Chen Yong-ji's game-tying single sparked a dormant attack that had been quiet all afternoon and Lin Yi-chuen finished it off with a bases-clearing, three-run double that capped a four-run eighth to help Taiwan top Australia by a 4-2 margin in the 2006 XVI Intercontinental Cup Baseball Championship in Taichung yesterday.
The win was Taiwan's first of the ten-day tournament after two tough losses to Italy and Japan on Thursday and Friday respectively had kept the hosts winless in its first two contests.
"It might have turned the whole tournament around for them," sports commentator Chien Ding-yuan said after the win, referring to Team Taiwan's chances to finish this year's competition with a respectable result.
PHOTO: TAN CHAO-YANG, TAIPEI TIMES
Stellar efforts by starters Tseng Song-wei (Taiwan) and Adam Blackley (Australia) kept either offense from scoring through the first six innings, with Tseng pitching a three-hit shutout and Blackley taking a no-hitter one out into the fifth before settling for a two-hitter through the sixth.
Then came a timely single by Australia's Matthew Kent off a tiring Tseng following a hit batsman by Tseng that put runners at the corners in the top of the seventh.
After Tseng intentionally walked the next batter to load the bases to set up a potential inning-ending double play for Taiwan, Australia's Trent D'Antonio promptly drove a pitch from Tseng deep enough to right for a sacrifice fly that gave the team from Down Under a 1-0 lead.
PHOTO: TAN CHAO-YANG, TAIPEI TIMES
Australia's one-run advantage would stand for just an inning before Taiwan responded with a game-turning, four-run eighth for its first lead in the game.
Down 4-1, Australia would muster one final offensive in the top of the ninth against reliever Luo Cheng-long by drawing a walk and a hit batsman after two quick outs to set up Bradley Dutton's run-scoring single that made it 4-2 with runners on first and second.
Taking no chances with Luo, Taiwanese skipper Yeh Chih-shien immediately sent for right-hander Keng Bo-shuen who got the next batter to fly out to right to seal the win.
Luo was credited with the win for Taiwan, allowing a run on a single with a walk, two hit batsmen and a pair of strikeouts over 1-2/3 innings of play, beating lefty Donovan Hendricks who entered the game in the seventh in relief of Blackley.
"It was a huge win for us because it meant the difference between a 1-2 start and a 0-3 start," Yeh said after the game.
His troops now take on South Korea in a key matchup at 1pm this afternoon where the winners will likely finish in the top-four of the seven-game preliminary round.
Japan 4, Taiwan 3
Team Taiwan dropped its second straight game in as many days on Friday night in a disheartening 4-3 loss to Japan to remain winless in the 2006 XVI Intercontinental Cup Baseball Championship.
The classic seesaw battle between two of Asia's powerhouses featured three lead changes before Japan's Saigo Yasuyuki smashed a tie-breaking solo home run off Taiwanese reliever Lin "Little Chick" En-yu (Macoto Cobras) in the bottom of the eighth to put his team up for good.
Trailing 3-2 for nearly three innings, Team Taiwan wasted a golden opportunity to make a big inning out of the eighth by managing to score only one run on three singles, a hit batsman and two wild pitches by the Japanese to force a 3-3 tie before doing any further damage to end the inning with the bases loaded.
The second game of the seven-game, round robin preliminaries for Taiwan had the squad in their traditional blue uniform jumping 2-0 in front at the top of the fourth, courtesy of a two-run double off Japanese starter Saitoh Takashi by top amateur slugger Lin Yi-chuen.
The 2-0 advantage for Taiwan would last less than an inning as the Japanese answered with a pair of runs in the bottom of the same inning on a two-out single by Nakao Toshihiro, followed by Suzuki Kanji's liner to shallow-right that scored the tying run with the help of an erroneous throw by Taiwanese shortstop Yang Chung-sho.
Team Japan then skidded ahead 3-2 in the bottom of the fifth on a solo blast by Onizaki Tomochika off Taiwanese starter Yang Jien-fu (Sinon Bulls) to claim its first lead in the game before the late-game drama that ultimately went Japan's way.
Both starters pitched effectively for their respective team with Yang Jien-fu holding a decent Japanese lineup to three runs (two earned) on five hits and seven strikeouts over five innings and his counterpart Saitoh limiting Taiwan to two runs on three hits in seven spectacular frames.
So the game boiled down to which team had a better bullpen. And unfortunately for Taiwan, a poorly located pitch by the Little Chick was the difference in the game as an unforgiving Saigo taught the soon-to-be rookie hurler for the Nippon Professional Baseball League's (NPB) Rakuten Eagles (Lin was signed by the Eagles to a multi-year contract earlier this week) a costly lesson by driving the ball to the opposite field for the game-winning homer.
Taiwanese world No. 1 women’s doubles star Hsieh Su-wei on Saturday overcame a first-set loss to win her opening match at the Madrid Open. Top seeds Hsieh and partner Elise Mertens of Belgium, with whom she last month won her fourth Indian Wells women’s doubles title, bounced back from a rocky first set to beat Asia Muhammad of the US and Aldila Sutjiadi of Indonesia 2-6, 6-4, 10-2. Hsieh and Mertens were next to face Heather Watson of the UK and Xu Yifan of China in the round of 16. Thirty-eight-year-old Hsieh last month reclaimed her world No. 1 spot after her Indian
EYES ON THE PRIZE: Armed with three solid men’s singles shuttlers and doubles Olympic champions, Taiwan aim to make their first Thomas Cup semi-final, Chou Tien-chen said Taiwanese badminton star Tai Tzu-ying yesterday quickly dispatched Malaysia’s Goh Jin Wei in straight sets, while her male counterpart Chou Tien-chen beat Germany’s Kai Schaefer, as Taiwan’s women’s and men’s teams won their Group B opening rounds of the TotalEnergies BWF Thomas and Uber Cup Finals in Chengdu, China. World No. 5 Tai beat Goh 21-19, 22-20 in a speedy 33 minutes, her fourth straight victory over the world No. 24 shuttler since they first faced each other in the quarter-finals of the 2018 Malaysia Open, where Tai went on to win the women’s singles title. Malaysia followed up Tai’s opening victory
Chen Yi-tung (陳奕通) secured a historic Olympic berth on Sunday by winning the senior men’s foil event at the 2024 Asia Oceania Zonal Olympic Fencing Qualifiers in United Arab Emirates. Chen defeated Samuel Elijah of Singapore 15-4 in the final in Dubai to secure the only wild card in the event, making him the first male Olympian fencer from Taiwan in 36 years and only the sixth Taiwanese fencer to ever qualify for the quadrennial event. The last appearance by a Taiwanese male fencer at the Olympics was in 1988, when Wang San-tsai (王三財) and Cheng Ming-hsiang (鄭明祥) competed in Seoul. The
Rafael Nadal on Tuesday lost in straight sets to 31st-ranked Jiri Lehecka in the fourth round at the Madrid Open, while Taiwan’s Hsieh Su-wei advanced to the semi-finals in the women’s doubles. Nadal said that he was feeling good about his progress following his latest injury layoff. Nadal called it a “positive week” in every way and said his body held up well. “I was able to play four matches, a couple of tough matches,” Nadal said. “So very positive, winning three matches, playing four matches at the high level of tennis. I enjoyed a lot playing at home. I leave here with