Ontario Blue Jays’ LHP Mason Robertson (Barrie, Ont.) has committed to Hillsborough Community College.
Read MoreOntario Terriers RHP/INF Zachary Saufl has announced his commitment to the Vanguard University of Southern California.
Read MoreWhile the COVID‐19 situation remains fluid, Baseball Ontario is continuing to monitor the situation. Based on the guidelines of the provincial government and public health authorities, they are extending the suspension of all in‐person baseball programs and activities until May 31, 2020.
Read MoreThere may -- or may not -- be a summer schedule for Canada’s elite teams. Yet, one thing we know, one thing a virus can’t take away are the players named to the Rawlings-Perfect Game Preseason All-Region First Team selections. Canada is grouped with Puerto Rico, which also has players eligible for the draft. Joey Ellison’s Ontario Blue Jays as well as Doug Mathieson and Jamie Bodaly’s Langley Blaze had the most Canadians with five players each to the First Team.
Read MoreDevon Teeple, of The GM’s Perspective, recently caught up with his lifelong friend Nick DeForest, who played college ball, as well as internationally in Austria. DeForest is now an athletic director in Austria who is planning a web conference for athletic directors around the world which will take place on April 21 and 22.
Read MoreOntario Terriers infielder Elijha Hammill (Oakville, Ont.) has been recognized by Rawlings and Perfect Game as one of the top Underclass athletes at the high school level in the USA, Canada and Puerto Rico. The list includes 300 players from the 2021, 2022 and 2023 classes. In addition, Terriers’ RHP/ INF Dylan Oborne (Richmond Hill, Ont.) received an honourable mention in the Canada / Puerto Rico Region.
Read MoreOntario Blue Jays alum Noah Skirrow (Stoney Creek, Ont.), who is one of the top Canadian pitching prospects heading into this year’s MLB draft, is trying to stay sharp by pitching in a barn in Pennsylvania that’s owned by his girlfriend’s family.
Read MoreOver the years, the Okotoks Dawgs have developed a special relationship with the Oregon State Beavers, who are three-time NCAA Division 1 National Champions.
Read More“Serious” is the word Okotoks Dawgs Academy coach Allen Cox used to describe infielder Cole Tucker (Mount Pearl, N.L.) during a recent Premier Sports Academy Inc. webcast. It is perhaps “seriousness” that landed Cole a role playing Division I ball with the Niagara Purple Eagles, under coach Rob McCoy.
Read MoreCanadian Baseball Network writer Scott Langdon talked with some of his friends and family members about what they miss most about baseball in this second part of his two-part series.
Read MoreCanadian Baseball Network writer Scott Langdon shares some of his childhood baseball memories and writes about what he misses most about baseball (which, like most of us, is pretty much everything).
Read MoreSix Canadians are on Baseball America’s recently released top 400, 2020 draft prospects list.
Read MoreThe Ontario Blue Jays have temporarily closed their facility and have suspended their season until further notice.
Read MoreOntario Blue Jays RHP Kevin Millar (Georgetown, Ont.) has committed to Southeastern Community College.
Read MoreOntario Terriers and Junior National Team standout infielder Elijha Hammill (Oakville, Ont.) has announced his commitment to the University of Utah.
Read MoreThe Intercounty Baseball League’s Barrie Baycats, Brantford Red Sox and Kitchener Panthers announced in separate statements on Thursday that they would be suspending operations for the 2020 season.
Read MoreThe Canadian Baseball Network would like to extend our deepest condolences to our managing director, Ryan Isaac, on the loss of his aunt Hertha (Isaac) Kornhaus who died from the coronavirus (COVID-19) on April 2.
Read MoreCanadian Baseball Network writer Lukas Weese shares the story of how Jean-Gilles Larocque, owner of The Baseball Academy in Sudbury, Ont., has transformed his facility into a daycare for nurses and doctors during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Read MoreCanadian Baseball Network contributor Scott Langdon writes that baseball and tennis have similar mechanical movements and transferable skills, but the balls at the core of each game are among the most obvious differences in the two sports. He examines how each of the balls are made.
Read MoreElliott: David Calabrese (Maple, Ont.) still atop draft list
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