will take on the role of Head Coach of the Great Britain Cadets National Team.

Jason Greenberg will continue as General Manager and Director of Operations for the GB programme, a position that he took up in April last year. 

All have been appointed for three years, offering some continuity and giving the group a chance to plan for the medium term, an important step after what was a relatively disappointing year for the GB set-up in 2010.  Phil Edmonds will also be taking up the position of Junior National Team General Manager, with the appointment of a GM for the Cadets still pending.

Full details about the appointments can be found on the Great Britain Baseball website. 

Joe Gray and I briefly discussed with Jason Greenberg what was then the possible appointment of Sam Dempster in a bonus podcast at the start of December, available on the BaseballSoftballUK website.

Congratulations to all on their appointments.

Great Britain catcher Mike Nickeas gets a Big League call up

Team GBThere was some exciting news today for the Great Britain national team as Mike Nickeas was promoted from Triple-A to the Major Leagues by the New York Mets.

Nickeas represented Great Britain in the 2007 European Baseball Championships and was one of the key reasons why the team won the silver medal that year. 

Unfortunately an injury kept the catcher out of the 2009 World Cup, but his contribution to the 2007 team means that he’ll always have a noteworthy place in the National Team’s history, and even more so if he gets into a game over the next few weeks and becomes a full fledged Major Leaguer.

Nickeas has been added the Mets’ 40-man roster and would be available for selection for tonight’s game against Atlanta.

His GB biography can be found here.

Great Britain head home from the European Championship after 4-3 loss to Greece

GbHlSqGreat Britain’s 2010 European Championship came to a disappointing end yesterday in Neuenburg, Germany.  Pat Doyle’s men narrowly lost their final First Round game 4-3 to Greece in ten innings.  The result means Great Britain will finish fourth in Group B, just outside the top three places that lead to qualification for the Second Round.

Having beaten Spain 5-1 on Monday to keep their Second Round hopes alive, Team GB’s game against Greece was their second ‘must win’ contest in two days.  It looked like they would make it two wins from two, and earn a 3-2 tournament record, when Matt McGraw gave GB a 2-1 lead in the top of the eighth inning.  The outfielder, who went 4-for-6 in the game, doubled to lead off the inning, advanced to third on a wild pitch and then came around with the go-ahead run when Evan Romanchuk reached on a fielder’s choice. 

However, Greece have surprised many with their confident play so far in the tournament and they hit straight back in the bottom of the frame.  Alex Smith, who gave up two runs in seven innings, walked the lead-off batter James Demetral and Greece’s second baseman came around to level the game again at 2-2 despite the best efforts of reliever Stephen Spragg.  Continue reading

Great Britain fall to 1-2 after two weekend defeats in the European Championship

EC2010SmThe Great Britain Senior baseball team faces an uphill battle to qualify for the second round of the 2010 European Championships after defeats to Sweden and Italy over the weekend.

Team GB’s campaign began positively with a 10-1 win over Croatia on Friday and they headed into their game against Sweden on Saturday full of confidence; however, the offence that had worked so well the day before was shut down by Sweden’s starting pitcher Joakim Klasson as Great Britain were defeated 4-1. 

Klasson held Great Britain scoreless through the first eight innings, getting a key double-play in the sixth inning when Matt McGraw grounded out to the third baseman with two on and no outs, and escaping unscathed from a bases-loaded situation in the seventh when Michael Trask flied out to end the inning. 

Sweden were leading 4-0 at that point.  Great Britain’s starting pitcher Brian Essery balked home Sweden’s opening run in the second inning, gave up two runs on four hits in the third inning and then saw Tony Dermendziev come home on a fielding error by third baseman Michael Johnson in the fifth inning.  Essery pitched seven innings in total, conceding eight hits and four runs.  It wasn’t quite the start Essery may have wanted, but he battled all the way and kept the game close.

Unfortunately, the offence couldn’t take full advantage of the opportunities they created, grounding into five double-plays in total.  They did break up the shut-out attempt in the bottom of the ninth when Trask earned a walk with the bases loaded, but Rich Klijn then grounded out to end the game with three base-runners left stranded.

That result meant that Great Britain would head into back-to-back games against the two Group B favourites, Italy and Spain, with a 1-1 record rather than the ideal scenario of facing arguably their two toughest opponents with two wins already on the board.

The difficulties Great Britain face in qualifying from that position were made clear in Stuttgart on Sunday when Italy showed why they are one of the tournament favourites by beating Team GB 12-2  in a game called after seven innings due to the ten-run ‘mercy’ rule. 

Italy went into the game on the back of two impressive victories over Spain (by a score of 9-1) and Greece (13-1 in 7 innings) and they quickly got out in front with three runs in the first inning off GB starter Mike Renery.  Italy then doubled their lead by plating three runs in the third inning, two coming courtesy of a home run by veteran Jiminez Chapelli.  Italy’s hitting coach, former Major League All-Star Mike Piazza, is clearly teaching his pupils well. 

Italy’s pitching wasn’t doing badly either.  Starter Cody Cillo held Great Britain hit-less through 3.2 innings before Sam Wiley broke up the no-hitter attempt in the fourth inning.  Wiley went on to drive in Team GB’s only two runs in the seventh inning when he took a liking to the first pitch he saw from reliever Chris Di Roma and thumped it over the right field wall for a two-run homer.  That still left Great Britain trailing by ten runs, 12-2, and Di Roma closed out the inning to bring the game to an early end.

It was a comprehensive win for Italy, but Pat Doyle and his coaching staff will look to take the positives from the defeat, not least of which being a three-up, three-down inning by the young left-handed pitcher Ted Gieschen.

Tomorrow’s game against Spain, moved from Heidenheim to Stuttgart, is basically a ‘must win’ affair for Great Britain.  Spain’s form in their opening two games, a 9-1 loss to Italy and a narrow 7-6 win over Croatia, suggests that Team GB can get their tournament back on track if they perform to the best of their ability.  A win tomorrow would set up a potentially decisive final game against Greece on Tuesday afternoon.

Great Britain 1 – 4 Sweden: Box score and play-by-play, Great Britain Baseball report,

Great Britain 2 – 12 Italy: Box score and play-by-play,

Great Britain wins European Championship opener

GbHlSqGreat Britain started off their European Championship campaign in style today with a 10-1 win over Croatia in the TVC Stadium, Stuttgart. 

Spain’s recent success in the FIFA World Cup showed that a team can recover from a disappointing opening game, but every team hopes to get that first win under their belt as soon as possible and to set a positive tone for the rest of the tournament.

That’s exactly what Team GB did today, not only by winning their first game but by putting up six runs in the top of the first inning. 

Admittedly they were helped by a nervous start from their opponents, with Croatia committing two errors in the field, catcher Benjamin Goldstrom allowing a passed ball and starting pitcher Michael Lennox throwing two wild pitches all in the first frame.  However, Great Britain will rightfully argue that it was their patience at the plate and positive approach that put the pressure on their opponents and allowed them to capitalize on the subsequent mistakes.

There can be no better start to a pitcher’s day than seeing his teammates racking up a six-run cushion before he even takes the mound.  Alex Smith had that good fortune today and he wasn’t going to let that run support go to waste.  Smith pitched seven strong innings, allowing only three hits and one run while striking out four and giving up one walk.  Stephen Spragg and Jeff Mottl picked up from where Smith left off, each pitching a scoreless inning and facing the minimum three batters, in Spragg’s case with a double-play taking care of a walked batter in the eighth.

Michael Johnson, a Great Britain Cadet graduate and former Burgess Hill and Bracknell baseball club member, drove in four runs, while Evan Romanchuk went 3-for-5 with a solo home run to lead off the sixth inning.  Former Manchester Baseball Club player Rich Klijn also went 3-for-5 and the Bracknell Blazers’ Michael Trask hit a single to centre field in the eighth inning to get that all-important first tournament hit out of the way.

It all amounted to a great start by Pat Doyle’s men, but there’s still a lot of hard work to be done if Great Britain are to qualify for the second round.  That work continues tomorrow with a game against Sweden, who lost 12-9 against Greece in Heidenheim today.

Further details

Box score

Great Britain Baseball website report