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Ken is a man who has been dedicated to
softball in Saskatoon for 28 years, as a player, as a coach or manager
with six national medal-winning teams and as vital member of host
committees for 12 national or world championship events which came to
Saskatoon.
Ken was born in Saskatoon in 1951, grew up
in the Caswell Hill and Bedford Road areas and played sandlot baseball,
minor hockey and high school soccer.
One of his first teams as a player was The
Twisters and he was also with Aberdeen Knights for his first taste of
action in a Saskatoon league, and later the Kosmos and the Golden
Twisters.
He was given the opportunity to join Bob
Stayner's coaching staff with Harmony Centre, who in 1983, were silver
medallists at the Canadian senior women's championships and then a year
later, fourth-place finishers.
He had another happy association in men's
softball, starting with the All-O-Matics, who won Canadian silver medals
in 1986, and then six years with the Rempel Brothers, who were perennial
contenders. This 1987 team, which he managed, won the Canadian Senior
men's championship in a tournament at Calgary. Among his years with the
Rempel Brothers, they also won bronze in 1990, and gold again in 1994.
Ken has been a strong influence in
developing Saskatoon talent and the decision to build a junior program
around Lorne's Lazers in 1993 was important. The 1995 version of the
Lazers finished fourth in the Canadian junior women's finals played in
Saskatoon.
Among a string of teams, which won
successive provincial titles, the 2000 Lazers performed extremely well
and came home with bronze medals for the Canadian championships at
Laval, Quebec. Ken has coached the Lazers since the beginning and was at
the helm again during the past season.
Ken has been active in organizational work
off the field and he is among those who, in 1995, brought the Canadian
junior women's championships to Saskatoon. Among the six other national
tournament host committees was the one in 1996 when Saskatoon was front
and centre in the promotion of the Canadian senior women's tournament.
Probably
the biggest single undertaking in Saskatoon softball ever was the 2002
ISF world's women's championships, which brought an outstanding array of
international teams. Among the stars on the Canadian team was homegrown
shortstop Jackie Nichols. And, mostly, it was an opportunity to see
teams, which now qualify at an Olympic level. Best of all, for Ken, was
the way Saskatoon reacted with overflow crowds in the parks he has long
called his second homes. |