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After an impressive career as a player, Bob
Sawatzky went into coaching, winning four medals with Saskatoon teams at
the Canadian championships and coaching Canada's national team to gold
medal triumphs at the Pan-American Games twice.
Bob grew up in Hague, which was right in the
heart of Saskatchewan softball country. As a boy in elementary school,
he was the catcher and the school’s principal, Carl Ens, often pitched
in games against the high school team.
Bob played senior men's softball with
College Lads, Medallions and Burnells, 1965 through 1968. He went to
Calgary to play for 10 years, playing on six Alberta championship teams
and once winning a silver medal at the Canada Summer Games. He also
played second base and was team captain two of the four years he was
with BetaWell Braves in the Western Canada Major League.
Bob returned to Saskatoon and became coach
of the All-O-Matics, 1980 through 1983, and Rempel Brothers in 1984, and
his teams won two silver and two bronze medals at the Canadian
championships. He was with the All-O-Matics when they toured Japan in
1981 and New Zealand in 1983.
Bob became co-coach of the Canadian National
team and they competed in the 1983 Pan-American Games at Caracas,
Venezuela. The Canadians took the gold medal, surviving a scare against
The Bahamas in the semifinal but then they beat United States soundly in
the final. The Canadians repeated as Pan-American Games champions in
1987 when the tournament was held at Indianapolis.
The world
championships came to Saskatoon in 1988, and the Canadian team finished
with bronze medals in their home stand. Bob's final fling on the
international scene was at a Pan-American qualifying tournament in
Buenos Aires in 1990 and again there was success as the Canadian team
took the gold medal. |