Tag: Jerry Chen

  • Is Taiwan Arming Youth Ballplayers with AI?

    Is Taiwan Arming Youth Ballplayers with AI?

    The story of a Little League champion turned tech czar offers insights

    by Jerry Chen

    Originally published on The Taipei Gun, December 17, 2025

    For a country widely known for its dominance in semiconductor manufacturing, Taiwan is actually quite behind in the integration of technology in baseball.1 So, no, while we are seeing “AI-powered” baseball camps and other innovations in the U.S., even if mostly gimmicky, the Taiwanese are not yet arming youth players with AI.

    The real news: Basegarden, a youth baseball foundation focused on rural Taiwan, partnered with tech company MetaAge to donate laptops to rural schools and present a seminar on AI. While not as provocative, this small step is arguably more significant in a culture where, historically, athletics and academics are separated at a young age.

    Let’s rewind 50 years. Youth baseball development was largely a nationalist initiative in the 1970s. Chiang Kai-shek’s authoritarian government, still fixated on “taking back the mainland” and decades away from democratizing, saw its diplomatic influence start to crumble. It needed a way to solidify its legitimacy and found this in what I will call the “youth baseball arbitrage.”2 It was a formulation to take advantage of the U.S.’s relaxed attitude toward training young players and its concurrent fascination and coverage of world competition in Little League Baseball.

    The nationalist impulse

    After sending a Taichung team that won the Little League World Series (LLWS) title in 1969 and receiving international coverage, the winning formula became simple in the 1970s:

    1. Field a team to play in the LLWS;
    2. Display dominance (i.e., win a lot);
    3. Receive American “international” coverage;
    4. Feel like a strong nation;3 and
    5. Repeat step 1.

    This was evidently a self-sustaining cycle and resulted in a win-at-all-cost mentality. At worst, it fostered unsavory tactics discussed in Andrew Morris’s Colonial Project, National Game.4 At best, the national obsession spurred specialization and generated a pipeline of young winners. Teams from Taiwan won 17 titles in a three-decade stretch starting in 1969, not to mention the wins at the Senior and Big League levels.

    Exactly how Taiwan or Chiang’s government was portrayed seemed secondary to the fact that there was any coverage at all. All press was good press at that point. Chiang’s government was expelled from the United Nations in 1971, and Taiwan remains unrepresented in many international organizations to this day.

    Nonetheless, the national baseball craze produced cohorts of top players like Yuen-Chih Kuo but also byproducts like the unlikely story of Cheng-Wen Wu.

    Yuen-Chih Kuo (left) with the LLWS trophy (Photo: Taiwan Cultural Memory Bank / Central Daily News)

    A tale of two champions

    Yuen-Chih Kuo, or Genji Kaku as he is known in Japan,5 was born in 1956 in Taitung, southeastern Taiwan. He was a pitching phenom who caught national attention in 1969, the year Taiwan held a national team identification tournament to organize a national superteam.

    Kuo excelled on the mound, reportedly throwing a 13-inning, 220-pitch(!) complete game at one point, and batted .350 in the tournament to earn a spot on the Taichung Golden Dragons. The Taiwanese all-star team won the Far East region and then powered past Canada, Ohio, and California to win the 1969 LLWS title. This was the first ever championship won by a team from Taiwan.

    Kuo’s baseball career took off a few years later. He signed with the Chunichi Dragons in 1981 and never looked back. His fastball reached 151 km/h (about 94 mph) in his NPB debut. Over his 16-year career in Japan, Kuo recorded 106 wins, 116 saves, a 3.22 ERA, and 1,415 strikeouts. He was inducted into the Taiwanese Baseball Hall of Fame in 2019.

    Many players that were part of the pipeline of champions, like Yuen-Chih Kuo, came from rural and indigenous communities. They devoted their schooling years almost exclusively to baseball. Most, unlike Kuo, would not reach his level of success, or anywhere close to it. For a Taiwanese athlete trained for professional baseball, Kuo achieved the traditionally ideal outcome.

    The Tainan Giants in 1971 (Photo: National Archives Administration)

    Cheng-Wen Wu, our second protagonist, was born in 1958 in Tainan, southern Taiwan. Like many of his classmates, he played baseball at school. In 1971, two years after Taichung’s historic win, Wu’s Tainan Giants entered the LLWS as the Far East regional champions and also dominated. A standout pitcher, Wu threw a shutout in the 11-0 win against Hawaii in the semifinals. In the championship game, Tainan defeated Gary, Indiana, led by future MLB player and manager Lloyd McClendon.

    The glorious win in Williamsport may have turned out to be the least remarkable feat in Wu’s life in the context of Taiwanese history. After all, it was replicated by eight other Taiwanese teams over the next decade.

    After his baseball career, which did not extend much further, Wu received degrees in electrical and computer engineering, first from the prestigious National Taiwan University (NTU) then from the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he earned his master’s and Ph.D. Following his extensive schooling, Wu joined the faculty of the National Tsing Hua University (NTHU) and eventually became vice president of NTHU. He was one of eight candidates running to become president of his alma mater NTU.

    In 2024, Cheng-Wen Wu became minister of the National Science and Technology Council, stewarding the research and development of some of the world’s most advanced technology. As Taiwan’s “tech czar,” Wu oversees the funding of academic research and the development of industrial complexes like the famed Hsinchu Science Park.

    Wu’s career path could not have differed more from Kuo’s. Even though his baseball career peaked early, his integration into the world outside of baseball is truly a blueprint for educating young players. Five decades after their shared experiences as Little League champions, they are linked once again in the modern age.

    Competing futures of youth baseball

    The thread that brings Kuo and Wu together is another ballplayer, former CTBC Brothers outfielder and Hualien native Szu-Chi Chou. Chou was born in a small town in Hualien called Guangfu, or Fata’an in Amis. He is a three-time recipient of a youth baseball scholarship established by Yuen-Chih Kuo.

    According to Chou, he was only able to afford a left-handed glove because of the scholarship. Chou’s professional baseball career spanned 20 years. He is a four-time Taiwan Series champion (all with the CTBC Brothers / Brother Elephants) and MVP in 2012.

    Inspired by Kuo’s philanthropy, Chou founded Basegarden in 2013 to support youth baseball players in rural Taiwan. However, unlike Kuo’s scholarship, Basegarden focuses on the players’ academic pursuits, often outside of baseball. It has partnered with TSMC to offer career resources and broaden professional opportunities, for example.

    So, a Kuo protege is now helping the next generation of baseball players build tech literacy and diversify their career paths. In essence, he is working to produce more Cheng-Wen Wus. The future is bright for Taiwanese youth baseball players who will all become well-rounded students and excel in other fields beyond their playing careers … right?

    Not exactly. For one thing, the nationalist impulse is still there. After Team Taiwan won the 2024 Premier12 title, EasyCard Corporation announced it would donate to the Taiwan Indigenous Baseball Development Association, with the explicit goal of producing future indigenous players that can bring home more golds.

    The Taiwanese want to see their country win. Players are viewed as tools to help achieve that goal, and indigenous communities have historically been the perfect toolboxes to draw from. That means continued specialization into sports for marginalized kids with little pathways to alternative careers—the opposite of what Basegarden is aiming to achieve. The irony is that when it comes to putting Taiwan back on the map, winning countless Little League titles seems pretty ineffective.

    Will there be another Yuen-Chih Kuo? Almost certainly.6 The more important question is: Will there be another Cheng-Wen Wu? A Little League champion turned tech czar (or industry titan or leading artist)? We shall see in a few years, or decades.


    Covering the bases

    The TSG Hawks have re-signed slugger Steven Moya to a one-year deal. Hawks right-handed pitcher Spenser Watkins announced his retirement. Baseball America projectsleft-hander Wei-En Lin to be the Athletics’ No. 4 starter in 2029. Former Chicago Cubs pitcher Jen-Ho Tseng, who was non-tendered by the Rakuten Monkeys, reportedly agreed to terms on a deal with the Wei Chuan Dragons.

    1 Statcast (using the PITCHf/x camera system, then the TrackMan radar system) was installed in all 30 MLB stadiums in 2015; as of 2025, two of the six CPBL teams do not yet use TrackMan, and one uses just a portable unit.

    2 With the majority of the country, some 85% of the population, having lived through Japanese rule and embraced what was known to them as a Japanese game, Chiang’s newcomer government, explicitly anti-Japanese, saw its usefulness and reluctantly accepted baseball.

    3 Whether this nation meant “Free China” (as in the grand project supported by Chiang’s regime who arrived just two decades prior) or “Taiwan” (as in the physical land with which most countrymen were inclined to identify), or some combination of the two national identities, was contentious and remains a debatable topic.

    4 I also discuss this in my article published in NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture.

    5 Kuo’s name has also been translated as Yen-Tsu Kuo, as he was registered in the Little League system.

    6 National resources continue to be poured into player development. Plenty of professional players have performed at the highest level in Japan and beyond.

    For more on Taiwanese baseball, follow Jerry Chen’s site, The Taipei Sun

    https://www.thetaipeisun.com

  • Illusions of a National Game: The Myths That Built (and Broke) Taiwanese Baseball

    Illusions of a National Game: The Myths That Built (and Broke) Taiwanese Baseball

    by Jerry Chen

    On April 11, 2020, at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic and while the rest of the world put professional sports on hold, the CTBC Brothers played the Uni-President Lions at Taichung Intercontinental Baseball Stadium to start the world’s first professional baseball game of the year. Taiwan, long neglected—or isolated—by the international community, was finally gaining a global audience, not only for its successful COVID-19 response that led to this much-anticipated season-opening, but also for a national sport that had always craved international recognition.

    But this moment in the limelight did not actually elevate the profile of Taiwanese baseball or boost Taiwan’s “soft power” in global influence as reported. One problem was that Taiwan’s major league was confusingly named the Chinese Professional Baseball League (CPBL), and no casual fan was going to research the historical or linguistic context of why that is the case, or care that this league is different from the China Baseball League (CBL) across the Taiwan Strait. Some media outlets used the term “Chinese Baseball League” or “Chinese baseball,”undercutting Taiwanese baseball’s distinct identity.

    After popular podcaster Jared Carrabis erroneously reported, “We are playing baseball in China” in April 2020, he followed up with something perhaps worse: “Correction—it’s a Chinese baseball league in Taiwan. Whatever. It’s baseball. And it’s happening.” The name of the CPBL, now resembling a marketing blunder, has been a contentious topic for decades, involving domestic politics, ethnic identity, and even foreign affairs. However, the name is just a symptom of a much larger, perhaps generational problem. Taiwanese baseball is having an identity crisis, yet its fans seem to be entirely unaware or indifferent.

    As a national game, baseball has captivated Taiwanese fans and reflected a unique and collective self-image in Taiwan for almost a full century. This self-image, as with any other expressions or aspirations of consciousness, is full of complications, contradictions, and ultimately illusions. As baseball faces challenges around the world, any initiative to advance the sport requires an examination of its role in society. For the Taiwanese people, it means facing, coming to terms with, and addressing the harsh realities of their historical relationship with baseball.

    Existing scholarship offers an extensive historiography of baseball in Taiwan. In Playing in Isolation, Yu Junwei provides an assessment of a national game that is arguably hollowed out from within by inorganic incentives. Government policies that focused on maximizing propaganda instead of the long-term development of baseball buoyed amateur participation but led to the game’s decline. In Colonial Project, National Game, Andrew Morris offers a reading of baseball as a manifestation of Taiwanese social identity within the context of globalization. He discusses in depth the historical dynamics between Taiwanese baseball and governing forces like Japan, the Republic of China, the United States, and even capitalism. Finally, in Empire of Infields, John J. Harney makes the case that Taiwanese baseball epitomizes a nuanced history transcending simple narratives of assimilation or resistance. The history of Taiwan is complex, and the history of baseball in Taiwan is no exception.

    Fans around the world view and cherish baseball through the lens of nostalgia; Taiwanese fans specifically find a shared pride in old tales of international glory. Despite undoubtedly creating a collective identity, Taiwanese baseball has sometimes been marked by unsavory goals and means and often entangled with class and ethnic stratification. Investment in baseball development has primarily been made to serve the interests of empires, literal and otherwise. The legacy of those interests continues to hinder the modern game, and a clear-eyed attempt to reconsider baseball’s cultural role is needed for the game’s future in Taiwan.

    In this essay, two of Taiwanese baseball’s most prominent origin stories, the Kano and Hongye legends, are thoroughly examined. The historical incentives of creating or reinforcing myths surrounding these origins are weighed against the cultural costs of upholding them; their many complications or contradictions are laid out and contextualized. While any attempt to amend or remove these culturally pertinent legends will likely be futile, examining the manufactured significance that overlays them is an essential first step toward creating authentic baseball moments beyond historical or extrinsic interests. These cultural moments may just evolve into the beginnings of a new era of Taiwanese baseball.

    Continue to read the full article on Project Muse

    https://muse.jhu.edu/article/968562