Bringing baseball back to Montreal

Sports January 25, 2012

MONTREAL (CUP) – On September 29, 2004, the Montreal Expos lost 9-1 at home to the Florida Marlins.

It’s been seven years and three months since the last pro baseball game was played in Montreal, but the sport received a shot in the arm recently, thanks to some homegrown talent.

Montreal youth get baseball tips from Yankees catcher Russell Martin (photo by Amanda Laprade/The Link).

Earlier this month, the Montreal Canadiens’ practice facility in Brossard was taken over by baseball pros and aspiring major-leaguers. Around 160 kids lined the halls of the Bell Sports Complex to learn tips from New York Yankees catcher Russell Martin, who played high-school baseball growing up in Montreal.

The event was part of a camp hosted by Baseball Empire, a series of baseball camps directed at every type of player, which intends to aid players aged 7 to 16.

“This is the beginning of something big that may come in the near future,” says Josué Peley, one of the camp’s instructors, who also plays for High-A Salem, the farm team for Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox.

The event, founded by Ivan Naccarata, formerly of the Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball League’s Quebec Capitals, is meant to help boost baseball’s popularity in Montreal since the Expos’ departure.

“Baseball Empire is there to make sure the sport doesn’t die,” says Naccarata. He came up with the idea for doing a camp while wondering what to do with his passion for coaching during a slow off-season.

“Whenever you’re playing professional baseball, there’s a period when you’re not playing, and sometimes you have to find jobs,” says Naccarata. “During the off-season, I’ll be able to create work for these guys right here,” he says, referring to Quebec stars Jonathan Malo and Jean-Luc Blaquière of the New York Mets affiliate AA Binghamton, as well as Peley and other pros.

Naccarata happens to be good friends with ex-Concordia Stinger baseball player Vincent White; he called him up while planning the camp with MartinŃthe de facto star of the camp.

“We just thought it would be a fun thing to do, to use a bit of my popularity, get some kids together, and teach them some of my knowledge,” says Martin.

Earlier this month, at least, they got the spark they were looking for, as the camp sold out all of its spots. This is something that White, now communications manager of Baseball Empire, is ecstatic about.

“We got a huge turnout and we’re very happy about it,” says White, who explained that the whole point of this camp is to give back to baseball’s youth in Quebec.

One of the campers, Anthony Alluisi, 14, hopes to bolster his baseball skills after attending the event.

“I hope that I’m going to perform and learn something from Martin. He’s one of my favorite players,” he says.

Taking on this camp is something that also pleased his mother, Nancy Crnich. “I think this is a good idea, to apply to this camp, because taking on sports is a good way to stay active,” she says.

Thanks to the camp’s success, White hopes more events of its kind will follow.

“The whole idea is to give a series of camps. We hope to have some in the summertime, and definitely some in the fall and the winter of next year,” he says.