03 March 2026
- Team Australia World Baseball Classic
Ahead of second World Baseball Classic, left-handed pitcher Blake Townsend has found himself
Blake Townsend is still only 24 years old.
He has pitched in a World Baseball Classic, a Premier12, an Under-23 World Cup and an Under-18 World Cup. He has reached Triple-A in two different organisations. He is coming off the best professional season of his career.
And yet, ahead of his second World Baseball Classic, the left-hander from Traralgon is only just beginning to understand who he is on the mound.
“I think before I was pitching for other people,” Townsend said. “Now I’m pitching for myself.”
It is not a selfish statement. It is a freeing one.

At the 2023 WBC, Townsend was just 21 years old. Despite already reaching Triple-A with the Seattle Mariners, he was still a young kid from country Victoria – legally old enough to compete against the world’s best, but barely old enough to order a drink in the United States.
Signed by Seattle as a 17-year-old in 2019, Townsend spent five seasons in the Mariners system and climbed to Triple-A before his first WBC appearance. In the middle of 2024, he was released — a moment that forced reflection.
“A lot of guys who have gone through what he’s gone through are done playing,” Team Australia pitching coach Jim Bennett said. “The beauty is that he’s seen the next step.”
Townsend signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates soon after, finishing 2024 in their system and returning in 2025 to produce the best numbers of his professional career.
Across 92.1 innings in 2025, he compiled a 1.76 ERA, again reaching Triple-A. Prior to that, he dominated the 2024-25 Australian Baseball League season with the Adelaide Giants, posting a 0.60 ERA in 15 innings.
Now, he is signed with the Texas Rangers and was in Spring Training before linking back up with Team Australia.
The commitment meant he missed the pre-tournament camp in Fuchu, instead joining the squad in Miyazaki as preparations intensified ahead of March 5.
The difference in Townsend today is less about velocity and more about conviction.
“It definitely changed my perspective,” he said of being released and starting again. “I’ve changed my approach from trying to please a specific team or pitch a certain way that doesn’t feel natural to me. Now I get the opportunity to do what I think is going to work.”
He said he really started pitching.

“I used the misses and had confidence to be in the zone, no matter what the count is, no matter what I’ve done the pitch before,” said Townsend. “Just knowing my stuff is good enough to compete with these guys is pretty huge.”
Bennett sees a different pitcher than the one from three years ago.
“It’s almost night and day,” he said. “Not only his stuff and his competitiveness, but the conversations we have are a whole other level. There’s less worry, more trust. He sees the game differently now.”
Townsend describes it as maturity’ through lived experience.
“Having a better idea of what pitches to throw in which count. How to attack specific hitters. Really just committing to my plan,” he said.
Simply making it to this level from a town of just over 25,000 people — two hours from Melbourne — is remarkable.
Doing it after being released, re-signing, reaching Triple-A twice and earning another major league opportunity is something else entirely.
He was 21 at his first World Baseball Classic.
He is 24 now.
Still young. Still ascending.
But this time, Blake Townsend is pitching for himself.
And still figuring it out.
MORE STORIES
Eric Balnar is writing features from the World Baseball Classic build up, thanks to Aces Sporting Club.
Here are some more:
– Australia adjusts on the fly as rain washes out WBC tune-up vs Japanese Champs
– Competing at Everything: Inside Team Australia’s Relentless Fuchu Camp
– The shoe finally fits: Inside Josh Hendrickson’s Three Year Battle to Team Australia



































