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Vancouver Canadians
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Vancouver Canadians | |
| founded | 2000 | |
| city | Vancouver, British Columbia | |
| logo | Vancouver C's.PNG | |
| uniformlogo | Vancouver Canadians Cap insignia.png | |
| class level | High-A (2021–present) | |
| past class level | Class A Short Season (2000–2020) | |
| current league | Northwest League (2000–present) | |
| majorleague | Toronto Blue Jays (2011–present) | |
| pastmajorleague | Oakland Athletics (2000–2010) | |
| colors | Red, dark red, black, silver, white | |
| mascot | Bob Brown Bear | |
| ballpark | {{plainlist | |
| leaguenum | 5 | |
| leaguechamps | ||
| divnum | 7 | |
| divisionchamps | ||
| firsthalfnum | 1 | |
| firsthalfchamps | ||
| secondhalfnum | 2 | |
| secondhalfchamps | ||
| owner | Diamond Baseball Holdings | |
| gm | Allan Bailey | |
| manager | José Mayorga | |
| website |
the baseball team competing since 2000
- Nat Bailey Stadium (2000–present)
- Ron Tonkin Field (2021)
The Vancouver Canadians are a professional Minor League Baseball team based in Vancouver, British Columbia. Founded in 2000 after the relocation of the Southern Oregon Timberjacks to Vancouver, the Canadians are members of the Northwest League and, since 2021, serve as the High-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays. The team plays its home games at Nat Bailey Stadium.
Over the years the Canadians have grown into a well-attended, successful minor‑league franchise: they have captured five league championships (2011, 2012, 2013, 2017 and 2023) and seven division titles, while becoming the only active Canadian‑based team in affiliated Minor League Baseball after the Ottawa Lynx moved to Allentown, Pennsylvania in 2007. With a strong community connection and steady attendance growth, the club earned the John H. Johnson President's Award in 2013, recognizing its excellence as a minor‑league organization.
The team's affiliation history includes a development partnership with the Oakland Athletics from its inaugural season through 2010 before a transition to the Blue Jays' system in 2011. The 2020 season was cancelled due to the COVID‑19 pandemic; during the subsequent minor‑league reorganization, Vancouver advanced from the Class A Short Season level to High‑A, joining the rebranded Northwest League.
History
Prior to the 1999 season, the Vancouver Canadians Pacific Coast League franchise was purchased by a group led by Art Savage with the intention of relocating to Sacramento, California. Despite winning the Pacific Coast League title and Triple-A World Series, the Canadians moved to California's capital city. The Southern Oregon Timberjacks of the Northwest League announced their relocation to Vancouver. The team, a member of the Class A Short Season Northwest League, assumed the Canadians' name in 2000.
Like the predecessor Pacific Coast League franchise, the new Canadians signed a player development contract with the Oakland Athletics. The Canadians had players such as Nick Swisher, Jeremy Brown, Jason Windsor, Joe Blanton, Rich Harden, Travis Buck, Dallas Braden, and Dan Straily during this period.
2007
In 2007, local Vancouver businessmen Jake Kerr and Jeff Mooney purchased the Vancouver Canadians and secured a 25-year lease with the City of Vancouver Parks Board. Extensive work began that offseason in a full-scale stadium renovation which improved washrooms, concessions, concourses, and children's play area. Point-of-purchase concessions increased substantially.
In January 2008, former Washington Nationals executive Andy Dunn become the President and General Manager of the Canadians.
2010–2012
In spring 2010, the Vancouver Canadians and Scotiabank announced a long-term partnership that would see Nat Bailey Stadium renamed to Scotiabank Field at Nat Bailey Stadium.
The Canadians became the Short-Season A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays following the 2010 season. The team's attendance rose to 162,162 in 2011, a team record. In September 2011, the Vancouver Canadians won their first Northwest League title, defeating the Tri-City Dust Devils, 9–2, to win the final series, 2–1. The following year, the Vancouver Canadians became back-to-back champions for the first time in franchise history, defeating the Boise Hawks, 12–9, to win the final series, 2–1.
2013
In August 2013, outfielder Kevin Pillar became the first alumnus of the team to debut in the major leagues for Toronto.
On September 9, 2013, the Canadians became just the third Northwest League team to win three straight championships, defeating the Boise Hawks, 5–0, at Scotiabank Field at Nat Bailey Stadium to win the final series, 2–1, in front of a sellout crowd. The 2013 season also saw the Vancouver Canadians draw over 195,000 fans to Scotiabank Field, a fifth consecutive team record which included 23 sold-out games.
On November 4, 2013, the Canadians were named the 2013 recipient of the John H. Johnson President's Award, given to Minor League Baseball's top organization. It was the first time a Canadian-based franchise won the award.
2016–2017
In 2016, the Canadians led the Northwest League with a total attendance of 222,363, averaging 6,177 per game. This earned them the 2016 Esurance "Home Field Advantage Award", given to the organization in each affiliated minor league with the greatest attendance per percentage capacity. In 2017, the Canadians won another championship, defeating Eugene, 2–1, to win the series, 3–1. They beat their previous record with 239,527 people in total attendance for the 2017 season, averaging 6,303 per game. On January 26, 2018, Toronto extended their player-development contract with Vancouver through the 2022 season.
2018
Although the Canadians were unable to make the playoffs in 2018, coming in a close second in both the first and second half of the season, they still lead the league in attendance with an impressive 239,086 in total attendance.
2020
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Minor League Baseball season was cancelled. In the winter of 2020 as part the reorganization of minor league baseball, Vancouver received an invitation to continue as the Blue Jays' High-A affiliate. In a further change, they were organized into the High-A West along with five other teams previously of the Northwest League.
2021
The team began the 2021 season playing its home games at Ron Tonkin Field (the home field of the Hillsboro Hops) in Hillsboro, Oregon due to COVID-19 border restrictions. The Canadians finished 5th in 2021, missing out on playoffs.
2022
Prior to the 2022 season, the High-A West became known as the Northwest League, the name historically used by the regional circuit prior to the 2021 reorganization. Vancouver finished 2nd in the 2022 season, qualifying for the first time to the new Northwest League playoffs system. Under the new playoffs system, a single best-of-5 series is played to determine the championship winner. Vancouver lost 3–0 to Eugene to finish runner-up.
2023
In the 2023 season, the Canadians had the best overall record in the Northwest League at 77–54 and qualified for the playoffs by winning the first-half title with a 38–27 record. Vancouver defeated the Everett Aquasox 3–1 to win their first High-A Northwest League Championship.
In 2023, Mooney and Kerr sold the team to Diamond Baseball Holdings, a private equity group that owns over 47 minor league baseball teams.
2024
The 2024 season saw the Canadians again qualify for the playoffs, but they lost the championship series 3–1 to Spokane.
2025
In the 2025 season, the Vancouver Canadians set a new franchise record with an eight-game losing streak from May 15 to 23. The skid began with a 5–4 home loss to the Everett AquaSox on May 15. During the same series, the Canadians also dropped both games of a May 18 doubleheader to Everett. They then traveled to Eugene, Oregon, where their struggles continued with four more losses to the Eugene Emeralds. The losing streak finally ended on May 24, when the Canadians shut out the Emeralds, 9–0, at PK Park.
In June, the Canadians set a new franchise record for consecutive wins. The streak began on June 5, with a 9–4 victory over the Tri-City Dust Devils in Pasco, Washington, at Gesa Stadium. They matched their nine-game winning streak record on June 14 with a 6–1 home victory over the Spokane Indians in front of a sold-out crowd, and then set a new franchise record the following day with a 3–2 win over the Indians before another sold-out home crowd. The Canadians also swept the six-game series, marking the first time in Spokane Indians history that they had been swept since being promoted to High-A.
The franchise record was extended to an 11-game winning streak on June 17, 2025, with a 12–8 victory over the Emeralds at PK Park. The Canadians fell short on June 18 with an 8–1 loss, ending their record-setting winning streak. The Canadians had previously matched their nine-game winning streak three times in the past four years but had not been able to break that record until the 2025 season. They finished the first-half with a 37–29 record, tied with Everett who got the playoff berth due to head-to-head tiebreaker.
On August 13, the Canadians turned their first triple play in High-A franchise history against the Indians in Spokane. A 1-6-3-2 triple play that happened in the bottom of the 7th, where pitcher Aaron Munson threw to shortstop Arjun Nimmala, who then threw to first baseman Carter Cunningham, who threw home to catcher Edward Duran who tagged the runner out. The Canadians missed the playoffs for the first time since 2021, when they placed second-place in the second-half, 11 games behind the Eugene Emeralds.
Ballpark
The Canadians play their home games at Nat Bailey Stadium which had hosted previous minor league teams.
Season-by-season records
Main article: List of Vancouver Canadians seasons
| Season | League | Regular-season | Postseason | MLB affiliate | Ref. | Record | Win % | League | Division | GB | Record | Win % | Result | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Totals | — | 342–298 | — | — | — | 4–7 | — | — | — |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A+W | 55–64 | .462 | Toronto Blue Jays | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| NWL | 67–62 | .519 | 0–3 | .000 | Won Second-Half title | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lost NWL championship vs. Eugene Emeralds, 3–0 | Toronto Blue Jays | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| NWL | 77–54 | .588 | 3–1 | .750 | last=Ewen | first=Steve | date=September 17, 2023 | title=Vancouver Canadians win Northwest League title before loud, proud Nat Bailey crowd | url=https://theprovince.com/sports/baseball/blue-jays-affiliate-vancouver-canadians-win-northwest-league-title-before-loud-proud-nat-bailey-crowd | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240802020624/https://theprovince.com/sports/baseball/blue-jays-affiliate-vancouver-canadians-win-northwest-league-title-before-loud-proud-nat-bailey-crowd | archive-date=August 2, 2024 | access-date=April 11, 2025 | url-status=live | work=The Province | language=en-CA }} | |||||||||||||
| Won NWL championship vs. Everett AquaSox, 3–1 | Toronto Blue Jays | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| NWL | 68–61 | .527 | 1–3 | .250 | Won Second-Half title | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Lost NWL championship vs. Spokane Indians, 3–1 | Toronto Blue Jays | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| NWL | 75–57 | .586 | Toronto Blue Jays |
Canadians attendance
| Year | Total | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attendance | Average | Percent Change | Ref | |||||
| 2000 | 109,576 | 2,884 | N/A | |||||
| 2001 | 118,357 | 3,115 | +8.0% | |||||
| 2002 | 127,099 | 3,345 | +7.4% | |||||
| 2003 | 137,026 | 3,606 | +7.8% | |||||
| 2004 | 140,037 | 3,685 | +2.2% | |||||
| 2005 | 124,708 | 3,370 | –8.5% | |||||
| 2006 | 123,878 | 3,260 | –3.3% | |||||
| 2007 | 126,491 | 3,419 | +4.9% | |||||
| 2008 | 129,073 | 3,585 | +4.9% | |||||
| 2009 | 149,297 | 3,929 | +9.6% | |||||
| 2010 | 154,592 | 4,068 | +3.5% | |||||
| 2011 | 162,162 | 4,267 | +4.9% | |||||
| 2012 | 164,461 | 4,445 | +4.2% | |||||
| 2013 | 184,042 | 4,843 | +9.0% | |||||
| 2014 | 180,187 | 4,870 | +0.6% | |||||
| 2015 | 215,535 | 5,825 | +19.6% | |||||
| 2016 | 222,363 | 6,177 | +6.0% | |||||
| 2017 | 239,527 | 6,303 | +2.0% | |||||
| 2018 | 239,086 | 6,292 | –0.2% | |||||
| 2019 | 235,980 | 6,210 | –1.3% | |||||
| 2020 | - | - | - | |||||
| 2021 | 15,822 | 286 | - | title=Vancouver Canadians | url=https://www.thebaseballcube.com/content/minor_team/14113/ | access-date=2023-08-20 | website=TheBaseballCube.com | language=en}} |
| 2022 | 313,256 | 4,857 | +1879.88% | |||||
| 2023 | 297,437 | 4,541 | –5.05% | |||||
| 2024 | 274,892 | 4,262 | –7.58% | |||||
| 2025 | 277,990 | 4,212 | +1.13% |
Roster
Media
In the 2019 season, radio rights moved from CKST to CISL Sportsnet 650. As part of the deal, Sportsnet Pacific also gained rights to air a package of Canadians games on television.
Notable former players in the major leagues
- Trey Yesavage (2025)
- Alan Roden (2023)
- Mason Fluharty (2022–2023)
- Leo Jiménez (2022)
- Steward Berroa (2022)
- Lazaro Estrada (2021, 2024)
- Addison Barger (2021–2022)
- Orelvis Martínez (2021)
- Brandon Eisert (2021)
- Hagen Danner (2021)
- Max Castillo (2021)
- Adam Kloffenstein (2019, 2021–2022)
- Davis Schneider (2019, 2021–2022)
- Will Robertson (2019, 2021)
- Cam Eden (2019, 2021)
- Luis De Los Santos (2019, 2021)
- Spencer Horwitz (2019, 2021)
- Alek Manoah (2019)
- Vinny Capra (2018)
- Zach Logue (2017)
- Travis Bergen (2017)
- Cavan Biggio (2016)
- Lane Thomas (2015)
- Tim Mayza (2014)
- Tim Locastro (2014)
- Miguel Castro (2014)
- Ryan Borucki (2014)
- Franklin Barreto (2014)
- Richard Urena (2014)
- Roberto Osuna (2012)
- Daniel Norris (2012)
- Dalton Pompey (2012)
- Marcus Stroman (2012)
- Kevin Pillar (2011)
- Aaron Sanchez (2011)
- Noah Syndergaard (2011)
- Justin Nicolino (2011)
- A. J. Griffin (2010)
- Ian Krol (2009)
- Dan Straily (2009)
- Max Stassi (2009)
- Sean Doolittle (2007)
- Andrew Bailey (2006)
- Justin Sellers (2005)
- Jeff Gray (2005)
- Anthony Recker (2005)
- Travis Buck (2005)
- Kurt Suzuki (2004)
- Dallas Braden (2004)
- Landon Powell (2004)
- Gregorio Petit (2004)
- Alexi Ogando (2004)
- Omar Quintanilla (2003)
- Andre Ethier (2003)
- Santiago Casilla (2002)
- Jared Burton (2002)
- Joe Blanton (2002)
- Mark Teahen (2002)
- Nick Swisher (2002)
- Nelson Cruz (2002)
- John Baker (2002)
- Mike Wood (2001)
- Rich Harden (2001)
- Neal Cotts (2001)
- Dan Johnson (2001)
- Franklyn Germán (2000)
- Ron Flores (2000)
- Freddie Bynum (2000)
Notes
References
References
- "Meet Bob Brown Bear".
- "Vancouver Canadians sold to American company, promise business as usual".
- (February 13, 2025). "Blue Jays Announce 2025 Canadians Coaching Staff". Minor League Baseball.
- Johnson, Kelly. (November 2, 1998). "Who's on first? Baseball war heats up after team purchased".
- (October 27, 1999). "Timberjacks will make move to Vancouver, B.C.". Eugene Register-Guard.
- (2013-06-11). "Echoes From 527: Kevin Pillar | Back in Blue Network – Toronto Blue Jays Website and Weekly Video Podcast". Backinblue.kc-media.net.
- "Canadians win third consecutive championship". milb.com\date=September 10, 2013.
- (November 4, 2013). "Canadians earn 2013 President's Award". [[Minor League Baseball]].
- "Northwest League Attendance {{!}} MiLB.com Stats".
- (11 April 2017). "We have the best fans in @MiLB! Come celebrate winning the 2016 @esurance Home Field Advantage Award with your hometown team today!".
- "Canadians win fourth title in seven years".
- (January 26, 2018). "Vancouver Canadians on Twitter". [[Twitter]].
- "Blue Jays retain Vancouver Canadians as minor league affiliate".
- Mayo, Jonathan. (February 12, 2021). "MLB Announces New Minors Teams, Leagues".
- (March 29, 2021). "Vancouver Canadians to call Oregon home at start of baseball season due to COVID-19".
- (March 16, 2022). "Historical League Names to Return in 2022".
- Weinrib, Ben. (September 17, 2023). "Canadians stake claim to fifth NWL crown High-A Blue Jays prospects log timely hits, strong pitching in Finals".
- Canadians, Vancouver. "C's Announce New Owner Diamond Baseball Holdings".
- Zickel, Tyler. (May 25, 2025). "C's End Skid With Masterful Shutout Win". Minor League Baseball.
- Zickel, Tyler. (June 15, 2025). "Historic 10th Straight Win Hands C's Series Sweep". Minor League Baseball.
- Zickel, Tyler. (June 20, 2025). "C's Wrap First Half With 9-5 Win". Minor League Baseball.
- Zickel, Tyler. "Career Night For Stanifer, Triple Play Lead C's To Win".
- Zickel, Tyler. "Career Night For Stanifer, Triple Play Lead C's To Win".
- "2021 High-A West". [[Sports Reference]].
- Ewen, Steve. (September 8, 2022). "Canadians to face Emeralds in Northwest League finals Monday".
- Resnick, Jacob. (September 17, 2022). "Glowenke's blast hands Eugene '22 NWL title".
- "2022 Northwest League". [[Sports Reference]].
- Ewen, Steve. (September 17, 2023). "Vancouver Canadians win Northwest League title before loud, proud Nat Bailey crowd". [[The Province]].
- "2023 Northwest League". [[Sports Reference]].
- Ewen, Steve. (September 9, 2024). "Vancouver Canadians repeat chase starts tonight against Spokane team featuring celebrated prospect Charlie Condon".
- Mast, Allison. (September 15, 2024). "'Spokane needed a title': Rockies' High-A affiliate snaps championship drought".
- "2024 Northwest League". [[Sports Reference]].
- "2025 Northwest League". [[Sports Reference]].
- "Canadians Attendance (2000)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2001)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2002)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2003)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2004)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2005)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2006)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2007)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2008)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2009)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2010)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2011)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2012)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2013)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2014)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2015)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2016)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2017)".
- "Canadians Attendance (2018)".
- "Northwest League Attendance".
- "2020 Minor League Baseball season shelved".
- "Vancouver Canadians".
- "2024 Vancouver Canadians".
- "2025 Vancouver Canadians".
- Ewen, Steve. (2018-10-23). "Vancouver Canadians jump to Sportsnet 650, get TV games in the deal".
- The 2020 Minor League Baseball season was cancelled due to the advent of the [[COVID-19 pandemic]].
- Due to pandemic restrictions during the 2021 MiLB Season, the Canadians played in front of reduced crowds at [[Ron Tonkin Field]] in [[Hillsboro, OR]].
- Due to being promoted from [[Class A Short Season]] to [[High-A]], [[Northwest League]] teams began playing an increased number of games beginning in 2021.
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