02-27-2025, 08:12 PM
|
#2091
|
MVP
|
2026 in OBA

The Australasia League saw an intense battle for the top spot between reigning Oceania Champion Sydney and Christchurch. With the AL’s fewest runs allowed at 507, the Chinooks won the race at 109-53 over the 106-56 Snakes. Christchurch earned their fourth pennant in seven years, their eighth in 14 years, and their 16th overall. The Chinooks were behind only the Pacific League’s Guam (17) for the most pennants. The chase certainly sent fans to the ballpark as Christchurch set a new OBA attendance record at 2,169,152 fans.
For Sydney, it was only their second time in five years and fourth time in nine years outside of the top spot. The only time in OBA history that a team won more games and still only finished second was Honolulu in 1992 at 108-54, finishing four back on Guam. Canberra was third at 93-69 and had the most runs at 810. The Centurions posted a fifth straight winning season, but they’re still looking for that first title. Also of note, Melbourne fell off hard from 91 wins in 2025 down to 68 in 2026.
Australasia League MVP went to Sydney LF Lewis Sundstrom. The 26-year old Australian lefty had 51 home runs, 128 RBI, 103 runs, 54 steals, a .291/.348/.636 slash, .984 OPS, 158 wRC+, and 6.7 WAR. He didn’t lead in any stat, but was notably second in homers, RBI, and OPS. Sundstrom also hit for the cycle in June facing Hobart.
Christchurch’s Quinn Burry won Pitcher of the Year with the 17th pitching Triple Crown in OBA history with a 25-7 record, 1.93 ERA, and 435 strikeouts over 288.2 innings. The 26-year old Australian righty also led in WHIP (0.85), quality starts (32), FIP- (46), ERA+ (200), and WAR (12.8). Sensing his elite potential, the Chinooks had wisely signed Burry to a seven-year, $90,780,000 extension after the 2024 campaign.

Three-time defending Pacific League champ Port Moresby made it a four-peat and tied the PL wins record at 119-43. The Mud Hens matched 1999 Guam’s league record and were second in OBA history to Christchurch’s 126-36 world record from 2016. Port Moresby led in fewest runs allowed (471) and second in runs scored (760). They became six-time Pacific League champs with the result.
Vanuatu and Honolulu still had great seasons even if they were miles away from the Mud Hens. The Wizards were 100-62 and the Honu went 97-65 while leading with 782 runs. Samoa notably collapsed from 90-72 in 2025 to 64-98 in 2026. Guadalcanal was 68-94, but still managed to set a new OBA team record with 284 doubles.
Unsurprisingly, Port Moresby swept the big awards, led by CF Stanley Yeo as Pacific League MVP. The hometown hero won it for the fourth time, having also won in 2021, 23, and 25. The 30-year old lefty was the WARlord (8.6) and led with 101 stolen bases. Yeo scored 100 runs with 170 hits, 33 homers, .858 OPS, and 141 wRC+.
The Mud Hens’ pitchers finished #1-#5 on the individual leaderboard for ERA. The man in the #2 spot was Daniel Laurinavicius, who earned Pitcher of the Year as the WARlord at 8.8. The 33-year old Lithuanian was a newcomer to OBA, having spent his previous 13 seasons bouncing between the European Baseball Federation’s Elite Tier and the European Second League with Vilnius and Reykjavik.
Port Moresby signed him to a five-year, $60 million deal for 2026 which at the time was decried by some as an overpay for an unknown name. Laurinavicius delivered with a 2.17 ERA over 265.2 innings, 23-7 record, 267 strikeouts, 62 FIP-, and 171 ERA+.

The 67th Oceania Championship was a rematch from 2023, which saw Port Moresby defeat Christchurch to kick off their dynasty. The Mud Hens’ only other title prior to that also came at the expense of the Chinooks back in 1985. In round three, Port Moresby prevailed again, winning 4-2 for their third championship in four years. They became the fifth franchise achieve the feat, joining Melbourne (six from 2004-10), Guam (1997-2000), Honolulu (seven from 1982-90), and Adelaide (1974-77).
Finals MVP was RF Pete Maple in his first year as a full-time starter. The 25-year old Hawaiian went 9-23 with 2 runs, 1 triple, 2 homers, and 2 RBI. For Christchurch, they fell to 3-13 all-time in the finals and had lost six straight. No franchise in baseball history had finished as their league’s runner-up more times.

For Port Moresby, their 2026 crew deserves strong consideration as OBA’s best-ever champion. They matched 1999 Guam for the best record by an OBA champ at 119-43. Only 2016 Christchurch had a better record (126-36), but they lost their finale to the Golden Eagles. To that point, only eight teams in world baseball history had won 120+ games and their league’s overall championship. The other OBA champs with 110+ win seasons were 1978 Perth (111-51), 1979 Guam (112-50), 1992 Guam (112-50), 2007 Melbourne (110-52), 2010 Melbourne (113-49), and 2013 Christchurch (110-52).
Other notes: Sydney’s Trey Cruz broke the OBA single-season stolen bases record with 125, passing the previous best of 115 by George Connolly from 1991. Cruz also won his 10th Silver Slugger at second base. Port Moresby’s Feleti Koma set the OBA record for a pitching win percentage at .952 with his 20-1 season. Honolulu’s Steven Gamboa had his second no-hitter in three years, becoming the 19th OBA ace to throw multiple no-nos.
OBA home run, runs scored, and RBI leader Roe Kaupa became the first in OBA to cross 900 home runs and 2000 career RBI. After the 2026 season, 17 players in pro baseball history were in the 900 homer club. Kaupa also became the 5th in OBA to reach 3000 hits. He finished the season with 3132 and intended to come back with Vanuatu in 2027 at age 40. Adrian Kali had the top hits mark in OBA with 3467. Meanwhile, Earl Pacubas became OBA’s 17th member of the 500 home run club.
In pitching milestones, Peyton McCoy was the 13th to 4000 strikeouts and the 9th to 250 wins. It was his final season, finishing with 252 wins and 4212 Ks. As of 2037, those rank 7th and 13th, respectively. CF Pouvalu Manu won his 12th consecutive Gold Glove, becoming the third in OBA at any position with 12+ wins. Ashton Hughes (13) still had him beat in center.
|
|
|