Chinese Taipei national baseball team
中華臺北棒球代表隊
Information
Country Republic of China (Taiwan)
(competes as  Chinese Taipei)
FederationChinese Taipei Baseball Association
(中華民國棒球協會)
ConfederationBaseball Federation of Asia
ManagerYueh-Ping Lin (2022–)
WBSC ranking
Current 5 Steady (18 December 2023)[1]
Highest2 (3 times; latest in December 2022)
Lowest5 (2 times; latest in September 2018)
World Baseball Classic
Appearances5 (first in 2006)
Best result8th (1 time, in 2013)
Olympic Games
Appearances4 (first in 1984)
Best result 2nd (1 time, in 1992)
WBSC Premier12
Appearances2 (first in 2015)
Best result5 (1 time, in 2019)
World Cup
Appearances14 (first in 1972)
Best result 2nd (1 time, in 1984)
Intercontinental Cup
Appearances10 (first in 1973)
Best result 3rd (2 times, most recent in 2006)
Asian Games
Appearances4 (first in 1994)
Best result 1st (1 time, in 2006)
Asian Championship
Appearances26 (first in 1954)
Best result 1st (5 times, most recent in 2019)

The Chinese Taipei baseball team (Chinese: 中華臺北棒球代表隊; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Táiběi Bàngqiú Dàibiǎoduì) is the national men's baseball team of the Republic of China (Taiwan). It is governed by the Chinese Taipei Baseball Association. The team is ranked fourth in the world by the World Baseball Softball Confederation. The team is usually made up of professionals from Taiwan's Chinese Professional Baseball League, Japan's Nippon Professional Baseball, and Major League Baseball and Minor League Baseball from the United States.

Originally known as the National Baseball Team of the Republic of China (Chinese: 中華民國棒球代表隊; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Mínguó Bàngqiú Dàibiǎo Duì) it was renamed in the 1980s as the Chinese Taipei Baseball Team.[2]

The team has won five titles in the Asian Baseball Championship (most recently in 2019), a bronze medal at the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, and a silver medal at the 1992 Olympic Games in Barcelona. It won the gold medal at the 2006 Asian Games in Doha in a sweeping victory by beating South Korea, Thailand, China, Philippines, and finally all-time rival Japan. It achieved eighth place in the 2013 World Baseball Classic. The team came in fifth in the 12-team 2019 WBSC Premier12 Tournament, in November 2019. The team will try to qualify for the 2020 Olympics at the six-team Final Qualifying Tournament.

Results and fixtures

The following is a list of professional baseball match results currently active in the latest version of the WBSC World Rankings, as well as any future matches that have been scheduled.[3]

Legend

  Win   Lose   Void or postponed   Fixture

2019

Asian Championship GS October 14 Hong Kong  2–17 (F/5)  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 889
Asian Championship GS October 15 Japan  2–0  Chinese Taipei Douliu Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 0
Asian Championship GS October 16 Chinese Taipei  17–0 (F/5)  Sri Lanka Douliu Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 765
Asian Championship SR October 18 South Korea  1–7  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 1,250
Asian Championship SR October 19 Chinese Taipei  10–2  China Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 0
Asian Championship F October 20 Chinese Taipei  5–4  Japan Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 0
WBSC Premier12 GS November 5 Puerto Rico  1–6  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 11,852
WBSC Premier12 GS November 6 Chinese Taipei  3–0  Venezuela Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 10,983
WBSC Premier12 GS November 7 Japan  8–1  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
18:30 NST Boxscore Attendance: 20,465
WBSC Premier12 SR November 11 Chinese Taipei  0–2  Mexico ZOZO Marine Stadium, Japan
12:00 JT Boxscore Attendance: 2,803
WBSC Premier12 SR November 12 Chinese Taipei  7–0  South Korea ZOZO Marine Stadium, Japan
19:00 JT Boxscore Attendance: 4,056
WBSC Premier12 SR November 15 Chinese Taipei  2–3  United States Tokyo Dome, Japan
12:00 JT Boxscore Attendance: 4,967
WBSC Premier12 SR November 16 Australia  1–5  Chinese Taipei Tokyo Dome, Japan
12:00 JT Boxscore Attendance: 7,299

2023

World Baseball Classic GS March 8 Panama  12–5  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
19:00 NST WP: Randall Delgado (1–0)
Boxscore LP: Chih-Wei Hu (0–1)
HR: Nien-Ting Wu (1)
Attendance: 15,540
Umpires: HP – Roberto Ortiz, 1B – Trent Thomas, 2B – Chris Segal, 3B – Ki Talk Park
World Baseball Classic GS March 10 Italy  7–11  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
19:00 NST LP: Stephen Woods Jr. (0–1)
Boxscore WP: Yen-Ching Lu (1–0)
Sv: Chia-Hao Sung (1)
HR: Tzu-Wei Lin (1), Yu Chang (1), Kungkuan Giljegiljaw (1)
Attendance: 18,799
Umpires: HP – Chris Segal, 1B – Nic Lentz, 2B – Shoji Arisumi, 3B – Ki Talk Park
World Baseball Classic GS March 11 Netherlands  5–9  Chinese Taipei Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
19:00 NST LP: Lars Huijer (0–1)
HR: Ray-Patrick Didder (1)
Boxscore WP: Tzu-Peng Huang (1–0)
Sv: Chia-Hao Sung (2)
HR: Yu Chang (2)
Attendance: 18,826
Umpires: HP – Mark Carlson, 1B – Ki Talk Park, 2B – Dan Iassogna, 3B – Serge Makouchetev
World Baseball Classic GS March 12 Chinese Taipei  1–7  Cuba Taichung Stadium, Taiwan
12:00 NST LP: Shih-Peng Chen (0–1)
Boxscore WP: Elian Leyva (1–0)
HR: Erisbel Arruebarrena (1), Yoán Moncada (1)
Attendance: 18,852
Umpires: HP – Nic Lentz, 1B – Ki Talk Park, 2B – Larry Vanover, 3B – Shoji Arisumi

Current roster

Chinese Taipei roster
Active roster Coaches/Other

Pitchers

  • 12 Taiwan Chen Yun-Wen (baseball)
  • 15 Taiwan Jyu Jyun-Shan
  • 16 Taiwan Jyan Chen-Yen
  • 19 Taiwan Cheng Kai-wen
  • 21 Taiwan Yu-Hsun Chen
  • 37 Taiwan Chu Hao-Jyun
  • 45 Taiwan Si Tzu-Chen
  • 69 Taiwan Huang Tzu-Pong
  • 77 Taiwan wu Cheng-Che
 

Catchers

  • 11 Taiwan Hung-Yu Lin
  • 26 Taiwan Huang Jyung-Shong
  • 31 Taiwan Ling Young-Lang

Infielders

  •  5 Taiwan Fu-Lin Kuo
  •  7 Taiwan Kuo Yong-Wei
  •  9 Taiwan Oh Wei-Chung
  • 14 Taiwan Wang Seng-wei
  • 17 Taiwan Lin Tzu-Wei
  • 29 Taiwan Chen Chun-Hsiu
  • 36 Taiwan Yu Te-Lung
  • 51 Taiwan Yu Meng-Kui
  • 85 Taiwan Chu Yu-Hsien

Outfielders

  • 10 Taiwan Chen Zi-Hao
  • 24 Taiwan Chen Chieh-Hsien
  • 55 Taiwan Pan Wu-hsiung
  • 88 Taiwan Lang Ing-Lung
 

Manager

Coaches

Tournament record

Premier12 Tournament

2015

Team Chinese Taipei came in ninth in the 2015 WBSC Premier12 Tournament.

2019

Team Chinese Taipei came in fifth in the 12-team 2019 WBSC Premier12 Tournament, in November 2019.[4]

World Baseball Classic

World Baseball Classic record Qualification record
Year Round Position W L RS RA W L RS RA
Japan 2006 Round 1 12th 1 2 15 19 No qualifiers held
Japan 2009 Round 1 15th 0 2 1 13 No qualifiers held
Japan Taiwan 2013 Round 2 8th 2 3 17 25 3 0 35 0
South Korea 2017 Round 1 14th 0 3 20 32 Automatically qualified
Taiwan 2023 Round 1 17th 2 2 26 31 Automatically qualified
Total Round 2 5/5 5 12 79 120 3 0 35 0

World Baseball Classic, 2006

Chinese Taipei participated in the 2006 World Baseball Classic. The squad included players from Major League Baseball. During the Classic, the team played in Pool A but ended up being the third place and did not advance. Their only victory was a 12–3 win over China.

World Baseball Classic, 2009

Chinese Taipei participated in the 2009 World Baseball Classic. The squad included players from Major League Baseball. During the Classic, the team played in Pool A against the same teams as in 2006. After losses to South Korea and China, Chinese Taipei was eliminated from the tournament, finishing in 14th place.

World Baseball Classic, 2013

World Baseball Classic, 2017

Chinese Taipei roster
PlayersCoaches
Pitchers
Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders

Manager

Coaches


Taiwan faced Israel, the Netherlands, and South Korea in the 2017 World Baseball Classic.[5] The Chinese Taipei team lost all three games it played and was eliminated in the first round.

World Baseball Classic, 2023

Chinese Taipei participated in the 2023 World Baseball Classic. The squad faced Cuba, the Netherlands, Italy and Panama. The Chinese Taipei team win over the Netherlands and Italy, lose to Panama and Cuba. Since all teams in Pool A finished with a 2-2 record, based on tiebreaker rule, Chinese Taipei placed 5th in the pool[6] and was eliminated in the first round.

Qualification

Chinese Taipei was required to participate in the WBC 2013 Qualification as they were eliminated early in the game with 0 wins, along with Canada, Spain and Panama. Chinese Taipei was grouped in Qualifier 4 with other teams invited, Thailand, Philippines and New Zealand. Chinese Taipei defeated New Zealand in the first round with a 10–0 win. It then crushed Philippines 16–0. In the Qualifier Round, it met New Zealand again, this time beating the team 9–0 to gain entry into the WBC 2013, where the team was grouped with South Korea, the Netherlands and Australia. The team did not lose any points in the qualification.

2009 IBAF World Cup

Chinese Taipei participated in the 2009 Baseball World Cup, which occurred between September 9 and September 27, 2009. The team went 1–2 in the first round, losing to Mexico and Australia, but winning against Czech Republic. Chinese Taipei entered the second round as a wild card. Chinese Taipei went 5–2 in the second round, pulling off victories against Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Australia, and Mexico. The team qualified easily for the final round, but finished in 8th place, going 1–6 and losing the game for a 7th place title.

Intercontinental Cup

The team's first appearance at the Intercontinental Cup was in 1973. Since then, the team has won two bronze medals, one in 1983 in Belgium and one in 2006 in Taiwan. Taiwan did not participate in the 1975, 1979, 1981, 1993 and 1997 Intercontinental Cups. It is currently ranked 7th in the Medal Winner Ranking.[7] Cuba, Japan, Nicaragua and the United States remain Taiwan's four biggest rivals in the Intercontinental Cup.

As the host of the recent 2006 Intercontinental Cup, Taiwan won its second bronze medal after beating Japan in the 2006 Intercontinental Cup final 4–0.

Olympic Games

Summer Olympics record Qualification
Year Round Position W L RS RA
Spain 1992 Finals 2nd 6 3 67 34 1991 Asian Baseball Championship
United States 1996 did not qualify 1995 Asian Baseball Championship
Australia 2000 did not qualify 1999 Asian Baseball Championship
Greece 2004 Preliminary 5th 3 4 23 28 2003 Asian Baseball Championship
China 2008 Preliminary 5th 2 5 29 33 2007 Asian Baseball Championship
Final Qualifying Tournament
Japan 2021 did not qualify
(withdraw from final qualifying tournament due to COVID-19)
2019 Asian Baseball Championship
Total 3/6 11 12 119 95

    Barcelona Olympics, 1992

    On 26 July 1992 and the following ten days, Chinese Taipei competed against seven other national teams from Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Italy, Japan, Puerto Rico, Spain and the United States at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. The teams played each other seven rounds and the top four on the table advance to finals. Chinese Taipei eventually advanced to the finals, beating Japan 5–2 in the semi-finals. It struggled in the final against Cuba, suffering an enormous defeat. The score was 1–11. Nonetheless, it won a silver medal which is still now its best result ever achieved in the Olympics.

    Game Summary

    26 July 1992 - Round 1, Chinese Taipei defeated Italy 8–2.

    27 July 1992 - Round 2, Chinese Taipei lost by one run to the United States. The final score 9–10.

    28 July 1992 - Round 3, Chinese Taipei sought its second victory over the Puerto Ricans. The score was 10–1.

    29 July 1992 - Round 4, Chinese Taipei dominated the Spanish. The final score was 20–0.

    31 July 1992 - Round 5, Chinese Taipei beat the Dominican Republic eleven to nothing.

    1 August 1992 - Round 6, Chinese Taipei faced one of its two main rivals from Asia - Japan. It acquired its fifth victory by beating Japan 2–0

    2 August 1992 - Round 7, in the final round, Chinese Taipei suffered another defeat to the Cubans. This time Chinese Taipei scored only one run. The score was 1–8.

    4 August 1992 - Semi-final, Chinese Taipei defeated Japan 5–2 and would play against Cuba in the final.

    5 August 1992 - Final, Chinese Taipei was defeated by Cuba. Final score 1–11.

    Athens Olympics, 2004

    Chinese Taipei qualified for the 2004 Olympics by finishing 2nd in the Asian Baseball Championship. The team ended up finishing 5th in the tournament.

    Beijing Olympics, 2008

    The team qualified for the 2008 Olympics by finishing 3rd place in the Final Qualifying Tournament.

    On August 15, Chinese Taipei lost to China for the first time in an international baseball event. However, it had been suspected by DPP legislators that Beijing set up the schedule unfair to Chinese Taipei. Chinese Taipei was scheduled to play the latest game the day before. It was estimated that the players could only get three hours of sleep.[8] This allegation was rebuked by the governing party KMT as playing politics over baseball games as well as by the International Olympic Committee as common scheduling practice. The IOC further gave examples of other games being scheduled in a similar matter

    The team finished 5th in the tournament.

    Asian Baseball Championship

    Chinese Taipei has twice finished in first place, 10 times in second place and 10 times in third. The team competed again in the 2007 Asian Baseball Championship which was held in Taiwan.

    2009 Asian Baseball Championship

    In the 2009 Championship, Chinese Taipei sought their revenge against their humiliating defeat by China at the 2008 Beijing Olympics with an obliterating win of 13–1, crushing the Mainland Chinese baseball team. They proceeded on to the finals against their old time rival Japan. Japan won the match and took the title with a narrow score of 6–5, putting Chinese Taipei in second place. In the final round of the tournament, Chinese Taipei defeated 2008 Olympic baseball champions South Korea with a 5–4 victory. Their next match was played against China, whom they lost to for the first time in history at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing. Chinese Taipei would end up with a 13–1 victory in 7 innings (game ended due to mercy rule) over China. The team would then play a final decisive game against their long-time rival Japan. The Japanese team won 6-5 and took the championship title, having gone 3–0 in the final round. Chinese Taipei would finish as the runner-up, with 2 wins and 1 loss in the last round of the tournament.

    2019 Asian Baseball Championship

    In the 2009 Championship, Chinese Taipei recorded a 2–1 record in pool play to advance to the "Super Round". They had a 4–1 record in the Super Round to advance to the championship game. Facing Japan in the championship game, Chinese Taipei prevailed, 5–4, taking the title and earning a spot in the Olympic Final Qualifying Tournament for the 2020 Summer Olympics.

    Asian Games

    Chinese Taipei has not missed any of the Asian Games since its first appearance in 1990 in Beijing. In Beijing, it finished in first place, however, it was a demonstration sport thus it did not receive any medals. Its second appearance was in 1994 where it finished in third place. In 1998, it again finished in third place. Chinese Taipei lost to South Korea in 2002 in Pusan, South Korea and hence finished in second. It was by far its best result. At the 2006 Asian Games in Doha, Qatar, a game-winning walk off hit by Lin Chih-sheng helped to win its first Asian Games baseball gold. The team received seventy million New Taiwan Dollar from the Republic of China (ROC)/Taiwan government for their excellent achievement in Doha. They have finished in second place at the 2010 Asian games being beaten by South Korea 7–6 in the final.[9]

    Doha Asian Games, 2006

    Guangzhou Asian Games, 2010

    Taiwanese players thank the home fans after losing the semifinal game to Cuba in the 2006 Intercontinental Cup

    Uniform

    Before 1984 1984 to 1999
    Away
    Home
    Away
    Home
    1999 to 2003 2003 to 2012
    Away
    Home
    Away
    Home
    2012 to 2016, 2018 to present 2017 World Baseball Classic 2017 APBC
    Away
    Home
    Away
    Home
    Away
    Home

    Honors and recognition

    • Asian Baseball Championship
      • Gold: 1983 (Together with Japan and South Korea), 1987, 1989 (Together with Japan and South Korea), 2001, 2019
      • Silver: 1955, 1969, 1985 (Together with South Korea), 2003, 2005, 2009, 2012, 2015
      • Bronze: 1959, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1967, 1971, 1973, 1975, 1993, 1995, 1997, 1999
      • 4th: 1954, 1975
      • 5th: 1971
    • Asian Games
      • Gold: 1990 (Demonstration sport), 2006
      • Silver: 2002, 2010
      • Bronze: 1994, 1998
    • Intercontinental Cup
      • Bronze: 2006
    • Baseball World Cup
      • Silver: 1984
      • Bronze: 1986, 1988, 2001
      • 4th: 1982, 2003
      • 5th: 1973

    Records

    • Largest win — 30 - 0 India India, (Japan, 26 August 1987)
    • Worst defeat — 3 - 20 the Netherlands Netherlands, (Belgium, 15 July 1983)

    Name controversy

    In 1954, when the team first participated in the Asian Baseball Championship, it competed under the name of United Team of Taiwan. Since the expulsion of the Republic of China from the United Nations in 1971, the National Baseball Team of the Republic of China was forced to compete internationally under the name of Chinese Taipei because of the People's Republic of China's diplomatic pressure through the One China Policy. In Taiwan it is both referred to as 中華隊 (hanyu pinyin: Zhōnghuá Duì; literally, Chinese team) or 台灣隊 (hanyu pinyin: Táiwān Duì; literally, team Taiwan ).

    See also

    References

    1. "The WBSC World Ranking". WBSC. 18 December 2023. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
    2. "101 of Taiwan's Baseball". Taiwan E-learning and Digital Archives Program. 2006-11-16. Archived from the original on 2012-07-14.
    3. "Chinese Taipei in the WBSC Ranking (Men's baseball)". World Baseball Softball Confederation. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
    4. "Two teams from WBSC Premier12 2019 to qualify for 2020 Tokyo Olympic Baseball". WBSC.org. December 19, 2018. Retrieved February 13, 2019.
    5. Israel brings MLB experience to 1st WBC main draw Archived 11 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
    6. "The wild 5-team tiebreaker, explained". Major League Baseball. Retrieved 13 March 2023.
    7. Baseball - Intercontinental Cup Archived 2008-04-08 at the Wayback Machine
    8. Liberty Times (in Traditional Chinese)
    9. "South Korea feast on Taiwan pitching to take baseball gold". Reuters. 19 November 2010.
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