Israel at the European Baseball Championship

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This is a record of Israel's results at the European Baseball Championship.

Honors

During the 2016 C-Level qualifier, Dean Kremer was named the Euros’ Most Valuable Pitcher and Simon Rosenbaum was named MVP.[1] During the 2016 B-Level qualifier, Kremer once again won the Most Valuable Pitcher award.[2]

Israel led teams at the 2016 competition in almost every statistic possible during the C-Level qualifiers. They led in hitting with a .309 average, .450 on base percentage, .509 slugging percentage. They also were the leaders in runs with 53, home runs with 9 and hit by pitch with 20. In addition to hitting they led in ERA with 1.05, strikeouts with an average of 11.5 per nine innings, opponents batting average with .140 and fielding percentage of .973. Israel was tied for stolen bases with 23, which Romania led with 26. The only other statistics Israel did not lead in were walks and doubles.[1]

Record

European Baseball Championship record Qualification record
Year Host(s) Round Position W L RS RA Host W L RS RA
2010 Did not qualify Croatia 2 2 22 27
2012 Did not qualify Israel 3 2 39 16
2014 Did not enter Did not enter
2016 Did not qualify Slovenia, Austria 8 2 97 29
2019 Germany Semifinals 4th 5 3 50 48 Serbia, Bulgaria, Lithuania 11 3 129 48
2021 Italy Final 2nd place, silver medalist(s) 5 1 41 21 Automatic qualifier per 2019 European Baseball Championship position

2010 European Baseball Championship - Qualifier Pool 3

Israel competed in the qualification for the 2010 European Baseball Championship, in July 2008.[3] Israel went 2-2 and finished in 3rd place, based on the tiebreaker stat of runs against per 9 innings. Israel lost their first two games, against Bulgaria and Croatia, before coming back to win their final two games, against Serbia and Lithuania.

Standings
# Team Games Wins Losses Tiebreaker
1  Croatia 4 4 0
2  Lithuania 4 2 2 4.86 RA/9
3  Israel 4 2 2 6.75 RA/9
4  Bulgaria 4 2 2 9.00 RA/9
5  Serbia 4 0 4
Qualified for the final
Did not qualify for the final
2010 Games

July 7, 2008 Bulgaria  11 – 8  Israel Karlovac, Croatia
Attendance: 45
Boxscore

July 8, 2008 Israel  1 – 6  Croatia Karlovac, Croatia
Attendance: 200
Boxscore

July 9, 2008 Serbia  9 – 11  Israel Karlovac, Croatia
Attendance: 110
Boxscore

July 11, 2008 Israel  2 – 1 (F/10)  Lithuania Karlovac, Croatia
Attendance: 30
Boxscore

2012 European Baseball Championship - Pool Tel Aviv

Israel competed in the qualification for the 2012 European Baseball Championship.[4] In addition to competing, Israel hosted one of the qualification pools from July 26–29, 2011.[5][6] Israel was eliminated from the tournament after going 2-1, finishing in second place behind Great Britain who went 3-0. Israel won their first game against Georgia, lost their second game against Great Britain, before coming back to beat Lithuania in their final game. Israel went on to compete in the home/away finals against Great Britain, where they won the first game but lost the second, with Great Britain advancing to the main tournament.

Going into the round, Great Britain was expected to come win, being ranked 21st, followed by Lithuania at 48 and Israel at 57.[7]

2012 standings
Teams W L Pct. GB R RA
 Great Britain 3 0 1.000 30 16
 Israel 2 1 .667 1 30 11
 Lithuania 1 2 .333 2 19 28
 Georgia 0 3 .000 3 9 33
2012 games

July 26, 2011 Israel  11 – 1 (F/7)  Georgia Tel Aviv, Israel
Attendance: 857
Boxscore

July 27, 2011 Great Britain  8 – 6  Israel Tel Aviv, Israel
Attendance: 650
Boxscore

July 28, 2011 Lithuania  2 – 13 (F/8)  Israel Tel Aviv, Israel
Attendance: 800
Boxscore

2012 finals

July 29, 2011 Great Britain  0 – 7  Israel Tel Aviv, Israel
Attendance: 472
Boxscore

July 29, 2011 Israel  2 – 5  Great Britain Tel Aviv, Israel
Attendance: 320
Boxscore

2016 European Baseball Championship

Israel competed in the qualification for the 2016 European Baseball Championship.

During the C-Level qualifier, Dean Kremer was named the Euros’ Most Valuable Pitcher. During the two games he pitched, he pitched 13 innings, giving up only 6 hits, no runs, one walk, and struck out twenty.[1]

Simon Rosenbaum was named MVP after hitting .529, along with four homeruns, giving him a 1.294 slugging percentage, in addition to scoring ten runs, collecting 10 RBI and had three stolen bases.[1]

Israel led teams at competition in almost every statistic possible during the C-Level qualifiers. They led in hitting with a .309 average, .450 on base percentage, .509 slugging percentage. They also were the leaders in runs with 53, home runs with 9 and hit by pitch with 20. In addition to hitting they led in ERA with 1.05, strikeouts with an average of 11.5 per nine innings, opponents batting average with .140 and fielding percentage of .973. Israel was tied for stolen bases with 23, which Romania led with 26. The only other statistics Israel did not lead in were walks and doubles.[1]

2016 C-Level qualification

At the 2016 European Baseball Championship Israel entered the qualification at the C-Level. After finishing in first place during the Group B round, Israel moved on to the C-Level finals.[8] Israel was placed in Group B for the C-Level qualifier, where they won all three games they played, against Slovenia, Finland and Latvia, outscoring their competitors 31-4. Advancing to the C-Level semifinals, Israel faced Romania who they beat 8-3. In the finals, Israel beat Slovenia 14-0. During the C-Level finals stage, the top two teams move on to the B-Level qualification. As the first-place finisher, Israel moved on to B-Level qualification.

Group B standings
Teams W L Pct. GB
 Israel 3 0 1.000 0
 Slovenia 2 1 .667 1
 Finland 1 2 .333 2
 Latvia 0 3 .000 3
Qualified for Final Stage
Did not qualify fot Final Stage
Group B games

July 29, 2014 Finland  1 – 13 Israel 
Attendance: 60
Boxscore

July 30, 2014 Israel  9 – 0 Slovenia 
Attendance: 125
Boxscore

July 31, 2014 Israel  9 – 3 Latvia 
Attendance: 32
Boxscore

Final stage standings
# Teams
1  Israel
2  Slovenia
3  Romania
4  Ireland
5  Hungary
6  Finland
7  Latvia
8  Norway
Qualified for B-level Tournament.
C-Level semifinals

August 1, 2014 Israel  8 – 3  Romania Ljubljana, Slovenia
Attendance: 78
Boxscore

C-Level final

August 2, 2014 Israel  14 – 0  Slovenia Ljubljana, Slovenia
Attendance: 257
Boxscore

2016 B-level qualifier

After qualifying for the B-Level qualifier after finishing in first place during the C-Level qualifier, Israel competed in the Group A.[9] The top team from each of the two groups would move on to the tournament. With Israel placing third in their group, they were eliminated.[10] Israel started the round with victories over Belarus, Poland and Austria, before losing to Lithuania and Sweden. Despite outscoring their opponents 44-26, Israel was eliminated from the tournament, as Sweden and Austria went 4-1, leaving Israel one game back from advancing.

Group A standings
Teams W L Pct. GB
 Sweden 4 1 .800 0
 Austria 4 1 .800 0
 Israel 3 2 .600 1
 Lithuania 2 3 .500 2
 Belarus 1 4 .200 3
 Poland 1 4 .200 3

Source: [11]

Group A games

July 27, 2015 Israel  13 – 1  Belarus Vienna
Attendance: 50
Boxscore

July 28, 2015 Poland  6 – 8 Israel  Vienna
Attendance: 130
Boxscore

July 29, 2015 Israel  10 – 1 Austria  Vienna
Attendance: 780
Boxscore

July 30, 2015 Israel  5 – 7 Lithuania  Vienna
Attendance: 250
Boxscore

July 31, 2015 Sweden  9 – 8 Israel  Vienna
Attendance: 500
Boxscore

2016 roster
## Name Position B/T CI DOB
6 Dean Kremer P/OF R/R SR 07/01/1996
8 Oren Gal IF R/R SR 19/07/1987
10 Jonathan Isaac OF R/R SR 10/07/1989
12 Josh Weiss OF R/R SR 26/12/1981
13 Tal Erel P/C R/R SR 16/06/1996
15 David Weiss OF R/R SR 12/09/1994
19 Aric Weinberg OF L/R SR 18/12/1985
20 Yuli Tzippin P/OF R/R SR 02/08/1993
21 Ophir Katz C/OF R/R SR 03/04/1987
22 Amit Kurz C/IF R/R SR 20/08/1988
23 Orr Gottlieb P/OF R/R SR 27/09/1981
25 Yotam Ben-Amram P/OF R/R SR 25/07/1997
28 Alon Leichman P R/R SR 29/05/1989
32 Dan Rothem P/IF R/R SR 03/12/1976
33 Eitan Maoz C L/R SR 21/12/1989
35/7 Nate Fish IF R/R SR 02/01/1980
36 Shlomo Lipetz P R/R SR 11/02/1979
39 Simon Rosembaum P/IF R/R SR 28/12/1993
37 Richard Kania Manager
Peter Kurz General Manager
40 Jake Rabinowitz Coach
4 Zuzana Srejberova Coach

Source:[12]

2018 European Baseball Championship

Based on Israel's performance in the 2016 competition, Israel did not need to compete in the C-Level qualifier, and will compete in the B-Level qualifier in 2017. Israel will be in Pool 1, in Belgrade, Serbia, from 24-29 July. During the tournament, Israel will play Switzerland, Bulgaria, Austria, Greece, and Serbia[13]


July 24, 2017 Switzerland   Israel Belgrade

July 25, 2017 Israel   Bulgaria Belgrade

July 26, 2017 Austria   Israel Belgrade

July 27, 2017 Greece   Israel Belgrade

July 28, 2017 Israel   Serbia Belgrade

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Israel Dominates C-Level European Championship
  2. ^ "Sweden wins B Level European Championship in Vienna," Confederation of European Baseball, August 1, 2015
  3. ^ Karlovac Schedule
  4. ^ Baseball Profile Serving Wine With a Curveball
  5. ^ Tel Aviv Schedule Archived 2011-04-30 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Britain's Best
  7. ^ "GB to compete for European A Pool in Tel Aviv, Israel - News - British National Teams - Mister Baseball". mister-baseball.com. Retrieved 2016-07-07.
  8. ^ Qualifier European Championship C-Pool in Ljubljana: Final Day, August 2, 2014
  9. ^ Qualifier European Championship Seniors C-Level to be played in Ljubljana, Slovenia this week
  10. ^ Sweden wins B-Level European Championship in Vienna
  11. ^ Standing Pool A
  12. ^ ISRAEL Team Roster
  13. ^ Belgrade 2017