The Prince George Citizen

Pitcher turning heads

- TED CLARKE Citizen staff

Softball season is still a few months away and she hadn’t pitched a ball since the fall but you’d never know it watching Corina McClure throwing heaters in the indoor cage.

Each pitch she unleashed at the glove of Jared Potskin seemed to have vapour trails attached and the snap of the ball tenderizin­g that soft leather pocket echoed off the walls.

The word is out on the 17-year-old McClure, a multi-sport athlete who also plays volleyball, and her pitching arm peaked the interest of several teams in the Lower Mainland that hoped to lock up her service as a weekend player available to play for them in tournament­s.

She’s looking forward to being that fly-in player starting in April when she joins the Cloverdale Fury under-19 team. Until then, McClure is working out with Jared and his brother Nick Potskin, a shortstop with the senior men’s national team program, so she can hit the ground running as soon as she gets her chance to return to the outdoor diamonds.

“I’ve learned a lot of things from them, mechanics especially, things I can do on my own to help myself, and a lot of leadership qualities and things I can push for,” said McClure.

McClure grew up playing in the Prince George Minor Girls’ Softball League and in the Thunderbir­ds rep team program. This season, she’s helping coach the U15 Thunderbir­ds team. She’d seen her uncle, Colin Case, play slo-pitch, and he taught her the basics and she started playing house league ball when she was nine. McClure will never forget the day she asked her coach if she could pitch. It was her first season and it happened in a tournament in Quesnel.

“It was an open inning and we were leading 2-0 and I pitched and we lost 22-2,” she said. “I let in all 22 runs but somehow, I still wanted to pitch. My mom looked at me after the game and she was proud of me. I didn’t think anything of it because I thought, this is my first time pitching, I did great. I still pitch today, so it’s OK.”

McClure’s abilities as a chucker skyrockete­d after she attended pitching clinics put on by Jackie Desilets, Softball BC’s Vancouver-based program director, and she plans to continue working with her.

McClure is in her Grade 12 year at Shas Ti Kelly Road Secondary School. In December, she wrapped up her high school volleyball career when the Grizzlies hosted the North Central zone championsh­ip and lost in the final to the D.P. Todd Trojans. She’s now playing club volleyball as a power hitter for the Prince George Kodiaks U-17/18 team.

Until her Grade 10 year, McClure also competed in wrestling, alongside her one-year older sister Kinsley. Kinsley was once fourth-ranked in Canada in wrestling but broke her collarbone, and that incident was enough to convince Corina to stop wrestling and focus more on softball.

Competitio­ns were limited last summer because of the pandemic but she did play for the Little Chiefs in the John Cho Cup native fastball tournament at Spruce City Stadium and was selected as the top pitcher in the women’s division. McClure spent a lot of time on the field with coach Dave Cake and also played a few games in the Spruce City Men’s Fastball Associatio­n. She had hoped to be available to play for the Thunderbir­ds U-18 team this year but that won’t be allowed once she’s registered with her team in Cloverdale.

McClure, an A-B student, plans to study kinesiolog­y and is trying to work out details of scholarshi­p arrangemen­t at Fontbonne University in St. Louis, Mo. The Griffins softball team at Fontbonne has advanced to the NCAA tournament nine times since 2002.

 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE ?? Corina McClure goes through her windup while pitching in the cage at Northern Baseball Academy on Nicholson Street.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE Corina McClure goes through her windup while pitching in the cage at Northern Baseball Academy on Nicholson Street.

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