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The CBC's Jeremy Eaton gets the inside track on a new facility, with the Canada Games 2 months away

The CBC's Jeremy Eaton gets the inside track on a new facility, with the Canada Games 2 months away

CBC10-06-2025
A new 100-metre indoor track will hopefully give track and field athletes a leg up. The CBC's Jeremy Eaton gets a tour of what looks like a long white building from the outside, which is part of the Fortis Canada Games complex in St. John's.
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Following in his dad's footsteps, Kamloops baseball player selected in MLB draft
Following in his dad's footsteps, Kamloops baseball player selected in MLB draft

CBC

time20 minutes ago

  • CBC

Following in his dad's footsteps, Kamloops baseball player selected in MLB draft

It's been a big week for Tyrelle Chadwick. On Monday, he was drafted by the Colorado Rockies, giving him a taste of the big league. "It's a huge honour to have the opportunity to play at the next level," he told CBC's Daybreak Kamloops host Shelley Joyce. "It's something I've dreamed about for a really long time." Chadwick, who grew up in Kamloops and recently celebrated his 22nd birthday, has played for the Illinois Sate Redbirds since 2023, making 14 appearances this past season. According to Illinois State Athletics, he was third on the team with 43 strikeouts, threw one complete game and was named Missouri Valley Conference Pitcher of the Week in March following seven scoreless innings against Western Illinois University. Chadwick's family is familiar with Major League Baseball; his dad, Ray Chadwick, played for the California Angels (now the Los Angeles Angels) for one season in 1986. The pair sat down for an interview on CBC Radio before Chadwick heads south to start training. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. How long have you been playing baseball, Tyrelle? Essentially since I was born. I started playing organized baseball when I was four years old. But I mean, I was quite literally raised at the ballpark. So it's been a long time coming. There was a long time that I thought I was going to pursue basketball and thought I was going to try and play that at the collegiate level. It kind of flipped my later years of high school, especially with COVID, not having a senior basketball season. What happens next? So I will go down to Scottsdale, Ariz., actually. I'll have some medical procedures, like drug testing and a physical, to get cleared for everything. And then I'll sign my contract while I'm down there and I'll hop right into it. Ray, you must be thrilled to bits. How are you feeling? Proud papa, very proud. He wanted to pursue his dreams and now he has that opportunity and it's going to be fun to watch. Tyrelle, you're a pitcher. Right-handed. Will they try to change anything about your pitch, teach you new things or new strategies that you might not already have? Yeah, for sure. I mean, they have a great pitching development program. There's always more stuff to learn. I could see potentially adding another pitch to my repertoire. I currently throw three pitches. I throw a sinker, a slider and a change up. And more than likely I'll probably add a cutter of some kind, something that moves kind of the opposite direction as my sinker, which is my normal fastball. Pretty much everything I throw moves to the arm side of the plate for me as a right-handed pitcher and the cutter would move in the opposite direction and still be able to add a little bit extra deception. How fast do you pitch now? I've been up to 98 [miles per hour]. Most of my starts this year were around 92 to 94. I'd get up to 95 or 96 most of my starts. My separator has always been my fastball from the time I was 11 years old. It's been my velocity. So it was definitely a learning experience to kind of be like, OK, I do need to take a little bit off here. There's pitching development down there that I think will allow me to kind of get back into that 96, 97, 98 range and be able to command that a little bit better with some professional development. Ray, your son has been pitching a touch slower lately. Do you know anything about that? Oh, well, yeah. He struggled. So he came home and did some work and went back this year with that, what they call bowling ball sinker. But he was only throwing it 92 to 94. And you know, he dropped two to three miles an hour, but he got in the zone consistently. Lot better control consistently, he was second in the league in fewest walks in the league and first in the league in ground balls. He made a tremendous jump by coming off of his fastball and letting it work and getting it in the zone. Tyrelle, do you come home and talk to your dad about stuff? Do you still have questions for him or do you look for guidance? Yeah, I mean, we still talk about the game while I'm at school even. I mean, obviously I have coaches down there that I work with on a daily basis. But there's definitely, I think now that I am away from home more, we talk a lot more about the mental side of the game than necessarily specific mechanical developments. Ray, you're currently head coach of the TRU Wolfpack baseball team. What's your advice for aspiring young players who want to go all the way? Just like we said about him, it's hard work and, you know, progressing, getting better each year, getting better each time you step on the field each day, and that's what he's done. And if you do that, you'll give yourself a chance.

Ontario refugee agencies host soccer tournament to build community and friendship
Ontario refugee agencies host soccer tournament to build community and friendship

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Ontario refugee agencies host soccer tournament to build community and friendship

Social Sharing Refugees from all over the world came together for an annual soccer tournament in North York this Saturday organized as a way to help newcomers build connections in Canada, and take their minds off the stress of being in a new country. The tournament was put on by the Ontario Coalition of Service Providers for Refugee Claimants, a group of agencies and refugee housing services that are located in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA), said, located in Toronto. Francisco Vidal, executive director of Sojourn House, which provides emergency shelter and transitional housing services to newly arrived refugees in the GTA, said the tournament "uses soccer as a tool to build community and promote healthy lifestyles." Participating in the matches also helps improve players' mental and physical health, he said. "Some of [the players] have not had their refugee claim hearing yet," he said. "This puts their mind away into something that can build community and friendship." Event an opportunity to share experiences Dany Abuela attended the tournament for the first time on Saturday. Abuela moved to Toronto from Ecuador in January with his family. They have been staying at Romero House, an organization that provides refugee claimants with transitional housing and immigration support. "We are happy. Canada is a great country," he said. "This event for us is very important because we can speak with the other people, know their experience." Tenzin Khentse moved to Canada from India in 2021 and now works at the FCJ Refugee Centre as a youth leader focused on preventing human trafficking. He said the event is a good distraction for those dealing with refugee and asylum procedures. "Football is something that everybody enjoys. It's something everybody can relate to, and it's a really good distraction, you just forget about your problems for a while," said Khentse. This year, Vidal said there has been "a lot of hype" around the tournament because of the 2026 FIFA World Cup — which will be hosted in Canada, U.S. and Mexico — as well as the story of Canadian soccer star Alphonso Davies, who was born in a refugee camp in Ghana before he moved to Canada when he was five years old. Soccer team is like a 'new family in Canada' Some refugees living in refugee houses do not have family in Canada, said Diana Gallego, the co-executive director of the FCJ Refugee Centre, located in York. "To become a member of a soccer team, it's kind of [like] 'This is my new family in Canada,'" she said. Gallego said she fled Colombia 21 years ago with her husband and her son. Her son played in the tournament on Saturday. "When we are forced to leave our countries, we do it because our lives are at risk," she said. "To come here and to find an open home and somebody that can welcome you is really important." The coalition has organized five tournaments since 2018. This year marks the first time an agency from Hamilton participated in the tournament, as a way to engage with refugess outside the GTA, Vidal said.

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