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Ian Chadband

Aussie baseball boys stop Ohtani - but can't halt Japan

Australia's Aaron Whitefield celebrates with Jarryd Dale after scoring against Japan in the WBC. (AP PHOTO)

In front of Japan's Emperor Naruhito and pitted against the country's sporting king Shohei Ohtani, Australia have given their illustrious hosts a real scare in their World Baseball Classic showdown in the Tokyo Dome before succumbing to a 4-3 defeat.

With the royal visitor among the full-house hoping to witness more wonders from the game's greatest player on Sunday, Australia's pitchers managed to keep Ohtani quiet as they moved into a 1-0 lead with just three innings remaining.

But even without Ohtani managing to add a third home run in successive days on a rare off-night for the great LA Dodger, the reigning champions did finally manage to grab the lead in the seventh inning thanks to a two-run homer from Masataka Yoshida off the Aussies' fifth pitcher of the night, Jon Kennedy.

Alex Hall
Australia's Alex Hall watches his hit fly for a home run in the Tokyo Dome. (AP PHOTO)

The hosts added two insurance runs in the eighth inning -- and they needed them as the resilient Australians roared back with Alex Hall clattering a home run in the ninth inning and Rixon Wingrove blasting another on the next at-bat to narrow the gap to 4-3.

Ultimately, they fell just short but, having won their first two matches, Australia still have a chance to make it to the quarter-finals if they beat South Korea in Monday's final group game.

For a short while, the Aussie underdogs had been dreaming of a boilover triumph as they went into the lead in the sixth inning with outfielder Aaron Whitefield racing home after a throwing error by ‌Japanese catcher Kenya Wakatsuki.

Ohtani
Even the great Shohei Ohtani found it hard to get the better of the Australian pitchers. (AP PHOTO)

They had already done brilliantly to keep Ohtani at bay when he came to the plate in the third inning with the bases loaded, as the crowd bayed for a repeat of the grand slam homer he had hit just two days earlier.

But Shugo Maki was picked off by Australian catcher Robbie Perkins for the third out. 

Later in the contest, discretion proved the better part of valour as the Aussies gave Ohtani a couple of walks, but the Boston Red Sox star Yoshida, who'd also homered against South Korea on Saturday, proved the one to turn the tide.

Naruhito
Japan's Emperor Naruhito, Empress Masako and daughter Princess Aiko watched the baseball clash. (AP PHOTO)

The World Baseball Classic has become a source of huge national pride for Japan, especially since Ohtani led them to victory in the US in the last edition, as was signified by the Emperor's appearance alongside Empress Masako and their daughter, Princess Aiko.

It's the first time a sitting Japanese monarch ​has ​attended a professional baseball game for 60 years.

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