Members of Taiwan’s World Baseball Classic (WBC) team were welcomed yesterday morning by Minister of Sports Lee Yang (李洋) and more than 300 fans at Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport upon their return from Japan.
Taiwan finished tied with South Korea and Australia for second place in the WBC’s Pool C with a 2-2 record, but the South Koreans squeaked through to the tournament’s quarter-finals based on the tiebreaker: fewest runs allowed per defensive inning.
Although Taiwan did not advance, many fans still felt the four-game campaign, which started poorly with shutout losses to Australia and Pool C winners Japan, was a success because of a 5-4 extra-inning victory over archrivals South Korea in the team’s final game.
Photo: CNA
Upon arrival at the airport’s Terminal 2, pitcher Chen Kuan-yu and manager Tseng Hao-jiu accepted flowers from China Airlines ground crew on behalf of the team.
Fans gathered in the terminal’s arrival lobby cheered for the team and the players while waving banners and flags, and they were most excited when outfielder Sung Cheng-jui held up the ball that he said was “the final out against South Korea.”
One fan, surnamed Lin (林), who said she has been a baseball fan for more than 20 years, said that she took time off from work to fly to Tokyo and watch Taiwan’s games against Australia, the Czech Republic and South Korea.
Photo: Chu Pei-hsiung, Taipei Times
She on Tuesday afternoon returned to Taiwan before heading to the airport at night to welcome the team.
Lin said she was particularly moved by the winning run scored against the South Koreans by team captain Chen Chieh-hsien, who was in as a pinch-runner while recovering from being hit on the hand by a pitch in the game against Australia.
Another fan said Taiwanese fans in Tokyo were vocal, “turning Tokyo Dome into Taipei Dome.”
While players who compete overseas returned to their respective teams, 18 players and their families, 10 coaches and Chinese Professional Baseball League commissioner Tsai Chi-chang took a Tuesday night flight from Tokyo after the end of Pool C play, arriving in Taiwan at 12:03am.
US national team star Folarin Balogun was among the scorers as AS Monaco on Friday won 3-1 at Paris Saint-Germain, dealing a blow to the side from the French capital before they face Chelsea in a crunch UEFA Champions League round-of-16 tie. Maghnes Akliouche gave Monaco a first-half lead at the Parc des Princes, and Aleksandr Golovin doubled their advantage early in the second half of the French Ligue 1 clash. Bradley Barcola pulled one back for the reigning European champions, but Balogun struck shortly after with a fifth goal in his last five games as Monaco claimed a precious
Teenage star Lamine Yamal’s superbly-taken goal on Saturday earned Barcelona a 1-0 win at Athletic Bilbao in Spanish La Liga. The champions restored their four-point lead over second-placed Real Madrid, who had on Friday temporarily closed the gap by beating Celta Vigo. Atletico Madrid tightened their grip on third with an entertaining 3-2 win over Real Sociedad. Yamal, 18, curled into the top corner after 68 minutes to split the sides at Athletic’s San Mames stadium. “We’re already seeing what Lamine can do — he puts it right in the top corner, and there’s nothing the keeper can do,” Barca
CHANCE TO QUALIFY: Both teams now have three points from two games, and Taiwan sit ahead of Vietnam and behind Japan, who last night beat India 11-0 Taiwan yesterday defeated Vietnam 1-0 to move into second place in Group C at the AFC Women’s Asian Cup with one match remaining. Su Yu-hsuan scored the decisive goal in the 26th minute after Taiwan midfielder Saki Matsunaga’s shot hit the crossbar, leaving Su to nod the rebound into an empty net for the team which won the last of their three Asian Cup titles in 1981. It was a deserved victory for Taiwan, 2-0 losers to Japan on Wednesday, who created several chances to extend their lead. Vietnam, the 2022 quarter-finalist, beat India in their opener, but struggled to
Thousands of Taiwanese fans yesterday descended on the Tokyo Dome for the World Baseball Classic (WBC) opener, displaying banners proclaiming “Team Taiwan” as opposed to their official designation in the tournament, Chinese Taipei. Taiwan has long competed in international sport as “Chinese Taipei” to avoid objections from China. Outside the Tokyo Dome, self-described “fan activists” clad in the red, white and blue of Taiwan’s flag led chants of “Go Taiwan” in Mandarin and “Team Taiwan” in English. “Of course we hope to compete under the name Taiwan, so that in the future there will no longer be a ‘Chinese Taipei’ anymore — it