The Guardian (Charlottetown)

KCBL ball season begins Friday

Kings County league set to begin Friday at Memorial Field

- JASON MALLOY jason.malloy @theguardia­n.pe.ca @SportsGuar­dian

The Kings County Baseball League (KCBL) will begin later this week.

It will look different due to restrictio­ns put in place due to the coronaviru­s (COVID19 strain) pandemic, but the game will go on.

“The guys just want to play ball,” president Lefty Dunn said Monday. “They just want to get out and have some fun.”

There are seven teams playing this season. They are the defending champion Stratford Athletics, Morell Chevies, Peakes Bombers, Cardigan Clippers, Charlottet­own Tigers, Charlottet­own Jays and the P.E.I. Youth Selects.

The Northside Brewers have taken a one year of leave of absence.

The league normally starts during the May long weekend, so the season has been reduced from a 20- or 24game schedule to 12 games per team.

Dunn believes the KCBL is the longest running league in the province at more than 30 years and ensuring it continued was important to the players.

“They just want to keep that streak going,” he said.

The first games of the season will be Friday night at Memorial Field in Charlottet­own when the Chevies and Selects meet for a doublehead­er beginning at 6:30 p.m.

One of the biggest changes this season will be the homeplate umpire calling balls and strikes from behind the pitcher for social distancing reasons.

There will also be limited fan access to the diamonds. Currently there are 50 people allowed at the field, but with each team normally having about a dozen players per game, combined with the two umpires, there would only be a handful of places remaining for fans.

The playoffs are where the league saw its biggest crowds, but Dunn said there might be more interest for regularsea­son games this year.

“With COVID, and no sports the last two or three months, there might be a lot of people want to come out and watch,” he said. “You just don’t know.”

If more than 50 people are at a field, fans will be able to watch the games from their vehicles.

With the New Brunswick Senior Baseball League being cancelled this season, more of the Charlottet­own Gaudet’s Auto Body Islanders’ players are being allowed to play in the intermedia­te league.

The KCBL is allowing each team to carry three of the Islanders this year, compared to two in previous years.

 ?? FILE ?? Stratford Athletics’ catcher Grant Grady dives for a foul ball during the 2019 Kings County Baseball League playoffs.
FILE Stratford Athletics’ catcher Grant Grady dives for a foul ball during the 2019 Kings County Baseball League playoffs.

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