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Canada secures spot in Baseball World Cup bronze-medal game with walk-off grand slam | CBC News

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Canada secures spot in Baseball World Cup bronze-medal game with walk-off grand slam | CBC News

Team Canada has secured its spot in the Women’s Baseball World Cup bronze-medal game, doing so in spectacular fashion.

The moment came in the fifth inning of Wednesday night’s game between Canada and Venezuela at Port Arthur stadium in Thunder Bay, Ont.

In the bottom of the fifth inning. Canada was leading 6-0 with the based loaded.

Catcher Lucie Anctil stepped to the plate, swung, connected and drove the ball over the right-field wall.

A grand slam is impressive enough, but this was more than that — it was a walk-off grand slam, as the four runs increased Canada’s lead to 10-0. That triggered the tournament’s mercy rule, won Canada the game and clinched the team’s spot in Saturday’s bronze-medal match.

“I’m feeling really, really, really good,” Anctil, whose hometown is La Pocatière, Que., said after the win. “I was confident I could do a hit, but a home run? Honestly I didn’t think that it would happen here.

“I was running for my life and just hoping that she didn’t make the catch.”

The win improved Canada’s record at this week’s World Cup to 2-2, and came off two losses in a row: to Japan on Monday and the USA on Tuesday.

“[Wednesday], the focus was to stay light,” Team Canada manager Anthony Pluta said. “We didn’t do a traditional stretch. We went out, we played a a game of tag, having us run around just laughing, having a good time.

“Just try and keep it light after after that game against the U.S., and maybe that was it. Maybe something woke them up, who knows, but but it was a great game.

“I’d much rather play for a different medal, but we’re playing for a medal, and that’s what it’s all about,” he said.

Gold-medal finalists undefeated

Japan and the United States have punched their tickets to Saturday’s world championship game thanks to victories earlier Wednesday.

Both teams kept their undefeated streaks going, with defending champions Japan defeating Mexico 10-0, and the USA beating Chinese Taipei 9-0.

Team USA’s Ashton Lansdell celebrates after hitting a double at Port Arthur Stadium on Wednesday. (CBC News)

“I think it’s us playing our game, not adjusting to anybody else and making them adjust to us,” Team USA manager Veronica Alvarez said of her team’s success this week. “We’ve played the game as a team, and no one person has shined individually or been the person that we’ve had to lean on.

“That’s a testament to our players and the way they’ve come together as a team,” she said. “They celebrate each other. They don’t only celebrate their own wins, you know, so it’s really good that to see that happen. I love to see them congratulate each other, and be on each other’s side.”

More baseball before medal games

Fans can get a preview of the game on Thursday as Japan and the United States are set to meet at 11 a.m., on the final day of round-robin play.

“We will not let up in that game,” Alvarez said. “We’re playing that game true. Just kind of hopefully getting them a little taste of what’s coming to them on Saturday.”

Two other games will be played Thursday.

Mexico will face Venezuela in the afternoon — the winner will also earn a spot in Saturday’s bronze-medal game — while Canada plays Chinese Taipei in the evening.

No games are currently scheduled for Friday, as it was set aside as a rain day, but there haven’t been any rainouts so far this week. 

The final games will be played Saturday at Port Arthur Stadium: the bronze-medal game is set for 11 a.m., and the Japan-USA final is at 3 p.m.

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