The Daily Courier

Talent comes with trouble

- By DAVID TRIFUNOV

Everything is falling into place for the Kelowna Falcons and Mark Nonis. That’s what has him worried. Even though it was all good news, the team’s general manager hesitated when talking about the squad that will play this summer at Elks Stadium.

“On paper, this is one of the most talented teams I’ve ever had,” he said.

Nine players are expected back from the 2018 squad that reached the West Coast League championsh­ip last August.

Several of those players could hear their names called during this June’s Major League Baseball draft.

The Falcons have reached the WCL final two of the past three seasons and made the playoffs three of four.

When only four of 12 teams qualify for the post-season, that’s enviable territory to occupy.

What has Nonis hesitating? Well, he’s seen talented players come through Kelowna before.

He remembers the Falcons amassing the top hitters from Texas Tech and Auburn— powerhouse South East Conference schools—only to watch the team crumble under the weight of two big egos in Kelowna.

Great talent has to be blended or average talent has to be maximized all in a short timeframe of summer baseball.

“It’s in the hands of the coach to do that,”

Nonis said, adding he has a coach who can do just that.

Ryan Wright, an assistant at Montana State University Billings, will take over

the club.

With Wright on the bench, the first-place Yellowjack­ets are 30-10 in conference play and 12-4 at home.

He’s a “very, very well-respected up-andcoming coach,” Nonis said.

“He’s going to be a guy who’s going to do a lot of good things in baseball.”

Wright was an academic All-American during his playing days and is now completing a master’s degree in sports management.

Management is the key word here. It’s important to have a baseball-first coach who loves strategy and tactics, but also a guy who understand­s “new-age” athletes.

“I love this guy,” Nonis said. “I’m excited to see what he can do for this team.” Again, this all seems like good news. But no matter how many pieces come to play, Kelowna just can’t escape geography or circumstan­ce.

Many of the players the Falcons recruit come from far afield with kids from Washington State, Oregon and California choosing to play closer to home for Kelowna’s West Coast League opponents, Nonis said.

However, the kids from further away have longer travel commitment­s and shorter windows because of staggered starts among colleges across the United States.

Simply, players from the central and eastern parts of the U.S. leave Kelowna.

When the playoffs finally arrive in early August, many of the Falcons must return for the start of the school year.

“Talent wise, we’re going to contend with any team in the league,” Nonis said.

The Falcons are to open the 2019 season on the road against the Bellingham Bells on June 4 before the home-opener against the expansion Ridgefield Raptors on June 7.

 ?? The Okanagan Weekend ?? Elks Stadium will soon have baseball on the field again when the Kelowna Falcons begin West Coast League play on June 7.
The Okanagan Weekend Elks Stadium will soon have baseball on the field again when the Kelowna Falcons begin West Coast League play on June 7.

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