Times Colonist

Vansau returns looking to spark HarbourCat­s

- CLEVE DHEENSAW cdheensaw@timescolon­ist.com

VICTORIA 6 BEND 3

If the Victoria HarbourCat­s need any inspiratio­n for their slow start to the second half of the season, they only need look to their latest player addition.

Hunter Vansau is actually a re-addition this week after starring for the HarbourCat­s last season. He returned to the club Wednesday after playing for Mississipp­i State in the recent 2018 NCAA College World Series tournament in Omaha, Nebraska.

It’s how the Bulldogs got there that he most wants to impress on his HarbourCat­s teammates.

“We were 2-7 to start the season and then recorded two key sweeps over the Arkansas Razorbacks [who went on to play in the College World Series final against champion Oregon State] and Florida Gators, who were No. 1 at the time,” said Vansau.

“That turned our season around. Our bats came alive, and our pitching locked in, at just the right time. I also remember last year in Victoria we got off to a slow start before making the playoffs. Baseball is a crazy game. Anything can happen.”

In other words, baseball is a sport of swings — both at the plate and in the standings.

The second half of the West Coast League baseball season began for Victoria at 0-3 after being swept by the defending–champion Knights in Corvallis, Oregon, in a reprise of the 2017 WCL final.

But Vansau helped change Victoria’s luck on Wednesday as he belted the first pitch he saw over the wall at Wilson’s Group Stadium to give Victoria a 2-0 first-inning lead and the ’Cats went on to a 6-3 victory over the Bend Elks to move to 2-3 in the second half. Vansau finished his debut going 2-for-4 with three RBIs.

Mason Shaw picked up the win on the hill for Victoria, going five innings of shutout ball.

The Bellingham Bells won the WCL North Division first-half championsh­ip and playoff berth that goes with it. The Bells will face the second-half champion in the best-of-three North Division playoff final next month.

The HarbourCat­s-Elks set, which began with Victoria’s dramatic 5-4 walk-off victory in the bottom of the 10th inning on Monday, concludes tonight on Caledonia.

Also joining the HarbourCat­s is Vansau’s Mississipp­i State infield teammate Rowdey Jordan, who batted a team second-best .321 this season for the Bulldogs.

Outfielder Vansau only hit .191 and is looking for a strong summer with the HarbourCat­s to propel himself into his senior year at MSU in Starkville.

The six-foot-three Vansau showed what is capable of during a stellar 2017 campaign for the HarbourCat­s in which he batted .359 with eight home runs and 17 extra-base hits for 34 RBIs in 33 games to be named to the WCL’s second all-star team at season’s end.

The HarbourCat­s will be looking for that same kind of production from him again this summer in the second half of the season. On defence, Vansau used his height and agility to track down balls for some memorable catches last year in the Royal Athletic Park outfield.

The better news for the HarbourCat­s is that Vansau can stay through the playoffs this year, if they make it. Because of school commitment­s last year, he had to miss the WCL playoff final against Corvallis after Victoria beat Kelowna in the North Division final. His aim is clear. “I am going into my last year in the NCAA and I want to play pro ball after that,” said Vansau, who grew up in Crawford, Texas, where his family is neighbours of former U.S. president George W. Bush.

“There’s an old saying in baseball: You play as long as they let you.”

Vansau hopes that is for a long time yet. But if that doesn’t work out, he is well prepared for his backup plan: “I already have my degree in finance and am working in the master’s program if the dream of pro ball doesn’t work out.” Good plan. It’s not lost on any WCL players that there were 72 alumni or current WCL players selected in last month’s 2018 MLB draft, including 12 former HarbourCat­s. Several WCL players have gone on to make the majors, including former HarbourCat­s pitcher and now Philadelph­ia Phillies hurler Nick Pivetta. The visiting Bend team boasts former Elks star and 2015 WCL first-team all-star Nick Madrigal, selected fourth overall in the first round of the 2018 MLB draft by the Chicago White Sox, not to mention former Elks centre-fielder Jacoby Ellsbury of the New York Yankees. So it can happen. But only for the rare few, of course. You could say the same for any developmen­t league in any sport.

WCL players such as Vansau are collegians, so they have something to fall back on.

 ?? CHRISTIAN J. STEWART, VICTORIA HARBOURCAT­S ?? Hunter Vansau watches his first-inning homer sail out of Wilson’s Group Stadium on Wednesday.
CHRISTIAN J. STEWART, VICTORIA HARBOURCAT­S Hunter Vansau watches his first-inning homer sail out of Wilson’s Group Stadium on Wednesday.

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