Chinese Taipei's players broke into tears on the field on Sunday after a dramatic 5-4 extra-inning win over South Korea at the Tokyo Dome, in a victory that held an enormous emotional and historical significance in the World Baseball Classic. The triumph was the first for Chinese Taipei in WBC history and came after Taipei opened the tournament with two straight losses. With more than 40,000 fans in the stands, some of whom had travelled from Taiwan, turning the stadium into a sea of red and blue, the final out and win over South-Korea led to an emotional release. Players hugged, wept, and celebrated a result that kept their slim hopes of advancing from Pool C, alive.
Extra-inning drama brings a breakthrough win
The game went down as one of the most dramatic matches in the tournament. Chinese Taipei got off to the lead when Yu Chang hit a solo home run in the first inning, but South Korea remained within striking distance in a tightly fought pitching battle. While starter Ruey-Guei Gu Lin went on to hand four steady innings for Chinese Taipei, veteran Hyun Jin Ryu returned to the national team mound for South Korea and held the lineup mostly in check through three innings.
The game then erupted in the middle frames as Red Sox prospect Tsung-Che Cheng hit a solo homer in the sixth inning to give Chinese Taipei the lead before South Korea responded right away. Do-Yeong Kim answered with a two-run homer in the bottom half of this inning to shift momentum back. Stuart Fairchild then delivered what was one of the key moments of the eighth inning, blasting off a two-run home run to put Chinese Taipei back ahead.
On the other hand, South Korea refused to fade, tying the game later in the inning when Kim drove in Hyeseong Kim with a double. With the game tied at the end of nine innings, it went into extras with the tension building inside the packed Tokyo Dome.
Sacrifice bunt locks in victory as emotion is on the table
The decisive moment came at the top of the 10th inning as Kun-Yu Chiang laid down a sacrifice bunt, which went only a few feet along the first-base line, but it was good for bringing team captain Chieh-Hsien Chen home from third base for the go-ahead run. Chinese Taipei had one more scare to survive, though. In the ninth inning, South Korea threatened to tie the game when Ju Won Kim tried to score at the plate. However, first baseman Nien-Ting Wu hit a ground ball and threw a pitch home, where catcher Shao-Hung Chiang tagged it out. A replay review had confirmed the out, sealing the 5-4 win.
The moment caused an emotional celebration. "I think today the Tokyo Dome was our home stadium," Chen said after the game. Players hugged each other with tears streaming down their faces, knowing they had played a historic result. "It was one of the most fun ballgames that I've ever played in my life," said Fairchild.
For Chinese Taipei, the tears were a sign of a win that was not a breakthrough but a result of hardwork that proved the team was capable of competing with the traditional powers in the tournament.