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Parksville Royals Deagle and Plant sign with Golden Tide

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It’s a nice way to start the season if you can swing it.

Two Parksville Royals will head into their last season in purple with their September college plans all sewn up. Campbell River’s Ryan Deagle and Courtenay’s Thomas Plant have both signed with the Victoria Golden Tide baseball team of the Canadian College Baseball Conference  (CCBC).

Head Coach Frank Kaluzniak was quick to praise his players as they enter their final season with the Royals. “Great accomplishment for these guys. They’ve been Royals since day one and have shown tremendous and consistent improvements throughout their tenure with the program. I wish both Thomas and Ryan all the best moving forward. They have been a pleasure to coach.”

Thomas Plant, 6’ 1” and 195 lbs, battled injuries early in 2021 and then showed off an all-around skill set during the season. Plant demonstrated a patient hitting approach with break-out power from the right-side as well as grit and execution on the mound. “I have been training with the Tide this fall/winter and signed to play with them next year,” said Plant. “I want to thank the Parksville Royals as they have helped me become not only the ball player but the person I am today. My goals with the Tide are to bring a championship to Victoria while also getting a good education.”

Signing with the Tide caps off a tremendous 2021 for Campbell River’s Ryan Deagle. Deagle, 6’ 2” and 215 lbs, absolutely mashed at the plate this past season hitting .333/.453/.547. Over the course of the COVID-shortened season and playoffs he drove in a team-leading 22 RBI and hit two home runs to go with 6 doubles and 2 triples. Following the season, the team awarded Ryan the Tyler Phillips Memorial award for outstanding performance. “I wouldn’t be the person or player I am now without the help of coaches Frank, Bruce, Kevin, and Russy. All of my coaches helped promote me to colleges all over North America and always answered my questions. When I left for four months to train with the Golden Tide this past fall, my coaches with the Royals were extremely supportive checking in with me multiple times. Playing with the Royals has been a great experience and I have countless memories of my teammates in so many games and on the road at tournaments,” said Deagle. “The recruiting process with the Tide was easy as I trained with them for 4 months and enjoyed their ways of training and practices. My goal at UVIC is to study sciences and play there for one year and move onto a Division I school on a scholarship.”

“We’re really excited to have Thomas and Ryan join us,” said UVIC head Coach Curtis Pelletier. “We have three coaches who are Royals alum including myself so we believe in what the Parksville program is doing. I’ve had the chance to coach the Biro brothers back in the day as well as Connor Russell. I know the focus on development is strong in Parksville and any chance we can get a Royal on board, we’re ready to jump at that opportunity. Royals alum Ethan Dean has had a great fall for us and we’ll be leaning on him come conference to be a front end guy. Thomas and Ryan spent the fall here in Victoria training alongside the Tide and they have shown extreme work ethic and are ready to compete at the next level.”

Royals Winterball kicks off Jan 9 for players Grade 8 to 12. For more information, go to http://parksvilleroyals.pointstreaksites.com/view/parksvilleroyals/news/news_538180

BC Premier Baseball League

Catching tips: C’s manager Lavallee tells Whalley Chiefs players how to be pro

  Story courtesy of Tom Zilich: https://www.surreynowleader.com/sports/catching-tips-cs-manager-lavallee-tells-whalley-chiefs-players-how-to-be-pro-7349256 Vancouver Canadians manager Brent Lavallee was in Surrey with some wise words for the teen players of Whalley Chiefs. Two decades ago Lavallee was a catcher on a North Delta Blue Jays team coached by Ari Mellios, now with Whalley’s junior team in the B.C. Premier Baseball League. Post-practice at Whalley Athletic Park…

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Story courtesy of Tom Zilich: https://www.surreynowleader.com/sports/catching-tips-cs-manager-lavallee-tells-whalley-chiefs-players-how-to-be-pro-7349256

Vancouver Canadians manager Brent Lavallee was in Surrey with some wise words for the teen players of Whalley Chiefs.

Two decades ago Lavallee was a catcher on a North Delta Blue Jays team coached by Ari Mellios, now with Whalley’s junior team in the B.C. Premier Baseball League.

Post-practice at Whalley Athletic Park on Monday night (April 22), Lavallee talked to the Chiefs about what it takes to be a pro baseball player, and also about some of the pros he’s encountered on his own path up the ranks.

“I played against a lot of the players on the walls here,” Lavallee said of the ballpark banners that salute former Chiefs including Adam Loewen, Kevin Johnston, Andy Myette and others.

In North Delta, Lavallee was teammates with James “Big Maple” Paxton, now pitching for Los Angeles Dodgers, and saw how hard Paxton worked to get to the MLB.

“He threw 78 miles an hour as a 10th-grader,” Lavallee recalled. “I caught his first bullpen, he didn’t even know the pitch signals. He’d scream at me in his high-pitched voice, ‘curveball!’ — and he throws this terrible curveball. I’m yelling at our pitching coach, ‘Does this kid not know?’ And now that kid is pitching for the Dodgers making 12 mill and went from 78 to 92 (miles-an-hour pitches) in 24 months, not by accident. So if you want it and want to work for it, you’ll get it.”

A North Delta native, Lavallee returned to Vancouver this spring to manage the reigning Northwest League champions for a third season. He’s now a fixture on the top step of the dugout at Rogers Field at Nat Bailey Stadium, and has coached in the Toronto Blue Jays system for five years.

Back in the day, he was a catcher who struggled with aspects of the game.

“I was telling my son the other day that when I played for Ari, I couldn’t throw the ball — my pop time was three seconds, 3.05,” Lavallee told the Chiefs players. “I remember my first practice, I turned around and asked him, ‘Was that good?’ He’s like, ‘Good is about two.’ I was like, ‘Alright, I’m about one second away.’

“But as you guys know,” he added, “tenths of seconds are hard to eliminate as a catcher, or as anything. I got that thing down below two by the time I got out of there. But to do it, I got a bucket of baseballs and I’d go two hours before practice, tape a strike zone up on the chainlink, step it off and just throw into the fence.”

Mellios remembered.

“Yeah, he’d show up to Mackie (ballpark in North Delta) and be there by himself throwing the ball, and then we’d start catching practice soon after that.”

Hard work paid off for Lavallee, named Delta’s Male Amateur Athlete of the Year in 2010 while at LSU Shreveport, a Division 1 NAIA School, where he played and coached for many years.

“I still throw pretty well but none of it’s without effort and detailed work,” he said at the diamond in Whalley. “That’s kind of me, that’s the path here, and who knows, who cares where the path goes from here forward, but just try to be the best you can at this moment and you’re going to end up being successful in whatever way.”

Lavallee answered questions choosing the right path to college, trying out for teams, how to approach baseball program managers (“spelling and grammar in emails is important,” he underlined), reading good books (“You Win in the Locker Room First,” by Mike Smith and Jon Gordon) and recovery methods.

“Catching in college, I did what’s called contrast therapy,” Lavallee recalled. “I’d basically ice the heck out of my shoulders and knees and the second my ice time was up, 20 minutes, I’d have a hot bath and then ask my roommate to get more ice bags ready, then put the ice back on right after I got out of the hot tub or hot bath. I felt great to catch nine or 14 innings the next day. I’m not saying don’t ice but there is science out there that says no (that it’s a ‘masking agent’). We drink a lot of tart cherry juice, with extreme anti-inflammatories and a lot of really good attributes.”

The Chiefs players then heard more advice from Lavallee.

“Get in the weight room and don’t leave, and when you leave, go to the (batting) cage, and after you leave that, go to your kitchen and then go to sleep,” he added. “It’s a full-scale thing. You can work in the cage all you want but if you can’t impact the baseball hard enough, you’re not going to do enough damage to make a college want you. If the swing’s not there, it doesn’t matter how much you squat or bench-press.”

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BC Premier Baseball League

Ken Hatton Memorial Tournament Schedule Released

Share Ken Hatton Memorial Tournament Schedule Released – Hosted by the Langley JR Blaze April 16, 2024 11:53 AM PDT From the Blaze website: Join us as we honor the legacy of Ken Hatton with the Ken Hatton Memorial Tournament starting one month today on May 16th, hosted by the JR Blaze. Ken’s dedication to community…

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Ken Hatton Memorial Tournament Schedule Released – Hosted by the Langley JR Blaze

April 16, 2024

11:53 AM PDT

From the Blaze website: Join us as we honor the legacy of Ken Hatton with the Ken Hatton Memorial Tournament starting one month today on May 16th, hosted by the JR Blaze. Ken’s dedication to community and passion for sports inspired us all. Let’s come together to celebrate his life & love for baseball.

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Baseball BC High Performance Pathway’s Document Now Available

Share Baseball BC High Performance Pathway’s Document Now Available February 9, 2024 9:04 AM PST   The purpose of this document is to provide athletes, parents & guardians, and associations with a comprehensive summary of the Baseball BC high-performance program for the 2024 season. This includes explaining the high-performance pathways for each age division, event…

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Baseball BC High Performance Pathway’s Document Now Available

February 9, 2024

9:04 AM PST

 

The purpose of this document is to provide athletes, parents & guardians, and associations with a comprehensive summary of the Baseball BC high-performance program for the 2024 season. This includes explaining the high-performance pathways for each age division, event dates, selection processes, and camp locations. The Baseball BC staff contact for high-performance is Kyle Williams (kyle@baseball.bc.ca)

To view the document, click here: https://baseball.bc.ca/uploads/files/High-Performance%20Pathways%202024.pdf

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