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Country music stars give Canadians a huge promo

Jan 12, 2008 @ 02:13 pm by Jeremy

big_and_rich1.JPGAll I can say, is wow.  The Canadians are going nowhere but up, and this just proves that statement!

(Pacific Coliseum - Vancouver, BC) - The Vancouver Canadians have ahandful of new fans as Country music sensation Big & Rich alongwith Cowboy Troy came out for the Vancouver Tour stop wearing VancouverCanadians jerseys and game hats.

The Canadians who will be changing their look for the upcomingseason saw 13-thousand Big & Rich fans go wild when Cowboy Troycame out with John Rich wearing Canadians gear and acknowledged the C’sseveral times during their finale which finished with the Troy signingthe shirt and the hat and giving it to lucky fans in the crowd.

The C’s have made great strides in increasing their public profile,but were humbled to see a Grammy award winning Music Group come out andsupport Vancouver’s baseball club.

Thanks to Country music’s BIG & RICH!!!

C’s Media Boss, Rob Fai, is not only a media genius - but a promotional whiz! If this is part of the Andy Dunn effect, we’re certainly getting a great first impression of how his staff will be working!


Two bad decisions imploded the A’s minor league system… but neither was ‘Moneyball’.

Jan 08, 2008 @ 02:58 pm by Oz

beane-billy.jpgThere’s been a lot of stuff written, and said, (and whined) about Oakland’s recent trades of former Vancouver Canadian Nick Swisher, and former ‘afterthought’ of the Mark Mulder trade, Dan Haren.

Some thinkers are liking the deal, understanding that the worst that will come of it is one player as good as Swisher coming through in the next season or so, while the upside could mean THREE Swishers dropping into the roster by 2009. Others think it stinks, and that it’s just a continuation of the Oakland habit of trading away stars for kids, being cheapskates, and looking towards a future that will never come.

One noted blog pundit, on Elephants in Oakland, thinks Oakland boss Billy Beane "has made so many bad moves that his ‘positive’ moves are really just scabs on the A’s organization wounds he himself inflicted," reasoning that  the two trades "are a stinging rebuke of Billy Beane’s management of the OaklandAthletics Baseball Club, and if you will - the populist Moneyballtheory."

Swisher was one of several first round draft picks for the A’s in 2002.While Lewis spent much of the book explaining (not very well) varyingstatistical analysis methods the A’s purportedly eschewed - NickSwisher was the player the scouting crowd and stat heads could ‘agree’on. The definable stats and the indefinable intangibles and the toolsin-betweens were all there with Nick Swisher.

What Swisherbecame for the A’s was a loudmouth, publicity-whore and/or the face ofthe A’s franchise. Swisher was not a disappointment if you read columnsby Susan Slusser and Mychael Urban. If you look at the projectionsbased on stats and the hopes based on talent and ability - Swisher hadfailed, to date, to live up to the expectations of both the stat headand scouting communities. Swisher’s ability and talent havedeteriorated into ‘old player skills’; power, walks, low average, lackof speed. In 2007 Jack Cust clearly showed that those old player skillsare not worthy of a 1st round draft choice - they could be had,twice-over, (the A’s had Cust in Sacramento for 2005) at the minorleague level.

Now, he makes a good point that the A’s got Cust for nothing, and ended up with someone as good, if not better, than first round draft pick Swisher when they did so. That, to me, would seem to indicate that there’s value in the A’s tendency to steer clear of big money draft picks, and find replacement parts on the market when the need arises.

dotel_octavio.jpgBut Mr EiO goes on to harp on the Octavio Dotel [seen right] and Arthur Rhodes trades (which nobody will deny sucked), decry Oakland’s scouts and draft team as being incompetent, and points out the obvious - that Eric Chavez is a giant hole of suck, in trying to demonstrate that Billy Beane is a very average GM.

In my opinion, he not only cherry picks his data, but he also misses some very important points.

(more…)

The State of the Ballclub

Jan 03, 2008 @ 03:24 pm by Oz

notesfromthenat.gifWell, a lot has gone on with the C’s behind the scenes while we’ve been in off-season mode, and much of it I can’t yet talk about, simply because it’d be spoiling some neat surprises.

Here’s what I can tell you: Nat Bailey Stadium baseball Version 2008 is going to be awesome.

Let’s roll through the highlights.

First, yes, as has been mentioned below, there will be a new logo. The ‘concept logo’ Jeremy found will not be it, nor will it be close to it. Not sure where that one came from, but while the new logo will in all likelihood not be too far removed from the current logo, it will be a far, far, FAR improved version - thank god.

Much as I’ve been pushing for a team name change for a while, and have support on the issue from some folks on the inside, the Canadians name will not change. And to that I say, "Go Capilanos."

The team will have new uniforms - they’re going retro to a degree, but I’m not able to tell you in what way just yet. Suffice to say, you’ll notice the change. From a mile away.

There will be a team mascot, which is a positive step from a fan experience point of view, especially speaking as a soon-to-be dad of two.

All the C’s games will be broadcast in season 2008 - be it via radio or webcast - but here’s the kicker; the home games will be broadcast online via streaming video. FINALLY!

The long awaited changes to the NWL set-up, where the Arizona League is killed off and the Northwest League becomes the new rookie league, have not come, and will likely not arrive in 2009 either, due mostly to nobody in the Major League farm systems having the time or inclination to actually make it happen. That will continue to be threatened for another few years, but nobody is too keen to lose 30 players from their system in any great hurry.

The new Vancouver Team President will be announced next Monday, and though I know who it’ll be, I’m keeping my mouth shut for a bit so the team can announce it to full fanfare, which the announcement will deserve. 

As for this blog, the arrival of video webcasting of the C’s home games means we can shelve plans to do that ourselves. It’d been something I’d been planning for a while, and that we actually had a little budget for this season (thanks to those people who keep hitting the Westjet ad for their holiday travel plans), so we’ll either use that money to pick up a speed gun (so we can finally see how fast C’s pitchers are hurling), or do what we’ve done the last two years and send it to charity.

I’m guessing speed gun. 

On a personal note, I’ve sold my editorial services company, Unreel Media, to an American buyer, so I have a little more spare time than usual. Expect that to bring some more improvements to the site over the coming months - at least until I get my new PR firm up and running.

Oh, and we’ll be looking for new writers for the blog to join Jeremy and myself and really round out the coverage, so if you like the baseball, are committed to seeing a bunch of games this season, and know how to string a few interesting words together, drop us a line. We’ll talk.


Billy Beane is a genius.

Jan 03, 2008 @ 02:51 pm by Oz

swisher-nick.gifWhat better way to storm back onto the blog after a few months rest than by coming back on and directly refuting the guy who has been keeping the hot seat hot in my absence? (Thanks for keeping the blog a-rockin’, Jez. You are, and shall continue to be, the man.)

Yes, today Billy Beane and the Oakland A’s did what few saw coming and traded favorite son, Moneyball 1st round draft pick, and sometime switch-hitting slugger, Nick Swisher, to the Chi-Town Chaussettes Blanches for a handful of solid prospects.

The collective wisdom on this from A’s fans is "booo."

I say otherwise. I think this is a great move, and here’s why.

Frankly, Nick Swisher is ass. Sorry, I know he’s a homegrown talent, and I know he’s a former Vancouver Canadian, and I know he’s a bubbly dude with a great personality who lights up a clubhouse and treats the fans with respect, and I know he’s been a great return on a first round draft pick…

But he’s also a tubby dude who doesn’t hit nearly as hard and long as he should, labours around the outfield, is more suited for the first base spot that’s usually reserved for harder hitters than he, and is prone to long bouts of slumpishness.

Young? Check. Cheap? Check. Better than Eric Chavez? Well, duh.

But still ass.

If we go by batting average (and yes, I know how flawed a stat BA can be), Nick Swisher hasn’t hit above .269 over a full season since his High-A minor league days - and most of those seasons have been far below that level. Yes, he hits home runs, but last year he hit quite a few less (22) than the season before (35), and experienced some horrible dead spots where the only thing he could hit without striking out three times was a nightclub.

In short, he’s a younger Gary Matthews Jr - overrated, full of holes, and despite much promise, unlikely to deliver on anything close to a grand scale. 

So look at it this way - Swisher *might* have a breakout season in 2008 and smack 45 home runs, and if he does, both myself and Beane are fools. But he also might hit *less* dingers than he did in 2007, or, just as bad, the same number. And then he won’t be ‘a kid with great promise who might hit 45′, he’ll be ‘a kid who’ll hit 20 homers a season for you and not be too terrible in the outfield’. 

Swisher’s value is, right now, as high as it’s likely to be, in my opinion. I might be wrong, but I think it’s more likely that I’m right. So by selling him now, before he has a chance to hit .220 next season, the A’s made sure to get the utmost return on their Moneyball investment. 

Look at it this way; clearly, the A’s aren’t looking to compete in year 2008. But with what they’ve got back, they’re a shot at not only competing in 2009, but also the three seasons following - right through the time when their new stadium will be built. 

Now, I’m not going to say that Beane’s odd desire to keep Eric Chavez as he nosedives, season after season, is clever. Nor will I say that I understand why Mark Kotsay hasn’t been traded to the Yankees for a rosin bag, a salted pretzel and a 2-for-1 dry cleaning coupon. But if you understand and adhere to the theory that you sell high (think Mulder, Hudson, and Swisher), buy low (think 39 prospects acquired in the last two weeks), then you’ll see not only what Beane is up to right now, but why he HASN’T sold off Kotsay and Chavez - yet.

 

Trust me - if Chavez starts the season in good form, he’ll be gone by the end of the first month. And if Kotsay just manages to avoid needing more back surgery - ditto. 

It’s going to be a bad time to be an Oakland A’s fan, but if you’re a fan of the system, and of the future, this is going to be an interesting ballclub to be watching up close.

(NOTE: To those who have emailed and called over the past few weeks/months, sorry about being out of reach. I’ve been selling my business and dealing with the imminent birth of kid #2, and making a concerted effort to just leave baseball alone until things get interesting again. That time is here.) 

 


Bears announce new logo

Dec 23, 2007 @ 03:27 pm by Jeremy

9adPBPbb.jpgI don’t know why I just found this out now - but the Yakima Bears have announced a new logo for the 2008 season.

The logo is easily one of the best in the Northwest League, and the hats and jerseys are even better.

Announced on November 20th, the Bears will have a new logo, uniforms, hats and a youth logo as well.  Unfortunately, the only known photos of the new gear aren’t available for saving to computers, so I can only link you the page (to see the pictures click on the photo gallery).

The Bears, who are apparently in the festive spirit, are also giving fans a chance to park for free at all of their Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday games.  There are 15 games in total when you can park for free, but there are still 23 when you must park for 5 dollars.

——–

canadians_1.gif The Canadians are probably a few months away from announcing their future logo, but has it been already put on the internet?

On sharkbite.ca, there is a logo, where the description is "Vancouver Canadians baseball mascot concept". 

Is this a good logo?  Is it even the future logo of the C’s?  Post your comments down below. 

EDITOR’S NOTE: What a shame to see the Bears trash what was one of the best logos in the NWL, and replace it with logos that are just so pedestrian. There’s no history there, no modernity either, just letters and some terrible stock images. The road logo, in particular, is a shocker.

Not sure where the C’s concept logo came from, but if it’s close to what’s coming in February, I’m comfortable with it. I like the big V, and a beaver is a natural fit for the last Canadian minor league ball club. I’d still like to see a new name for the team, personally, but at least this brings the team closer to what is the best sports logo in Vancouver proper - that of the Vancouver Giants.


The quiet times…

Dec 11, 2007 @ 12:30 pm by Oz

bonds_busted.jpgGot a few emails of late asking when we’ll start regular updates of the blog again, so I figured I’d drop by and discuss. 

It’s tough to really do much updating about a low-A short season team around this time of the year. The team isn’t pushing out press releases, the players are only playing in Venezuela and Hawaii, if at all, and aside from a little movement in the Rule V draft, there’s not much to tell on the personnel change front.

And there’s one other thing that’s keeping me from the keyboard of late - the news that the Oakland A’s might be considering taking on the narcissistic criminal fraud that is Barry Lamar Bonds for season 2008.

To put this in terms impossible to confuse, if Barry Bonds wears Oakland green in 2008, this blog will not cover A’s games ever again. I’ll buy myself a Mariners jersey, and start learning the names of Everett Aquasox players.

bonds_drag.jpgNot that we’ll stop covering the Vancouver Canadians (or whatever incarnation they may end up as in 2008 - go Capilanos!) - we’ll totally go wall-to-wall on the C’s as we always have, but once the players leave the friendly confines of Little Mountain, we’ll be following them and only them - not the system they play for.

I don’t make this threat easily - I love the A’s with a passion - but part of the reason I love the team is because of the way they RUN the team. I see Billy Beane as being a smart guy willing to use technology and outside the box thinking and business sense to get ahead, but also as someone who has a sense of moral and ethical fortitude, which leads him to bring in people who a reasonable person can not just support as a player, but like as a person.

Nick Swisher, for mine, is what’s great about the A’s. Milton Bradley, for mine, was not.

mcgwire_mark.jpgAnd Barry Bonds, for mine, is Milton Bradley with anything remotely likable stripped away and replaced with poison, bile, ego and complete vacuum where his character should be.

History will not be kind to the 80’s/90’s A’s, who absolutely rode to glory on the back of steroids, ego and more steroids, but I’ve always justified my passion for the team by saying "that was a different time - a time when I didn’t know the A’s from a hole in the ground - and that isn’t today’s A’s."

If they repeat that loathsome time, for the sake of a few extra tickets sold to casual Giants fans who, collectively, have willingly held Barry’s pecker as he peed all over the record books for the last several years, I’ll have nothing to do with it.

Life is too short to spend it watching someone you hate.

UPDATE: In season 2006, Kane County Cougars catcher Raul Padron hit 2 home runs in the Oakland system. In 2007, for the Stockton Ports, he hit 13.

Today, he was handed a 50-game suspension for steroid use.

Previously, 2003 Vancouver Canadians catcher, David Castillo, has been suspended THREE TIMES for steroid use, while 2004 NWL MVP, Javier Herrera, got nabbed once.

Does Oakland still have a steroid problem? Perhaps, but you can’t really fault them for a couple of minor leaguers doing dumb things to get to the top. If they bring in Barry Bonds, however, "Does Oakland have a steroid problem" becomes a statement, rather than a question.


Canadians release ‘Early Bird’ schedule

Oct 25, 2007 @ 04:49 pm by Jeremy

notesfromthenat.gifThe Canadians were the 6th NWL team to release their 2008 schedule, and they will open the season at home once again.  Their 9th season as a member of the Northwest League features an eight-game road-trip through Everett and Spokane, a six-game bus trip through Oregon against the Emeralds and Volcanoes, as well as an eight-game stay at home vs Salem and Boise.

Game times were not released, because as the release said, "as we finalize a few details from a promotional standpoint".  The "upsetting" thing is that the C’s will close the season on the road.  But if they make the playoffs that won’t end up mattering.

If you want to read the schedule in my view, keep reading, otherwise head to the C’s visual representation of what 2008 will look like.

The boys of summer will kick off 2008 at home, for the fifth straight season.  Tri-City is back for the opening homestand, and that series will run from the 17th (Tuesday) through the 21st of June.  There is a Wednesday and Friday in that ’stand, so if last year’s schedule was any indication there should be two Nooners to open up 2008.

The first road trip takes place on the 22nd of June, finishing out on the 26th.  Vancouver will be in Yakima.

Returning for a six-game stay at home against divisional rivals Eugene and Everett, the C’s will entertain the Vancouver faithful from the 27th of June, all the way through until the 2nd of July.  That’s right fans, the Canadians are going to be at home on Canada Day.

Boise will host Vancouver during between the 3rd and 7th of July, before an off-day keeps the C’s from hosting the Spokane Indians.

The Injuns will be in town from the 9th, until the 13th before Vancouver embarks on a six-day road trip.  This half-a-dozen day bus trip will be to Oregon, where Vancouver will battle Salem-Keizer and Eugene, respectively.

Yakima visits the Nat on the 20th of July, and departs Canada after the 24th.  Vancouver will then play their sixth Eastern Division series of the year on the road against Tri-City.  This series, stretching from the 25th of July, through the 29th, will be the final meeting between the two teams.

An off-day on July 30th forces the dirty Volcanoes to enter town a day later, rounding out the month of July.  Salem leaves on the 2nd of August, before Vancouver goes away for their longest stint of the season.  The eight-game trip will take them through Everett and Spokane, before they come home on the 11th.

They won’t play at home until the 12th, against Salem to start their longest home-stand of the year.  The Volcanoes won’t leave until the 14th, and Boise will come-and-go between the 15th and 19th.  Playing Eugene on the road in late-August is never easy, but Vancouver will have to face the Emeralds before bringing home the Aquasox, making their final appearance at Nat Bailey of the season.

The Aquasox home-stand marks the beginning of a home-and-home between the two clubs.  Vancouver will be in Everett on Tuesday the 26th, and will leave on Thursday the 28th, before meeting the Emeralds one more time.  Eugene is in Vancouver to close out the home portion of the season, on the Labour Day long-weekend.

Vancouver wraps up the season in Salem, on September the 3rd.  Check back soon for the promotional aspects of the schedule, as well as game times.
 


Word on the street: A new look for the C’s?

Oct 01, 2007 @ 12:05 pm by Oz

canadianslogo120x120.jpgUnsure if this is considered a contravention of the Jake Kerr State Secrets Act or not, but I’ve heard now from two different sources now - one close to the C’s and one on the periphery - that the C’s could be looking at creating a new logo for the team.

This, if it happens, would be awesome. Not just ‘that’s cool’ awesome, but something close to ‘yes, that is Natalie Portman sliding her hotel key across the bar towards me’ awesome.

Well, okay, not quite that awesome. But you get the idea.

The current C’s logo is, or was (as the case may be), a mistake. It should have been a ‘V’. It should have been created using something better than Microsoft Word’s image-maker. It should have included a symbol that could be turned into a mascot, or at least been stylized enough that it would be wearable off the field. I mean, come on, what’s with the tiny baseballs? That’s Little League-standard… and to think, the old management paid money for that thing.

First off, if you’re going to do the single letter as a logo thing, it should almost always be the first letter of your city, not your nickname. You don’t see an ‘RS’ on the Boston Red Sox cap, you don’t see a ‘B’ on the Atlanta Braves cap, and you don’t see a ‘D’ sitting atop a Dodger.

Admittedly, you do see an ‘A’ on the Oakland Athletics cap, but that’s because the team has been known as the A’s through three different cities and over a century of history. Nobody else that I can think of goes the same route.

[Update: Upon further thought, I’ve remembered that the Minnesota Twins now go with a ‘T’ logo, but only because the old ‘TC’ they used was ass, and despite having a World Series history with the old ‘M’ logo that should have been permanent. The Seattle Mariners also used to stock an ‘M’, back in their old ‘trident logo’ days, but only because the M fit with the actual look of a trident.. and to be honest, that too looked kind of ass.]

aquasox.gifThe options for the Vancouver Canadians when it comes to a logo are one of two: either you go with a single letter (as the Spokane Indians and Eugene Emeralds did) or a funky mascot that you can sell to the kids (like the Everett Aquasox and Yakima Bears did). There’s really no other option.

The C’s went for the letter, mostly because it’s tough to make a mascot out of a ‘Canadian’. I mean, what would you use - a Mountie? A hockey player? A Tim Hortons donut? A stylized Tommy Douglas? An underpaid doctor? The Vancouver Canucks, with pockets much deeper than the Canadians, have struggled both with how to portray a Canuck on a logo, and how to utilize the straight ‘C’, for years, so I can see why the Canadians would take the easier option.

But when they went for the single letter, they really botched it up. When someone in Eugene or Boise or even North Van sees a giant C on a cap, what’s their first thought about where that cap comes from?

Cincinnati? Chicago? Chilliwack?

‘Couver?

boise_hawks_2004.gifLet’s set aside the fact that we totally ripped the concept, font and appearance of our logo from the Boise Hawks logo [seen left] - you know, the one they just trashed because it was old and outdated?

spokane_indians.jpgLet’s ignore the fact that the Spokane Indians did the exact same logo as ours, only did it eighteen times better [seen right], even getting input from local First Nations folk and using their own font design, rather than just selecting the ‘Playbill’ font in Word.

Spokane’s logo is sellable and relevant to the area. Eugene’s logo is sellable and relevant to kids.

Everett’s logo is so good, in fact, I actually considered buying one of their caps. But the C’s? I have nothing in my wardrobe with that big ugly C. The alternate ‘flying V’ I have plenty of.

But not the C.

tri_city_dust_devils.gifGranted, the C’s logo isn’t as terrible as the Tri-City Dust Devils mess [seen left], which was actually stolen from the Cincinnati Cyclones of the ECHL.

aaa-canadians.gifAnd it’s not the brewery-logo-inspired crap that ours used to be back in the Triple-A days [seen right] (thank God we weren’t owned by Kokanee, or the team would be wearing Yeti suits during batting practice).

But it’s not good. And it needs a change. And the fact that word on the street says a change is gonna come, means the C’s are STILL listening to the fans and giving us what we want.

Crazy massive props, yo.

One final word on the topic: Please, whoever makes the decisions on merchandising, please talk to me before next season. The C’s have never got their merchandising right, and it’s an area I have masses of experience in. Let me design one single t-shirt, and I guarantee it’ll outsell anything else you might come up with by 50% or more. I’ll even give you the team’s next ad slogan for free:

"Small ball, redefined."

Boom.


Playing catch-up

Sep 04, 2007 @ 10:38 am by Oz

Just wanted to let people know that we added some missing game reports down the page. They’d be easy to miss if you check back often and read from the top down, so FYI… look deeper.

I leave you with something that will make you go ‘argh’… according to C’s radio caller, Rampaging Rob Fai, there’s been talk around the NWL that the league may ditch the Western and Eastern divisions next season, making the playoff between the two teams with the best overall records.

This makes incredible sense, especially with the Eastern Division champion likely to be a sub .500 team for the second year running.

Of course, if this decision were made pre-season, Vancouver would be 0.5 games out of the playoffs right now, instead of 18.5 games out of the running. Aargh.

Interesting trivial aside: How good are Salem-Keizer this season? Chew on this: they’re the only team in either division with a better than .500 record on the season.

That’s insane.


The Vancouver Canadians: The last team standing

Aug 30, 2007 @ 01:19 pm by Oz

ottawa-lynx.gifA few weeks back, I bought a small knick knack on eBay - an Ottawa Lynx paperweight. At least I think it’s a paperweight. It doesn’t seem to serve any other kind of purpose that I can see.

Ibought it because, come Labor Day, the Ottawa Lynx will be no more, andthe Vancouver Canadians will be the last remaining Canadian minorleague baseball team.

Think about that for a second - no affiliated minor league baseball anywhere in Canada… except for Vancouver.

Ofcourse, this is a shameful course of events, and one that could havebeen avoided with just the minimal amount of care and concern, but careand concern aren’t words that sit well with baseball executives.

From today’s Globe and Mail:

On Labour Day, the Ottawa Lynx will play the final game of their15-year existence when they close out a six-game homestand against theSyracuse Chiefs, ending an era during which minor-league teams weredotted across Canada.

Less than a decade ago, there were Triple-A teams in Vancouver,Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa. In addition, Canada played host toseveral other major-league affiliates in places such as London, Ont.,Welland, Ont., and Medicine Hat.

Yet when the Lynx depart after this season for Allentown, Pa., theSingle-A Vancouver Canadians will become the only Canadian outpostamong the dozens of major-league farm teams in North America.

Granted, the game isn’t as big up here now that the Blue Jays aren’t incontention and the Expos are gone to Washington, and the ridiculousborder line-ups (mostly heading in a southerly direction) haven’thelped the situation.Nor has the fact that, up north, during April and May, it’s usually either raining, has just rained, or is about to rain.

Andthe fact that US towns and cities are happy to pile loads of taxpayermoney into building stadiums while Canadian cities view socialinfrastructure as something to be avoided is another factor.

Butif you want to know the REAL reason that there’s no minor league ballin Canada, I can sum it up in three words: the Blue Jays.

The Lynx were born when baseball interest in Canada was peaking. The franchise played its first game only five months after the Toronto Blue Jays captured their first World Series, as baseball participation, television audiences and attendance hit record highs.

Ottawa sold out most games during those early days, setting an International League attendance record in their new 10,000-seat facility and becoming the jewel of Canada’s minor-league scene.

But when interest in both the Blue Jays and Montreal Expos began to decline in the mid-1990s, so do did the minor leagues suffer in popularity.

Then there were the economic forces. During the late 1990s and early 2000s, a low Canadian dollar made teams more valuable in the United States than Canada.

Economics, schmeconomics. The failure of baseball at the minor league level in this country is down to the Jays.

And not their lack of results so much as their lack of resolve.

Put simply, the Blue Jays could have seen the game failing in their own backyard and done something about it beyond compelling people in the cheap seats to "Make some noize!" They could have showed a little charity, and helped out surrounding areas to keep their teams. They could have played exhibition games outside of Ontario, or even the occasional in-season game. They could have made their stars into nationwide heroes on the same level as Joe Carter or Larry Walker once were. They could have drafted more local kids, or traded for one or two. They could have dragged a minor league team or two BACK to Canada.

But they did none of this. Instead, they figure wall-to-wall Blue Jays coverage on Sportsnet is enough to keep the kids in Nunavut and the oldies in Thunder Bay interested. The result of that misguided thinking? If Vancouverites want to see a ballgame, they go to Seattle. If Calgarians want to see one, they go to the independent Northern League. If Regina folks want to see one, they’ll head for Chicago.

Sure,there’s no law that says the Blue Jays have to spend money or exacteffort in helping keep minor league ball in Canada. There’s noprovincial or federal directives that say they should sling a fewmillion to cities to help them build stadiums that could have helpedthem keep their teams. There’s nothing in the bible that says "thoushalt build the sport in your own backyard if you want people to give adamn when the Yankees and Sox own your ass."

But the fundamentals of business dictate that, if you wantyour company to grow, your industry should grow too. and thefundamentals of sport management suggest that, if your team is playingaway for a week, but your Triple-A team plays just down the street, youkeep the locals interested in baseball ALL. THE. TIME.

TheMariners get this. Their minor league affiliates are as close as theycan be to Seattle, and the results are overwhelmingly positive. Do youhonestly think that Everett Aquasox fans don’t get to Safeco Field towatch the Mariners as often as they do the Flipperkids? Do you notthink Tacoma ball fans convoy past the airport to see their Triple-Aheroes playing in The Show?

Meanwhile, where do the Blue Jaysminor leaguers play? Not Montreal, Ottawa, Hamilton and St Johns, butrather New Hampshire, Florida, New York, and Michigan.

The BlueJays love to call themselves Canada’s team, but where’s the incentivefor Canadians outside the 416 to give a damn about the Jays,when they send their kids to the US to play? Where are baseball fans inWinnipeg, Quebec, Calgary and Edmonton supposed to go to get theirbaseball fill, if the Jays aren’t concerned with supplying it?

Now,I understand how the minors work. I get it that decisions such as theone to move the Lynx to Pennsylvania are not made by the Rogers board,but that board can damn well have a say, and when the city of Ottawacouldn’t or wouldn’t raise the cash to upgrade the ballpark there (oreven build parking for it, or even not destroy the existing parking),the Jays could have ridden in like local heroes, offered to build a newballpark, and taken over the affiliation of the team while doing so.

For$10-25m, the team could have exploited a great real estate opportunity,anchored itself among Ottawa’s ball fans as ‘their team’, and securedthe ability to have their call-ups a short drive away, rather than ashort flight - for decades to come.

But they don’t. And themotards who don’t think these things through will say "Canadians don’tlike baseball", even as the Vancouver Canadians attendance figures spikeup dramatically (for Low-A short season ball, at that), and thousands of Vancouverites tackle the bordercrossing every weekend to see Mariners games some four hours away.

City officials will say "I won’t waste taxpayer money on stadiums",even as stadium developments across the United States, from Memphis toBalitmore to Albuquerque to Round Rock, rejuvenate downtrodden areasand bring in millions of dollars (and thousands of jobs) to localeconomies, as well as giving local populations some 70 nights ofentertainment every summer that they otherwise would have spentwatching TV.

As for the economics reasoning that Ottawa’s owners are trotting out as the logic behind their move, it’s funny that as they leave, the Independent Can-Am League is looking to not just move in to the city, but take over the stadium lease.

[Can-Am League ‘Quebec Capitales’ owner Miles] Wolff is also betting that Canadians still have plenty of appetite for baseball. Right now, he’s bidding to take over the final two years of the Lynx lease and operate a Can-Am League team in Ottawa next spring, with a schedule that runs from late May to September.

"There is and has always been great baseball interest in Canada," Wolff said. "People say what can you do better than the Lynx? Well, we don’t have to play in April and May when the weather is terrible and the Senators are doing well."

The Ottawa Lynx are dead, just as the Edmonton Cubs,Dodgers, Drakes, Eskimos, Grays, Legislatures, Navy Cardinals andTrappers died off. They’re dead like the Calgary Cannons, or theMedicine Hat Blue Jays, or the Pulaski Blue Jays, or the St CatherinesBlue Jays, or the Montreal Royales, Royals and Royals Accomplishments.Extinct like the Victoria Rosebuds. Gone the way of the VancouverAsahi. Fallen off the twig like the Winnipeg Maroons and Whips. Or like the entire ill-conceived, ill-fated, corruptly-run Canadian Baseball League.

May the baseball gods have mercy on their souls.

And ours for letting it happen.


Rob?s and Matt?s road trip, Days 6 & 7: Tacoma to Everett

Aug 30, 2007 @ 12:38 am by Oz

mcgowan_baker.jpgAugust 6th 2007: Tacoma Rainiers vs Nashville Sounds (AAA)
Four-freaking-AM is too damn early.

On the road by 5:00; a 12-hourjourney ahead. I drove from Sacramento to Medford, Matt drove to Salem,and I took us into Tacoma.

We rolled in at 4:45, booked into the "6",cleaned up a little, and left for Cheney Stadium at 6:15. Since it’s aMonday, I figured we had some extra time, because Cheney draws about aswell as the Nat on a Monday.

The one thing to always look forward to atCheney is the mural of old uniforms they have outside the bar. It’s avisual representation of what logos have come before.

day-6-2007-wall-of-unis.jpg 

(more…)

This isn’t a hockey town. It’s a SPORTS town.

Aug 29, 2007 @ 01:18 pm by Oz

canucks.jpgI just listened to the Vancouver Canucks unveiling their new hockey jersey, and with 8,000 people paying money to go see it (seriously!) and live TV and radio coverage (seriously!), I began to feel a little sad.

8,000 people to see five guys skate around in a new jersey? Seriously?

I tried to go to the Province and Vancouver Sun websites (part of the Canada.com network - which is the nation’s largest internet portal) to actually see what it looks like for myself, but they’ve both crashed under the weight of looky-loos like myself.  

So what chance do our Vancouver Canadians ever have of making the big time when hockey gets that sort of turnout - paid turnout at that - for a ten-minute event?

lit-night-game-laim-butts.jpgThen I looked again at last night’s C’s crowd - 5,035 people. 

On a Tuesday night.

A chilly Tuesday night.

For short-season Low-A ball.

At a time in the season when we have no chance of making the playoffs.

I was flicking through yesterday’s Province and I found a full page in the sports section devoted to the appearance at Nat Bailey Stadium of the Famous Chicken, and more coverage a page later of the previous night’s game.

Then I remembered going to the grocery store yesterday, and nearly walking into a giant sign advertising C’s tickets for sale at $5.95 each. Then I recalled hearing an ad for the C’s over their PA system a few minutes later.

Then I opened The Richmond Review and saw a Canadians ad. This morning I saw a TV commercial for the C’s on one of the network stations in town, and a few days ago, in the shocker of our time, Mike ‘baseball who?’ Pratt actually talked up the C’s on his Sportsnet-simulcast radio show.

And now I’m listening to the nooner.

Vancouver is a hockey town, it’s true. But it’s also a baseball town. It’s also a football town. It’s also a lacrosse town, and a basketball town, and a soccer town.

In short, this is as rabid a sports town as you’ll find, and Grizzlies notwithstanding, if you supply a solid on-field product and don’t take the fan base for granted, Vancouver’s sports mad population will feed the machine and give you their hard earned.

This is a sports town, Jake Kerr. If you keep on building it, we will come.



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