1989 World Youth Baseball Championship
Tournament details
CountryJapan
DatesJuly- August
Teams8
Final positions
Champions Japan (1st title)
Runner-up Taiwan
Third place China
Fourth place South Korea

The 1989 World Youth Baseball Championship was the inaugural edition of the under-15 international baseball competition held in Japan from 24 July to August 1989. Players aged 13 to 15 competed in the eight-nation round-robin tournament.[1]

Squad

Brazil

  • Coach: Huguiyoski Sugeta[2]
  • Center fielder: Marcelo Takao Tanaka
  • Right fielder: Ricardo Momose

Canada

  • Pitcher: Rob Peronne, Ray Solomon, Kevin Briand, Patrick Lussier, Stephane Chagnon, Martin Lavigne, Mario Rouleau, Patrick Dupuis
  • Catcher: Andrew Halpenny, Jamie Dimitroff
  • Infielder: Brad Robinson, J. J. Hyde, Neil Szeryk, Jody Brown, Alain Lachance, Pascal St. Pierre
  • Outfielder: Louis Lachance, Dominic Therrien, John Evans, Chris Vetor

Two players were excluded from the above roster. [3]

China

  • Gao Lijun

Japan

  • 1st baseman: Kouta Soejima (副島孔太)
  • 3rd baseman: Kei Shibata
  • Shortstop: Akihito Suzuki (鈴木章仁)
  • Ryuichi Sakamoto, Yota Tawa[4]

South Korea

Incomplete

  • Catcher: Chang Sung Kook, Lee Jin Suk[4]

Taiwan

  • Pithcher: 9洪邦政, 林怡宏, 林信助, 陳宗男, 吳俊良 (Wu Chun-liang)
  • Catcher: 鄭文賢, 石金受, 王文智
  • Infielder: 33陳慶國 (Chen Ching-kuo), 陳懷山, 曾信彰 (Tseng Hsin-chang), 洪啟峰, 陳光輝, 郭子偉
  • Outfielder:游明傑, 18龐玉龍, 朱志強, 35藍德威
  • Head coach: 陳友彬
  • Assistant coaches: 劉明光、蔡景峰

[5][6]

United States

Incomplete

  • Widd Workman,[1] Frank Harmer,[7] Mike Rennack, Chris Smith[4]
  • Left fielder: Geoff Jenkins

Venezuela

Incomplete

  • Center fielder: Robert Marcano[8]

Preliminary round

24 July, 1989 South Korea  9 6  Japan

[9]

25 July, 1989 United States  11 2  South Korea
25 July, 1989 Venezuela  4 3  Taiwan
25 July, 1989 China  12 6  Brazil
25 July, 1989 Japan  8 0  Canada

[1]

27 July, 1989 Brazil  13 1  United States Yokohama
27 July, 1989 Venezuela  11 4  Canada Yokohama
27 July, 1989 China  10 0  Canada Yokohama
27 July, 1989 Taiwan  6 0  China
27 July, 1989 Taiwan  5 0  South Korea

[2][10][11][12][13]

29 July, 1989 Venezuela  2 1 (11th inning)  South Korea Jingu Stadium

There is only one game on 29 July. All the other teams were idle.
The records until 27 July was Venezuela 3-0, China and Taiwan 2-1, the United States, Brazil, and Japan 1-1, South Korea 1-3, and Canada 0-3.[14]

30 July, 1989 United States  6 2  Venezuela Tokyo
30 July, 1989 China  5 1  United States Tokyo

The United States became 2-2.[15][7] The results of the other matches are unknown.

31 July, 1989 Japan  4 3  United States Tokyo Dome
31 July, 1989 Taiwan  11 1  Canada Yokohama
31 July, 1989 Japan  8 3  China Jingu Stadium
31 July, 1989 South Korea  4 2  Brazil

Only Venezuela was ideal on 31 July.
After the matches of 31 July, the records are Japan and Taiwan 4-1, Venezuela and China 3-2, South Korea 3-3, the United States 2-3, Brazil 1-3, and Canada 0-5.[4][16]

2 Aug, 1989 Taiwan  3 2  United States
2 Aug, 1989 Japan  4 1  Brazil
2 Aug, 1989 Brazil  4 3  Venezuela
2 Aug, 1989 China  8 2  Venezuela
2 Aug, 1989 South Korea  9 1 or 3  China

information The Boston Globe report is at 9 - 3, but South China Morning Post as 9 - 1.

[17][18][19][20]

Some games were postponed by rain and later canceled because they would not affect teams' placing.
After the end of the round-robin matches, the records are Japan and Taiwan 5-1, China and Korea 4-3, Venezuela 3-4, the United States and Brazil 2-4, and Canada 0=5.

Placement matches

The matches were held at 10:00 at Jingu Stadium[21]

3rd-place match

Aug ?, 1989 China  4 3  South Korea Jingu Stadium

[22]

Final

Aug 3, 1989 Japan  5 4  Taiwan

Final standings

RankTeam
 Japan
 Taiwan
 China
4  South Korea
5  Venezuela
6  United States
6  Brazil
8  Canada

All-Star Team

  • Right-handed pitcher: Wu Chun-liang (吳俊良) (TWN)
  • Left-handed pitcher: Gao Lijun (CHN)
  • Catcher: Chang Sung Kook (장성국) (KOR)
  • 1st baseman: Kouta Soejima (JPN) (副島孔太)
  • 2nd baseman: Tseng Hsin-chang (TWN) (曾信彰)
  • 3rd baseman: Kei Shibata (JPN)
  • Shortstop: Akihito Suzuki (JPN) (鈴木章仁)
  • Center fielder: Marcelo Takao Tanaka (BRA)
  • Right fielder: Ricardo Momose (BRA)
  • Left fielder: Geoff Jenkins (USA)

[22]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "U.S. baseball team beats S. Korea". The Los Angeles Times. 25 July 1989. p. Part A, 8. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  2. 1 2 "U.S. bows in youth baseball". Pacific Stars and Stripes. 29 July 1989. p. 22. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  3. "National team trims roster". Brandon Sunday. 23 July 1989. p. 10. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "World Youth Baseball Championships". Pacific Stars and Stripes. 2 August 1989. p. 25. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
  5. "Briefs". Chicago Tribune (Chicagoland North Edition). 4 August 1989. p. 2. ProQuest 282613336. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  6. "Youth Baseball". The Orlando Sentinel. 4 August 1989. p. B-4. Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  7. 1 2 "U.S. Rolls past Venezuela 6-2". The Daily Oklahoman. 31 July 1989. p. 20. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  8. "Marcano's son stars". The Japan Times. 31 July 1989.
  9. "There - Baseball". Kingston Gleaner. 25 July 1989. p. Sports 5. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  10. "Canada loses two at world baseball tourney". Star-Phoenix (Saskatoon). 28 July 1989. p. B2. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  11. "SportsBriefly". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. 28 July 1989. p. Section 3-7. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  12. "Keith beats pace". Winnipeg Free Press. 28 July 1989. p. 56. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  13. "Play washed out". The Province (Vancouver). 27 July 1989. p. 69. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  14. "Venezuela prevails". Daily Record (Morristown, New Jersey). 30 July 1989. p. C6. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  15. "Labonte races past Waltrip". Star Tribune (Minneapolis). 31 July 1989. p. 2C. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  16. "Cuban becomes first high jumper to clear eight feet". The Vancouver Sun. 31 July 1989. p. C2. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  17. "Taiwan beats U.S. team". The Kansas City Star. 2 August 1989. p. 2B. Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  18. "Youth Baseball". The Orlando Sentinel. 3 August 1989. p. D-5. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  19. "World Youth Tourney". The Boston Globe. 3 August 1989. p. 38. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  20. "Results Roundup". South China Morning Post. 3 August 1989. p. 27.
  21. "Today's sports". The Japan Times. 3 August 1989. p. 17.
  22. 1 2 "Japan tips Taiwan 5-4 for world youth baseball crown". Pacific Stars and Stripes. 5 August 1989. p. 22. Retrieved 24 June 2022.
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