The Prince George Citizen

‘We’ve all gotten old and this team... is kind of the next generation’

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“We were locals, we didn’t have outside people coming in. We all wanted to be a team and we worked hard at it.”

Before he knew it, Anderson wasn’t just going to tournament­s in Western Canada with his Peavine team.

He became a hired gun, getting picked up by teams and to play for North American championsh­ips in places like Oklahoma, California and Washington. He pitched until he was 55.

“I didn’t make money but I had my expenses paid for to go all over the western United States and I met lots of people and enjoyed my time and the competitio­n was good,” he said.

Peavine was back in the Canada Day tournament lineup for the first time in 15 years.

After losing their first game to Falcon Contractin­g of Prince George the beat the Nak’azdli Pirates 5-1 Saturday night and will face Big Guy Lake Sunday at 8 a.m., and the winner will advance to the semifinal round.

Anderson returned to find a few familiar faces in the crowd at Spruce City Stadium and he was there strictly as a spectator. Now 70, Anderson had his sons Al and Jay playing in the Rangers’ infield, while his grandson (Al’s 16-year-old son) Blake was covering right field.

“We’ve all gotten old and this team that’s here now is kind of the next generation,” said Elmer.

“Once in a while I’ll grab the ball and the arm still feels really good, but I’ve had my years. It’s nice to see this coming back up again. Peavine is starting to start up the young guys now. It was just lack of interest from our area, slow-pitch took over and there were no younger people coming up to pitch.

“Prince George was the team that started to beat us. When they came into their prime, we were the opposite. We kind of dropped off.”

The Regina Golden Hawks were back to try to bring the Canada Day title back to Saskatchew­an, having won it in 2015, followed by back-to-back losses to the Westbank Cardinals in the championsh­ip game in 2016 and 2017.

Albert McNab, a perennial Prince George tournament all-star catcher and former MVP for the Regina team known as the Sundance Hawks, has been coming back every year for the last 30 years. Like Anderson, the team McNab now cooaches spans three generation­s.

Three of McNab’s sons – Calvin, Lyle and Ron – and two of his grandsons – Brandon McNab and Josh Montana – play for the Golden Hawks. Montana, 19, also plays baseball for Cañada College in San Francisco.

The Golden Hawks roster of 11 players also includes pitcher Brock Perry of Prince Albert, Sask., who played for Westbank the previous five seasons.

“All these young guys here on the team, most of their dads played for the Sundance Hawks, so it just kind of carries on,” said McNab.

“We’re mostly family-related and that makes it easier for the management and the coach. We get in a couple of vans when we travel, we buy sandwiches and we’re four to a (hotel) room – we don’t live high in the hog, unless they bring their wives.

“We keep coming back here because Sheldon (tournament organizer Bjorklund) treats us well and he keeps inviting us back and he’s a good friend of ours. We like it here.”

Regina will be hosting the Canadian Native Fastball Championsh­ip, Aug. 3-5. As many as 90 teams are coming and the Canada Day tournament was one of several the Golden Hawks will use as a tune-up for nationals.

The Hawks are focused on playing tournament­s closer to home and have set aside senior A ambitions.

They haven’t competed at the ISC world tournament for two years. The competitio­n in Prince George isn’t quite as strong as it was when the elder McNab was in his prime and it’s the quantity, not the quality, that has diminished.

“Back in the day, you had 10 teams that could win it, here you maybe have three or four that will be there,” said McNab.

To a large degree, it’s First Nations ball players who are keeping fastball at the higher levels alive in Canada and McNab is not alone in his worries for the game’s longterm future.

“Back in Regina we’ve got 16 teams in the league and 12 of them are probably native teams and if we were to pull away and form our own league, that league would probably fold,” he said.

“Sad to say but it’s a dying sport. It’s the pitching. The top three teams here have to have the top pitchers. Pitching is big part of the game.

“Kids are playing in the native communitie­s but the non-native (teams) are struggling now because they didn’t bring up young guys like this. We’ll be good for a while yet, though.”

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