
Defending Oceania Champion Auckland successfully defended the Australasia League title in 1982. The Avengers improved upon their 97 wins from the prior year, taking the top spot at 102-60. They were 11 games ahead of second place Sydney. The Snakes and Brisbane both have yet to make the playoffs through OBA’s first 23 seasons. For Auckland, this was their third title (1965, 1981).
Gold Coast’s Neville Ryan won back-to-back AL MVPs. The 26-year old left fielder was the leader in triples (27), RBI (119), total bases (369), slugging (.652), OPS (1.009), wRC+ (189), and WAR (8.5), adding 43 home runs and a .297 average. Auckland’s Nigel Chambers won his second Pitcher of the Year. The 32-year old Englishman was the ERA leader (1.84) and WHIP leader (0.75) with 35 quality starts, 10.2 WAR, 354 strikeouts, and a 24-9 record over 323.1 innings. This beat out an excellent season from Adelaide’s Tarzan Rao, who had a 2.20 ERA over 348.1 innings with 484 strikeouts and 13.0 WAR. His K total was the third most in a season to that point in OBA history.

Over in the Pacific League, Honolulu defended its title successfully as well. The Honu set a franchise record with a 107-55 season, 14 games better than the prior year’s effort. Guam had a solid second place season at 93-69, but was still a distant second. Honolulu led in runs scored (641) and runs allowed (482). It was their fourth PL title (1962, 63, 81).
Pushing the Honu to their title was Pacific League MVP Evan Serafina, who surprised many with his effort at age 40. The American second baseman had a 16 year MLB career before coming to OBA and bouncing around between teams since 1980. Serafina signed with Honolulu for 1982 and delivered a banner year, leading in RBI (99), WAR (9.4), slugging (.584), OPS (.928), and wRC+ (201). He added 42 home runs and a .287 average. Pitcher of the Year was Jinhai Mo, winning it for the third time. The 27-year old Australian had won it previously in 1977 and 1978 with Perth. The Penguins traded him to Guadalcanal for a prospect haul prior to 1982. In his one season in the Solomons, Mo led in WRA (1.60), WHIP (0.80), K/BB (8.8), FIP- (53), and WAR (10.6), adding 361 strikeouts and a 23-10 record in 286 innings. This would be Mo’s final OBA season, as he’d move to Chicago and begin a decade-long MLB tenure.
The 23rd Oceania Championship was a rematch from the prior year between Auckland and Honolulu. The Honu would deny the Avengers their repeat, winning the series in five games and sending the cup to Hawaii for the first time. 2B Ruben Tracy was the finals MVP, a 35-year old American in his fourth season with the Honu following a nine year MLB career. Tracy had 8 hits, 3 runs, 2 home runs, and 4 RBI in the series.


Other notes: Honolulu’s Clint Keeling was the Reliever of the Year and tied OBA’s single-season saves record with 53. As of 2037, he and Pakelike Moote still share the record. Guam’s Abraham Tristan became the first OBA player to have a four home run game, doing it against Guadalcanal on September 10 with a 4-5 effort. Gold Coast’s Mateo Garcia tied the single-game strikeout record, fanning 20 against Melbourne on April 21. Nigel Chalmers became the fifth OBA pitcher to 3500 career strikeouts. Ross Deacon became the fourth batter to 400 home runs. SS Adam McMahon won his ninth and final Gold Glove.
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