1956 Claxton Shield

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1956 Claxton Shield
Tournament details
SportBaseball
CountryAustralia
HostsSouth Australia Adelaide, SA
Teams4
Dates28 July - 4 August
Defending champions New South Wales (1955)
Final positions
Champions
Gold medal australia.svg
 Victoria (5th title)
Runner-up
Silver medal australia.svg
 Western Australia
Third place
Bronze medal australia.svg
 South Australia
Fourth place New South Wales
1955

The 1956 Claxton Shield was the 17th annual Claxton Shield, it was held in Adelaide, South Australia. The participants were South Australia, New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia. The series was won by Victoria in due to a controversial decision in the final game. They claimed their fifth Shield title. The 1956 Olympic Baseball team was selected from the tournament.[1]

Controversy[]

The final game of the Shield erupted in controversy when South Australia played Victoria. Victoria stood with a 3–0 record, Western Australia with a 2–1 as well as South Australia. If South Australia won against Victoria in the final game, the winner would be determined on run differential.

The game was tied 4–4 at the end and went to extra innings, with South Australia making the break through, going ahead 5–4 going into the bottom of the 12th inning. The South Australian team realised that a one-run win would not be enough to win the series and needed to score more runs, therefore they had to allow Victoria to score so they could chance a bigger win in the 13th inning. With a Victorian runner on third base the pitcher attempted a pickoff, deliberately throwing the ball away. The umpire called a dead ball and sent the runner back to third. The next pitch, the South Australian pitcher deliberately balked, which would have allowed the run to score, but the home plate umpire called the game over and gave the game to Victoria as a 9–0 forfeit on the basis that South Australia brought the game into disrepute.

Appeals by the South Australian team to the Australian Baseball Corporation were denied, so the championship was awarded to Victoria.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ Clark, Joe (2003). A History of Australian Baseball: Time and Game. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-6440-2.
  2. ^ Clark, Joe (2003). A History of Australian Baseball: Time and Game. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-6440-2.
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