But What Do I Know? . . . Joey Votto, Dave McKay, Edouard Julien, Rowan Wick

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October 8, 2023

By Kevin Glew

Cooperstowners in Canada

*Please note that a prize will be awarded to this week’s trivia question winner.*

Some Canadian baseball news and notes from the past week:

-Cincinnati Reds slugger Joey Votto (Etobicoke, Ont.) confirmed on the Dan Patrick Show on Friday that he plans to play in 2024. There was speculation that the 40-year-old first baseman would retire after enduring two injury-shortened seasons. But Votto said he’d like to return to the Reds. The Reds have a $20-million option on him for 2024 or they can pay him a $7-million buyout. The Reds are likely to opt for the latter, but that doesn’t rule out Votto, who batted .202 with 14 homers in 65 games this season, from returning to the Reds. “The last couple years were crummy,” Votto told Patrick. “I wasn’t healthy for two years, so I’d like to play well. It’s not the taste I want to leave in my mouth.” Votto also told Patrick that he’d consider signing with another club if the Reds weren’t interested in bringing him back. With left-handed hitting DH Brandon Belt unlikely to return to the Blue Jays, Votto could be a nice fit with his hometown club. Another season would allow Votto the opportunity to pass Larry Walker (Maple Ridge, B.C.) for most hits by a Canadian. Votto has 2,135 major league hits, just 25 behind Walker.

-It dawned on me while I was watching the Arizona Diamondbacks in their Wild-Card series against the Milwaukee Brewers that their first base coach, Dave McKay (Vancouver, B.C.), is the only Canadian to have coached on three different major league teams in the postseason. McKay was a coach with the Oakland A’s (1986 to 1996) and St. Louis Cardinals (1996 to 2011) before joining the D-Backs in 2014. And it should’ve dawned on me earlier than this, the D-Backs, with McKay on their staff, made the postseason in 2017.

-Let’s give a tip of the hat to Baseball Canada’s Greg Hamilton and Ernie Whitt this postseason. Heading into the off-season after the 2022 campaign, Edouard Julien (Quebec City, Que.) was a decent prospect in the Minnesota Twins system. But Julien’s stock rose considerably after Hamilton and Whitt opted to bat the 23-year-old leadoff for Canada at the World Baseball Classic in March. All Julien did was go 7-for-13 for Canada with two home runs. It was a performance that vaunted Julien up the Twins’ prospects list and into the major leagues much sooner than expected. During the regular season, Julien set a record for most home runs by a Canadian second baseman in a major league season with 16. He also led Twins’ regulars in on-base percentage (.381) and was second in OPS (.839). He hit a double for the Twins on Saturday in the opening game of their American League Division Series against the Houston Astros. According to the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, this made him the 14th Canadian to hit a double in the major league postseason.

-That certainly was an ugly end to the Blue Jays season. People have asked me what I think will happen next. Well, GM Ross Atkins confirmed in a very confusing press conference on Saturday morning that John Schneider will return as manager. I think what many are missing here is that is contingent on Atkins returning as GM. I’m not sure how safe Atkins’ job is or should be. The one prediction I will make is that I’ll be very surprised if Buffalo Bisons’ hitting coach Matt Hague, who worked wonders with Davis Schneider, Ernie Clement, Spencer Horwitz, Orelvis Martinez, Nathan Lukes and Rafael Lantigua in triple-A this season, is not on the Blue Jays’ big league staff next season. Fun fact about Hague: his father, Paul, was born in Toronto.

-The 2023 season ended on a high note for right-hander Rowan Wick (North Vancouver, B.C.). After being released by the Chicago Cubs in mid-July, the 30-year-old right-hander signed a minor league deal with the Blue Jays and was assigned to the triple-A Bisons where he proceeded to strike out 38 batters in 21 innings, while allowing just 10 hits. That’s good for a whopping 16.3 strikeout per nine inning rate. That has to be good enough to earn him at the very least an invite to a major league camp next spring. After parts of four seasons as an effective reliever with the Cubs, Wick failed to crack the big league team’s roster out of spring training in March and struggled to an 8.60 ERA in 23 appearances with triple-A Iowa before the Cubs released him on July 15.

-On this date 38 years ago, the Toronto Blue Jays played their first postseason game. They beat the Kansas City Royals 6-1 in the first game of the American League Championship Series at Exhibition Stadium. Dave Stieb got the start and pitched eight scoreless innings, allowing just three hits, while striking out eight. Ernie Whitt and Tony Fernandez had two RBIs each to lead the Blue Jays’ offence.

-In case you missed it, I wrote an extensive feature about former Blue Jays closer Tom Henke that was published yesterday. Without Henke in the bullpen in the final two months of that 1985 season, the Blue Jays likely wouldn’t have won their first division title. One story that I couldn’t weave into my Henke article was a great one he told me about the late great Tony Fernandez. “Tony and I were great friends. He was a great spiritual man. He played the game the way it was supposed to be played. And God bless him. I miss him,” said Henke. “I’ll tell you a funny story about Tony. One time I was getting my rear end handed to me in Baltimore. I think I gave up five runs and they were hitting bullets off me everywhere, and then Tony comes running in from shortstop, and I think he thought he was the pitching coach. And he says, ‘Hey, don’t throw any more fastballs, you’re going to get somebody killed.’ And at that point, I was about ready to kill Tony for his expert advice. But you know thinking back on it, it’s kind of funny.”

-Happy 64th Birthday to former Montreal Expos infielder Bryan Little! He batted .251 in 220 games in parts of three seasons with the Expos from 1982 to 1984. He was also the best bunter I’ve ever seen. It’s a lost art today, but Little had eight sacrifice bunts in 1984 alone. He also bunted for several more base hits that season. In 2014, Little was brought into Chicago White Sox spring training camp as a special instructor to work with Adam Eaton and Alejandro De Aza on their bunting skills.

Bobby Doerr, as the Toronto Blue Jays hitting coach

-Forty-seven years today, the Toronto Blue Jays hired Boston Red Sox legend Bobby Doerr to be their first hitting coach. Doerr, who had batted .288 and collected 2,042 hits in a 14-year big league career with the Red Sox, would remain the Blue Jays batting coach through the 1981 season when Cito Gaston took over. Five years after he left the Blue Jays, Doerr was finally elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

-This week’s trivia question: Over the years, two Canadians have hit home runs for the Minnesota Twins in the major league postseason. Name one of them. Please provide your answer in the “Comments” section below. The first one to answer correctly will win a copy of the official 2022 Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame induction program.

-The answer to last week’s trivia question (John Hiller’s shutout against Cleveland on October 1, 1970 made him the second Canadian left-hander to throw a shutout for the Detroit Tigers in a regular season game. Who was the first?) was Mike Kilkenny (Bradford, Ont.) who threw four shutouts for the Tigers in 1969.



12 thoughts on “But What Do I Know? . . . Joey Votto, Dave McKay, Edouard Julien, Rowan Wick

Add yours

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Nice work, Stephen. Morneau is one of them. Thanks for your support. I will get the program in the mail to you. Thanks again.

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Yes, you are correct, Kelly. Nice job! Thanks for your support.

  1. Tom Valcke – Stratford, Ontario – Tom Valcke put his iCASE Baseball Academy as well as his position of Head Coach at George Brown College into hiatus, when Hong Kong brought him there in 2018 to serve as head coach of their Men's Olympic baseball team, where he finished with unprecedented success in the 2018 Asian Games held in Jakarta, Indonesia, spiking their WBSC World Ranking from #41 to #28 in just one year under his tutelage. China then scooped up Valcke, as he became the GM and Head Coach of Panda Sport and Culture, a division of the China Olympic Federation, overseeing baseball and softball, and training the national team coaches of baseball and softball, men's and women's teams. Panda Sport and Culture is based in Zhongshan, China's nationally recognized "#1 Baseball City," located on the southeast tip of China, and has a climate much like Florida. On his own initiative, he spent his evenings working with the local coaches of Zhongshan's local amateur youth baseball teams. For the first time in history, the same city won all four 2019 China National Championship gold medals, in 18U, 15U, 12U and 10U, that city being Zhongshan! Valcke worked with the China Baseball Association and Major League Baseball in helping the world's largest country accelerate their evolution into baseball, and helped them design and build a professional baseball stadium, a 600-room dormitory, and a new HQ for Panda Sport and Culture, where he held the role of CEO, in charge of a staff of 60. Valcke, former Technical Director, and Executive Director of Baseball Canada, and former coach of Team Canada, remains a baseball analyst with CBC Canada Radio and TV. The former president/CEO of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame, who spent a decade as the Canadian Supervisor with the Major League Baseball Central Scouting Bureau, served as a television broadcaster for the Montreal Expos, the GM of the Calgary Cannons Triple-A club, and the CEO/Head Coach of the World Children's Baseball Fair. He is the proud father of Alanna, Jaxon and Mia, and lucky husband of Paula since 1987. Jaxon and Mia are current star players and captains, respectively, of the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds baseball and softball teams. Mia also became the second female in history to play in World Cups for Team Canada Women's baseball team as well as Team Canada Women's softball team. https://www.canadianbaseballnetwork.com/canadian-baseball-network-articles/baseball-nomad-valcke-a-top-amateur-executive http://www.wbsc.org/csta-prestige-awards-honors-tom-valcke/ https://cooperstownersincanada.com/2012/01/23/valcke-recognized-for-global-baseball-efforts/
    Tom Valcke says:

    Adkins was as vanilla as it gets yesterday. His responses were calculated, like a kid in a Spelling Bee, with the end goal get out of the presser by walking the fence like a tight rope walker at the circus. Still not sure if I was watching Game 2, or the Sound of Music, when Fraulein Maria was operating the marrionnetttes to the tune of The Lonely Goatherd. Maybe the Jays could have Rob Thomson teach them how to develop, prepare, talk to all stakeholders in advance, watch the game with his eyes, weigh out pros and cons in the moment, and execute a complex pitching game plan? All the Phillies did yesterday was shutout the Braves in their home park, for the first time in 770 days. Oh wait, right, the Blue Jays could have pursued Thomson as their head coach on multiple occasions, five WS rings and all, so I guess he just didn’t suit them. They fired Montoyo at a point last season where the Jays were in a playoff position. Obviously, that said that making the playoffs wasn’t enough, and the goal was to go deep into the playoffs. So they hired another guy, Schneider, who had never coached a major league game, nevermind an MLB playoff game. Now Schneider is 0-fer-4 in the playoffs, and earning his stripes, like the Jays did with Alex Anthopoulos, so I guess we’re supposed to wait a few more years until John wins coach of the year and escapes out the door, while the core of the current roster fades away. Adkins threw Schneider under the bus yesterday, but stated that they’re keeping him. They put Schneider into a position to fail, and he did, but it wasn’t his fault. He just said yes to a dream offer. Schneider’s story is wonderful, and he deserved a shot as an assistant coach in the big leagues, but not a leap to head coach of a luxury-tax earning roster.

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thanks for sharing your opinion, Tom. Happy Thanksgiving!

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thanks for your comment and support, Scott.

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thanks for your comment and support.

    1. cooperstownersincanada – Kevin Glew is a professional writer based in London, Ontario. His work has been featured on CBC Sports, Sportsnet.ca, MLB.com and Sympatico.ca. He has also written articles for Baseball Digest, Baseball America, The Hockey News, Sports Market Report and the Canadian Baseball Network. He has been involved with the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame for more than 16 years, including a two-year stint as the museum's acting curator.
      cooperstownersincanada says:

      Thank you for reading it, Bob.

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