Taiwan has won the first title of the Little League World Series since 1996

NEWYou can now listen to PK Press Club articles!

For the first time since 1996, Taiwan is the champions of the Little League World Series.

Tun-Yuan Little League, representing the Asia-Pacific region, beat Summerlin South Little League from Nevada, representing the mountain region, to win the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, on Sunday by a 7-0 score.

A high -fly ball of Griffin Vargas from Nevada to the left field was the final, while the celebration followed for Taiwan on the ground.

CLICK HERE for more sports cover on Foxnews.com

Chang Chun-Po (19) from the Asia-Pacific region strikes only one against the mountain region during the first round at the Howard J. Lamade stadium on August 24, 2025. (Kyle Ross / Imagn images)

Lin Chin-Tse was the Taiwan star as it was throughout this tournament.

On the mound, he unleashed fast bullets equivalent to 98 MPH by MLB launchers, and the Nevada had trouble following his five lanches launched. Lin left a single blow in place while removing four Las Vegas strikers during its 58 throws, with 45 for strikes.

Nevada wins us the title of Little League World Series, will face Taiwan for the championship

Lin Chin-Tse (23) of the Asia-Pacific region is launching land against the mountain region during the first round at the Howard J. Lamade stadium on August 24, 2025. (Kyle Ross / Imagn images)

Meanwhile, in marble, he collected three produced points thanks to a triple base that put the game out of reach for Nevada at the end of the fifth round.

For a team as buttoned as Nevada was throughout their stay in Williamsport, they had a hard time starting the match with throws and wild errors that finally returned to bite them.

Luke d’Ambrosio, the starter of Summerlin South, had some control problems on the mound, and this led Jian Zih-de to mark on wild land at the bottom of the second round. Then he could not get the Speedy Tsai Yu-Ge on an attempt at stake, and his throw passed in front of the first basic player, leading to Chen Shi-Rong to the third house.

D’Ambrosio fights against his four work sleeves, showing a nasty curve that had Taiwan on their heels. He withdrew three, walked four and left five strokes, although he only granted two deserved points.

Tsai Yu-Ge (10) from the Asia-Pacific region reacts with Ethan Robertson (2) in the mountain region after flying second during the first round at the Howard J. Lamade stadium. (Kyle Ross / Imagn images)

Chen Qi-Sheng closed him for Taiwan at the top of the sixth round, working through the two strokes that he made it possible to get the possible final out to create a memory of a life.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top