Wilson: WCBL to showcase teams to young talent during Road to Okotoks

“Budding baseball talent will cross paths with all that the Western Canadian Baseball League has to offer in southern Alberta next year.

The meeting of the WCBL and the top young ball players from across Canada will take place thanks to The Road to Okotoks, a national championship tournament set to happen at the Seaman Stadium Complex from July 14-19 in 2026.

The Baseball Canada event will feature 16 amateur academy teams - with rosters of players who are 19 years old or younger - competing against each other for the right to hoist the Morneau Cup, a trophy named after Canadian Baseball Hall of Famer Justin Morneau.”

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SandlotsIan Wilson
Wilson: Morneau appreciates team-first focus of Road to Okotoks national championship

“He’s a Canadian baseball legend and a former National League batting champ, but Justin Morneau did a double take when he was asked to be the face of an exciting new national championship tournament.

Greg Hamilton – Baseball Canada’s director of national teams and head coach of the Junior National Team – approached the two-time Silver Slugger Award winner to see if he would lend his name to the top prize being handed out at The Road to Okotoks event.

“My first thought is, did Larry Walker turn it down?” said Morneau in downplaying his own impressive career and giving a nod to fellow British Columbian Walker, who was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2020.”

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SandlotsIan Wilson
Shushkewich: Duncan top Canadian in 2026 MLB draft rankings

“Left-hander Sean Duncan is one of the busiest high school players in Canada.

Between playing for the Langley Blaze, the Brewers, the Junior National Team, and in various tournaments and showcases on both sides of the border, Duncan (Port Coquitlam, B.C.) is always toeing the rubber, and it seems that the MLB Draft community is taking notice.

This past weekend, MLB Pipeline released its Top 100 Draft prospects for the 2026 MLB draft, and Duncan found himself being the top-ranked Canadian at #77. “

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Whicker: Re-signing Schwarber is about winning now for Phillies

“Hydrologists worry about 2030. So do climate scientists. Some baseball teams do, too, but generally they’re the ones who are trying to placate their fans. There’s nothing more self-indulgent than talking about the Five Year Plan when you’re 60-102 and you’re still charging eight bucks for hot dogs.

The Phillies aren’t worried about 2030. They proved it on Tuesday when they kept Kyle Schwarber, the 32-year-old king of the Three True Outcomes. Although Cincinnati, Baltimore and Pittsburgh tried to bid high for Schwarber, the Phillies put up $150 million over five years. They had little choice. Not only is Schwarber probably the most popular Phillie since Chase Utley, he’s refining the few things he does well. “

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