By IAN WILSON
It’s almost rush hour on The Road to Okotoks.
The field of 30 teams who will challenge for the Morneau Cup has been set and pool play schedules have been announced for the tournament qualifiers that are being held across Canada at the end of May.
Described as the baseball equivalent of the Memorial Cup, which pits the top Canadian junior hockey teams against each other every year, this inaugural event is expected to highlight the very best in academy competition from amateur players who are 19 years old or younger.
So, what can we expect from The Road to Okotoks and how does it work? You’ve got questions, we’ve got answers.
Here’s a closer look at the Baseball Canada national championship, which is being hosted by the Okotoks Dawgs.
REGIONAL QUALIFIERS
Three regional qualifiers are taking place in Alberta, British Columbia and Ontario from May 28-31.
The Ontario Terriers, Ontario Nationals, Ontario Blue Jays and Mississauga High Performance Program (HPP) will maintain host sites in Oakville, Woodstock and Mississauga.

A total of 10 teams will compete in the Ontario qualifiers, with the Ontario Nationals, Diamond Baseball Academy, Etobicoke Rangers, Atlantic Frontier and Ontario Kobras squaring off in Pool A, and the Ontario Terriers, Mississauga Tigers HPP, Ontario Blue Jays, North Toronto 17U Elite and Ontario Giants doing battle in Pool B.
The top two teams in each pool will punch their tickets to Okotoks. The third and fourth place programs will compete for remaining spots, while the quarterfinal losers will duke it out for the seventh and final qualifying slot.

The Langley Blaze and White Rock Tritons will welcome teams to McLeod Park and South Surrey Athletic Park in B.C., where the qualifiers will consist of one pool of six teams: the Abbotsford Cardinals, Langley Blaze, Mid-Island Pirates, UBC Thunder, Victoria Eagles and White Rock Tritons.

Following round robin play between the six clubs, the top four will advance to the semifinals and compete for the B.C. qualifier championship on May 31st. All four semifinalists will qualify for the main event in Okotoks.

In Alberta, the Vauxhall Academy of Baseball and Prairie Baseball Academy are hosting at Lloyd Nolan Yard and Spitz Stadium in Lethbridge, as well as Jets Stadium in Vauxhall.
Thirteen squads will clash in the Prairie qualifiers in three separate groupings. Pool A features the Calgary Bucks, HR Sports Academy, Okotoks Dawgs White, Sylvan Lake Gulls Prep and Vauxhall Academy, while the ATHX Academy Redhawks, Calgary Premier Blues, Okotoks Dawgs Red and Team Saskatchewan are going head-to-head in Pool B. Included in Pool C are the AHP Renegades, Calgary Cubs, Parkland Twins and Webber Wildcats Prep.

When pool play wraps up in the Prairie qualifiers, the top two first-place teams will advance to the semifinals. The remaining first-place squad and the second-place programs will then compete in the quarterfinals. Semifinal winners will move onto Okotoks and the losers will compete in a final qualifier game for the last spot.

Each team will take part in a minimum of four games during round robin play at the qualifiers.
Seven teams will advance from the Ontario qualifiers, four will move on from the B.C. tournament and three will make the cut out of the Prairie qualifiers. The Okotoks Dawgs Black team has secured a spot in the championship as the host and one wild card team will also be selected for the 16-team main event.
PLAYING BY THE RULES
The qualifying tournaments and the national championship in Okotoks are wood bat events and Baseball Canada pitch count rules will be in effect.
All games will be seven innings long, with the exception of the national championship final, which will go a full nine innings.
Athletes must be under the age of 19 years old as of December 31, 2026 and they cannot be an active member of a college or university program.
Registration for The Road to Okotoks opened on Nov. 3, 2025 and preliminary rosters had to be submitted by April 1, 2026. A final 24-player roster had to be filed by May 1st for final approval. Player substitutions after that date require Baseball Canada review and approval.
The maximum number of players allowed per roster is 26, with up to three non-Canadian residents or citizens allowed.
Ahead of the Baseball Canada national championship in Okotoks, the 16 teams that qualify will get a chance to participate in a one-round player draft to “enhance rosters and showcase top talent,” according to The Road to Okotoks website.
Through that process, qualified programs will have the opportunity to increase their roster by one player. Eligible players must be Canadian citizens or residents and no more than two players can be drafted by one organization, unless that program is not active during the summer months.
THE MAIN EVENT
The national championship will take place from July 14-19 in Okotoks, Alberta at both Seaman Stadium and Tourmaline Field. If needed, July 20th has been made available as a rain-out day for the event.
Home to the Okotoks Dawgs of the Western Canadian Baseball League (WCBL), Seaman Stadium is widely regarded as one of the top amateur baseball venues in North America. The 5,200-seat stadium regularly welcomes capacity crowds and was recently ranked by the U.S. publication Ballpark Digest as the top summer collegiate ballpark.
All 16 teams competing will be guaranteed a minimum of four round robin games. From there, the field will be cut in half and eight teams will advance to single elimination quarterfinal games. The semifinals and the championship game will follow.
This elite competition will allow Canada’s top academy programs to face each other in a best-on-best format for the first time ever, with national bragging rights on the line. With scouts, college baseball representatives and Baseball Canada coaches in attendance, it will also offer exposure to players and academy programs.
Tickets for the championship games are available through the Okotoks Dawgs website in the form of a tournament pass or a day pass. The tournament pass grants access to all games at both Seaman Stadium and Tourmaline Field. All tickets are for general admission seating, which is provided on a first-come, first-served bases. Children 10 years old and younger get in for free when accompanied by an adult.
THE MORNEAU CUP
The winner of The Road to Okotoks national championship will be awarded the Morneau Cup, which is named after Canadian Baseball Hall of Famer and former American League MVP Justin Morneau.
“It’s an honour to have my name attached to an event that brings together the top amateur talent in the country,” said Morneau.
“Competing in a high-stakes national championship like this pushes athletes to rise to the occasion and take pride in representing their teams and communities. I’m proud to support an initiative that celebrates excellence and helps grow the game across Canada.”
The native of New Westminster, B.C., who represented Canada at four World Baseball Classics, suited up in 1,545 Major League Baseball (MLB) games over 14 seasons, including 11 years with the Minnesota Twins.
Morneau was a four-time MLB All-Star, two-time Silver Slugger Award winner, the first Canadian to win the MLB Home Run Derby in 2008, and the 2014 National League batting champion. He was also inducted into the Minnesota Twins Hall of Fame.
Over the course of his major league career, Morneau recorded a .281 batting average, 247 home runs and 985 RBI.
EVERYBODY’S TALKING
The Road to Okotoks has generated plenty of hype since it was first announced in the fall of 2025.
Here’s a look at what some people are saying about it:
“It’s an opportunity for all the programs in the country that aspire to be the best in terms of their program versus others to tee it up and give them a chance to knock heads in an ultra-competitive environment,” said Greg Hamilton, Baseball Canada’s Director of National Teams and Junior National Team Head Coach.
“I think it’s just a wonderful opportunity to kind of showcase your skills against the best competition we have in the country,” said Russell Martin, who suited up in 1,693 games for the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, Pittsburgh Pirates and Toronto Blue Jays, before he was inducted into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame in 2024.
“I think what it really does is it tests your ability and your talent, compared to other players who are in other academies, and then of course the opportunity to play in front of a tonne of people and scouts, for me that’s the biggest thing,” said Matt Stairs, who played 19 MLB seasons for 13 teams and is now a coach at Dawgs Academy.
“The Road to Okotoks is a bold new chapter for amateur baseball in Canada … we’re creating a platform that not only celebrates elite competition but also supports player development and exposure. Just as importantly, this event helps unify our baseball community from coast to coast by bringing the best together on a national stage. We’re thrilled to launch this with support from the Okotoks Dawgs, Justin Morneau, and some of the most respected amateur programs in the country,” said Baseball Canada CEO Jason Dickson.
“There is no better venue than the Seaman Stadium Complex, and as demonstrated by the sold-out crowds we experience every summer, no better fan base than Okotoks, the communities of the Foothills and the Greater Calgary Area. Rather than have our most elite teams go to tournaments in the United States, it is a game changer that Baseball Canada will provide a format in our own country where the best can meet the best. We cannot wait,” said Okotoks Dawgs Founding/Managing Director John Ircandia.
“When you come into a competition like this, where the only goal is to take home the championship trophy, the Morneau Cup in this case, you kind of get a different sense of what it means to play and to be a baseball player and a teammate. The only thing that matters is being there for your teammates and trying to do whatever you can to win. Hopefully we’re able to get some of the kids in that type of environment where you’re playing with a group of kids, you’re playing with your teammates that you’ve played a bunch of games with. You’re not just getting thrown together for a tournament to show off your skills, and hopefully we can show these kids what it means to be a part of a team and what it means to go out there and chase the championship,” said Canadian Baseball Hall of Famer Justin Morneau.
For more information about The Road to Okotoks national championship, including the regional qualifying tournaments, check out the event website.












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