LEVEL OF COMPETITION
Aside from the remarkably well-financed UBC Thunderbirds which are clear stand-outs, there is very little to distinguish rival university baseball programs across Canada. A number of university teams have demonstrated streaks of excellence over the years in their respective groupings including the Brock Badgers in the early nineties, the University of Toronto Blues in the eighties, and Western University and McGill University more recently to name just a few.
Yet, just looking at game results demonstrates how evenly matched many of these teams really are. In 2016, the McGill Redmen won their third consecutive CCBA championship, yet they did so on a walk-off home run against a host Université de Montréal team that finished well below .500 (5-11) in a tightly contested game. While McGill (15-1) seemed dominant during the regular season, their only loss came against the last-place University of Ottawa Gee Gees who were 3-13.
Throughout the OUA, as well, lop-sided blow-outs are quickly followed up with one-run games. As in all baseball, so much depends on pitching and the biggest difference seems to come down to depth. Most teams have at least two good starters. Those without tend to struggle.
Many folks I talk to about university baseball seem to want to know: “How do the Canadian teams stack up against US teams?” It all depends. Judging from the results of non-conference games and the sporadic history of CCBA teams travelling to the US for exhibition games it seems that the better Canadian teams would be fairly competitive against most NAIA, NCAA III and some NCAA II teams but not against NCAA I teams.
This is not surprising given that the vast majority of US university teams wouldn’t be competitive against fully-funded, high scholarship NCAA I teams either. Weaker CCBA and OUA teams with consistent losing records would not fare well at all.
It is also worth noting that quite a few Canadian university clubs feature foreign-born players. Some of these players have played professional baseball and regained their amateur status, have exhausted their NCAA eligibility, or have registered at a Canadian university for graduate studies.
At my our own Carleton University, our shortstop was born in the Dominican Republic, our ace rookie starter was from New Hampshire, our left-fielder is Korean-born, and our top hitter was a Canadian kid who played junior college baseball in Texas. This is not rare in the CCBA where a wide range of returning and experienced players take the opportunity to extend their student-athlete baseball experience.
VARSITY STATUS
The best way to understand Canadian university baseball is as a varsity sport without full varsity status.
University baseball “club” status describes teams that play below that of the varsity and junior varsity team at any given US college or university.
Indeed, there is an entire national organization of club baseball teams in the United States, the National Club Baseball Association (NCBA) with over 300 members from coast to coast representing all three NCAA Divisions and the NAIA.
They are largely self-financed through student levies and, if you’re a baseball romantic and university educator like I am, they are perhaps the best representation of collegial sport and the purest student-athlete experience available.
These are university students playing purely for the love of the game even after they’re told they’re not quite good enough to represent their university on the varsity squad.
This is not what we have in Canada. Canadian teams are the sole baseball representatives at their given institutions. They hold competitive try-outs. At Carleton University over 50% of students trying out for the team were cut in the first week.
But there is one Canadian team that plays in the NCBA that we haven’t mentioned yet: The University of Windsor Lancers. The Lancers are technically a campus “recreation club”, like every other university baseball club in Canada. Yet, as in all cases north of the border, they are also the only team on campus.
Not surprisingly, and as further evidence of the difference between American club teams and Canadian programs, in 2016 Windsor was 14-3 and went on to win the NCBA District 5 East Championship.
Smaller universities with fewer registered students in Canada will likely have different experiences but it does not change the fact that they are, in the end, the best available baseball players at their given institution.
FUTURE OF CANADIAN BASEBALL
Without a doubt, therefore, the most significant pressure affecting Canadian university baseball teams (with the exception of UBC) is adequate financing. Few teams have varsity standing in their respective universities. University baseball teams raise their own funds and receive some support as competitive sports teams, clubs, or non-varsity teams but this is rarely enough for the team to operate. Coaches rent vans for out of town games because they cannot afford buses. Uniforms are re-used and seasons are kept short.
This is largely a function of the relatively late arrival of organized baseball to the Canadian university system in the 1990s under the now defunct Canadian Intercollegiate Baseball Association (CIBA) that housed a mish-mash of university and college teams.
Today, U Sports (the former CIS) functions to organize the regional and provincial university athletics associations (ie. the AUS, RSEQ, OUA and Canada West) for the purpose of facilitating a national championship, setting recruiting and establishing scholarship regulations. Only Tier 1 Sports such as hockey, basketball, and football among others get this kind of attention.
In the only U Sports region that recognizes baseball, the OUA, baseball is considered a Tier 3 sport. The OUA cannot offer a national championship because it has no mandate to do so as a provincial body.
In fact, in the OUA, baseball has received support above that normally ascribed to other Tier 3 status sports including scheduling and statistics. OUA baseball, therefore, is under constant pressure to manage its own affairs.
The issues of varsity standing, the facilitation of a national championship, and adequate financial support for university baseball in Canada are thus interdependent. There can be no U Sports national championship for baseball because it is a not a varsity sport.
And since U Sports does not provide a national championship, baseball is typically ascribed club status by member Canadian universities. It’s a catch-22 that is difficult to change.
Yet, there is a path. Here’s would it would take to make baseball a Canada-wide Tier 1 sport recognized by U Sports. Needless to say, it would require a coordinated effort. To start, the CCBA would need to disaggregate and its two divisions would have to join provincial U Sports bodies. The Northern division would move to the RSEQ and start a university baseball conference there and the Atlantic teams would join the AUS and do the same.
The CCBA would stay on to fulfill its core mandate which is to hold a Canadian University World Series but now it would do so in conjunction with the OUA, and the new RSEQ and AUS conferences. Perhaps the CCBA could also act as a catalyst for an expanded schedule and regional inter-conference tournaments?
Canadian university baseball could then have its cake and eat it too by lobbying from within U Sports for baseball’s rightful place while also enjoying the benefits of a World Series not offered to other Tier 3 sports.
The inclusion of the CCBC, however, would remain a tricky proposition and so the CCBA would have to make a decision about the eligibility of specific programs on a case-by-case basis. There is a chance that the potential for certain Western teams’ inclusion in a World Series could spur reform where needed. Hopefully, a Canada West baseball conference within U Sports would emerge.
In the end, in order for Canadian university baseball to move forward and offer the same type of student-athlete experience found in the US it must benefit from expanded funding, a longer league schedule of 40-50 games, and, of course hold a bona fide Canadian University World Series.
At this time no organization other than the CCBA seems able to act as a catalyst for this change. Baseball leaders across Canada would do well to give the CCBA all the help it needs.
To be sure, there is work to be done but as the tired baseball adage goes “if you build it, they will come.”
In the meantime, you can find me at the local ball diamond taking in another university baseball game. There’s not much more relaxing on a crisp Fall afternoon.