Coming off the best regular season in their brief history, itās little surprise the are considered the favourites heading into the championship.
Playing in the familiar surroundings of Edith Gay Park, the host Sun Devils couldnāt ask for a much better scenario for the 2017 provincial tournament.
Still, with just four days and a handful of games remaining in the seasonāand six other teams aiming for the same coveted prizeāhead coach Rob Law said his club will be taking nothing for granted.
āWe had a great regular season, but provincials are a completely different story,ā said Law, whose club went 30-8 to finish in top spot. āYou play four round robin games against four different teams, so every inning of every game is crucial.
āEvery team in the league has beaten us at one time or another this year, so thereās no letting your guard down. For our guys, each game will be about playing seven innings with everything theyāve got.ā
The Sun Devils open provincials on Thursday at 2:30 p.m. against Victoria. Round robin games will follow against Vernon and North Shore on Friday, then North Fraser on Saturday.
Like any game or tournament, Law expects his favoured Sun Devils will face some adversity this week at provincials. But based on both team chemistry and characterāwin or loseāthe head coach knows his players will leave it all on the field.
āItās just an amazing group of kids,ā said Law. āI havenāt seen a team thatās gelled like this one. Theyāve got each otherās back and when somebody makes a mistake, thereās someone there to pick him up. Itās a tight knit group.
āEvery kid has taken turns stepping up this year,ā he added. āTheyāre confident but not cocky going into this. Most of all, we want them to have fun, enjoy this and just play hard.ā
The Sun Devils round robin schedule is:
Thursday, July 27 vs Victoria Eaglesā2:30 p.m.
Friday, July 28 vs Vernon Canadiansā9 a.m.
Friday, July 28 vs North Shore Padresā3 p.m.
Saturday, July 29 vs North Fraser Natsā3 p.m.
The B.C. championship final is set for Sunday, 3 p.m. at
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Nelmes no-hits Victoria
In a season that produced more than a few highlights, Dreyton Nelmes and his Sun Devils teammates waited until the last game of the regular campaign to provide perhaps the most memorable moment of all.
The 16-year-old pitcher threw a complete game, no-hitter on Sunday afternoon, as Āé¶¹AV blanked the Victoria Eagles 9-0 in the finale of a four-game series.
Nelmes wasnāt actually aware he had a no-no going until the fifth inning when he heard a Victoria opponent bring it up.
Once his teammates found outāin keeping with traditional baseball superstitionāthey made no mention of the no-hitter and instructed Nelmes to go sit silently by himself at the end of the dugout.
With the sixth and seventh innings to go, Nelmes simply followed the fundamentals of pitching like any other game.
āI was thinking two more innings to go and as long as we win, thatās all that matters,ā said Nelmes, a Grade 11 student at Immaculata. ā(The no-hitter) was in the back of my mind but it was really just doing what I needed to do to help win the game.
āItās a team game, I had to rely on my teammates and thereās no way we could have celebrated this together without them,ā added Nelmes, who struck out seven batters. āItās starting to sink in what I did, itās nice, but Iām more happy for the team.ā
The Sun Devilsā defense was airtight behind Nelmes, making several big plays including Spencer Klassenās leaping grab at second base to take a sure hit away from the Eaglesā batter.
āHe actually looked like he climbed on air, amazing,ā Sun Devils coach Rob Law said of Klassenās catch.
As for Nelmesā performance, Law said it has a special place in the Sun Devilsā three-year history.
āIt was truly amazing what he did,ā added Law. āOur coaching staff leaned in and whispered to each other after the fifth inning and said⦠āYou see what is going on here?ā The three of us just nodded.
āIt was great to watch, I have goosebumps talking about it.ā
Nelmesā effort was preceded by another stellar outing on the mound by a Sun Devilsā pitcher. Jordan Laidlaw tossed a complete game one-hitter in a series opening 10-0 victory on Saturday.
āEverything was working for him, he had full command of his pitches, it was pretty to watch,ā Law said of Laidlawās win.
The clubs split the other two games of the series, with the Sun Devils winning 6-5 and the Eagles bouncing back with a 2-1 win Sunday morning.
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Sun Devils grads
This Sunday night, when the dust settles from the provincial championship, five Sun Devils will officially bid farewell to the program.
Jay Taylor, Noah Foufoulas, Kurtis Wall and Gavin Barrett will all play baseball next season at their chosen university or college, while Noah Ringness-Law will take a year off from school.
Taylor, who went 4-1 this season with a 3.78 ERA, will attend College of the Sequoias in Visalia, California, and will take Auto Mechanics and the core courses to get into physiotherapy.
Foufoulas is going to Thompson Rivers University in the CCBC and will take architectural engineering.
Kurtis Wall, who batted .375 this season, will also go to TRU and will enroll in Bachelor of Business Administration to pursue a degree in Finance.
Barrett, who went 7-1 with a 1.97 ERA in 2017, will stay at home to play in the CCBC with Okanagan College, while taking Associate of Arts leading into a Bachelor of Arts.
Ringness-Law, who led the Sun Devils with an eye-popping .459 average, 37 stolen bases and 31 RBIs, and had no fewer than half a dozen schools interested in his services, is weighing his options of where heāll play next season.
Wall, Barrett and Ringness-Law have all been with the program since its inception in 2015.
āTheyāre going to be missed,ā head coach Rob Law said of all five players. āTo see how far all of them have come since joining the program has been great to watch. These (provincials) will be their last games in that uniform. I know Iām likely going to be teary-eyed when itās all over.ā

