Times Colonist

Banged-up ’Cats ready for Falcons

- GAME DAY: VICTORIA AT KELOWNA, 6:35 P.M. CLEVE DHEENSAW

You’ve got to be quick on your cleats in summer collegiate ball.

Not only on the diamond, but in the dugout and management offices. Players come in and out like bees around a hive.

The Victoria HarbourCat­s will be minus two of their key players, who are lost for the season to injury. Six-foot-five pitcher A.J. Block from the Pac-12 Washington State Cougars was 2-0 with a downright stingy 1.92 ERA with 25 strikeouts and only 12 hits allowed and seven walks in 231⁄ innings pitched in six appearance­s. Third-baseman Davis Wendzel from the Big-12 Baylor Bears hit .316 in 10 games.

Block was the scheduled starter tonight for the HarbourCat­s in Kelowna, throwing Victoria’s rotation into disarray.

“Injuries happen in summer ball, spring ball, fall ball and winter ball,” said Victoria head coach Brian McRae.

“You have to deal with them in any league at any time. Nothing surprises us. We have back-up plans. We will piece it together.”

Shutting down injured players immediatel­y is of prime importance in a summer collegiate circuit like the West Coast League, where all the players are on loan from university teams.

“We are only borrowing the players,” said HarbourCat­s GM Brad Norris-Jones.

Reputation counts for everything in leagues such as the WCL, when NCAA teams look for teams on which to place their players for the summer.

“We want the players’ [NCAA] teams reporting no problems when we return them,” added Norris-Jones.

The HarbourCat­s head to the Okanagan for a three-game set against the Falcons (16-10). Victoria is 15-13 overall and 1-0 in the second half of the season.

The WCL North Division playoffs will consist of the winner of the first half of the season — Kelowna, Walla Walla, Bellingham and Wenatchee were fighting it out for that crown in Monday night action — playing the winner of the second half of the season.

“The system is such that we have already passed the firsthalf finish line while those other teams were still reaching the finish line [Monday] night,” added McRae, about the way the playoff berths are decided.

The HarbourCat­s are on a fivegame winning streak, but only the last of those really counted for a Victoria team that must win the second half of the regular season in order to be the second playoff team in the North Division.

Looking ahead, McRae saw some top priorities to address. He said the offence right now is better than the defence. But even that suddenly-potent offence has an issue.

“We are a left-hand dominant hitting team that faces a lot of left-handed pitching,” noted McRae, a former 10-season major-leaguer.

The HarbourCat­s return to Royal Athletic Park on Friday to being a three-game set against the Bend Elks from Oregon.

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