Canadian baseball star Justin Morneau was willing to put his name to the trophy of a new Canadian amateur baseball championship because he feels the tournament fills a need in the sport.
The Morneau Cup that starts Tuesday in Okotoks, Alta., brings 16 under-19 men’s baseball clubs together from across Canada to determine which one takes home his namesake trophy first.
Morneau, from New Westminster, B.C., is a four-time Major League Baseball all-star and the 2006 American League MVP. He likes that the national championship rewards teamwork.
“So much of the sports world now, especially on the baseball side, has turned to individual events and showcase and ‘how hard can I throw? How hard can I hit?” We’ve lost some of the desire to just win ball games with your friends or with the team that you’re on," Morneau said.
“It is a team and individual sport, but I think it’s become really individualized in the last 10 years with the way we measure and then grade kids and then see how they compete.
“One of the things that I remember the most is playing with the North Delta Blue Jays and North Delta Blue Jays got to go play for a national championship. We had a very good team but you felt like you were competing against the best in the country and I think that’s hopefully what this is going to do.”
Baseball Canada’s head coach and director of national teams Greg Hamilton asked Morneau, who played 14 Major League seasons with Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Colorado and the Chicago White Sox, if the former first baseman would consent to his name on the trophy.
“It was something that was unexpected, but once he explained to me the concept and what we were trying to do, it made a ton of sense,” said the 45-year-old, who now works for the Twins as a special assistant to baseball operations.
“The goal of this was to, whether you’re playing in an ultra-private super-expensive program or playing for your hometown team, the goal was to try and have a true tournament where everyone could kind of be on the same playing level and you get to play against and compete against the best in Canada.”
The road to Okotoks started with 29 teams playing in regional qualifiers to get to the Morneau Cup at Seaman Stadium.
The host Okotoks Dawgs, four teams from B.C., three from Alberta, five from Ontario and one each from Saskatchewan, Quebec and Atlantic Canada will compete over six days to Sunday’s final. There’s also a home run derby Friday.
There’s a natural scouting component built into bringing the top amateur baseball clubs in the country to one event, said Baseball Canada’s chief executive officer Jason Dickson.
“A lot of these travel clubs, they spent a fair amount of time in the U.S., trying to filling up their seasons and playing in some different spots, and we really wanted to create that one event to showcase that level of talent in Canada, keep them in Canada from just a tournament perspective, and really give those players an opportunity to be competitive and be seen,” Dickson said.
“The scouts and colleges like that because it’ll give them an idea of what type of player they may be looking at and from the Baseball Canada perspective, it helps us tremendously on the junior national side.
“We can measure how hard someone throws and how fast they run, but you’re always trying to measure how much compete do they have.”
Each Morneau Cup team was allowed to draft up to three additional players to bring to the tournament.
“It was really up to the club option if they wanted to take some players,” Dickson said. “No restrictions to where they came from so you could draft across the country.
“Some teams might opt not to draft and may be really happy with who they have. Others, maybe they need to add a little bit of talent or maybe they’ve had an injury or maybe just needed to bolster a pitching staff, for a longer form of tournament.”
Morneau will be in Okotoks to hand the trophy to the victors.
“The whole family’s coming up, bringing all the kids and we’re going to spend a couple days there and then we’re going to make our way through the Rockies and eventually end up in back in New Westminster to see some family,” Morneau said.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 13, 2026.
Donna Spencer, The Canadian Press



