Former Coquitlam Little League champion begins his journey to the Major Leagues

Tim Piasentin’s journey to Major League Baseball begins in Dunedin, Florida.

The hard-hitting Coquitlam infielder is at the minor league complex of the Toronto Blue Jays for the team’s introductory camp of prospects it selected in the MLB Draft on July 13 and 14.

Piasentin, 18, was the Jays’ fifth-round pick — 143rd overall — and on Monday, July 21, the team announced it had agreed to terms with the former Coquitlam Little League All-Star, along with several other of its recent draft acquisitions and non-drafted free agents.

According to MLB Pipeline, a website that tracks prospective Major Leaguers, Piasentin received a signing bonus of $747,500. That’s almost $250,000 more than the assigned value of $503,800 for a player picked 143rd overall.

Piasentin’s contract means he’ll forgo his prior commitment to attend the University of Miami in the fall.

Instead, he’ll likely begin his long and uncertain journey to the Major Leagues playing with Toronto’s rookie-league affiliate, the Florida Complex League Blue Jays, that is based in Dunedin.

As Piasentin continues to develop he could eventually find himself back near home with the Vancouver Canadians, the Jays’ High-A team, its third-highest minor league affiliate.

When he was 12, Piasentin helped take his Coquitlam team to the Little League World Series in Williamstown, PA. He drove in all five runs in its 5-3 win over host Little Mountain in the final of the provincial championship and he hit a home run at the Canadian national championship in Ancaster, Ont.

Piasentin progressed to the Coquitlam Reds program in the BC Premier Baseball League and last spring he graduated from the Okotoks Dawgs Academy program in Alberta that plays in the Western Canadian Baseball League, a top summer circuit for prep school players. He was also part of Canada’s national junior team.

In 2024, Piasentin won the Rawlings home run derby that was part of the Canadian Futures Showcase at the Rogers Centre in Toronto for the country’s top young baseball players.

Scouting assessments praise the bat speed and power of the 6’3”, 200-pound hitter but question whether his defensive capabilities might be better suited to playing first base or right field rather than third base.

Piasentin is the seventh Coquitlam Little Leaguer to crack an MLB organization. The first was catcher Don Gurniak, who was signed by the Montreal Expos in 1970 but never ascended beyond the team’s A-League affiliate before he was released in 1972.

More recently, pitcher Curtis Taylor continues to work his way toward an MLB roster spot. He’s currently playing for the Memphis Redbirds, the AAA affiliate of the St. Louis Cardinals, which signed him to a minor league contract last spring.

Taylor was drafted by the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2016 and has since toiled in the minor league systems of five other MLB teams, including the Jays, Tampa Bay Rays, Washington Nationals, Chicago Cubs and Minnesota Twins. He also played two seasons in the Mexican League.

Coquitlam slugger plucked by the Toronto Blue Jays

A Coquitlam infielder whose bat helped his team of 12-year-old All-Stars reach the Little League World Series, could someday help the Toronto Blue Jays win the World Series.

Tim Piasentin was selected in the fifth round, 143rd overall, by the Toronto Blue Jays in the second day of the Major League Baseball draft on Monday.

The left-hand-hitting third baseman was part of the Coquitlam All-Stars team that went to the Little League World Series in Williamsport, PA, after it won the 2019 provincial and Canadian championships.

Piasentin is a graduate of the Okotoks Dawgs Academy program in Alberta that plays in the Western Canadian Baseball League, a top summer circuit for prep school players. He was also part of Canada’s junior national team.

Piasentin is committed to join the University of Miami Hurricanes in the fall.

Heading into the draft, Piasentin was ranked 160th of the top 250 MLB prospects and he was considered to be Canada’s top high school prospect.

Scouting reports praise the bat speed and power of the 6’3”, 200-pound, 18-year-old but question whether his defensive capabilities might be better suited to playing first base or maybe right field.

Just Baseball’s Tyler Fleming said Piasentin’s “violent swing” is “tailor-made to do damage in the air, especially against heaters.”

“His standout tool is his raw power,” said MLB.com’s assessment of Piasentin.

MARIO BARTEL PHOTO When he was 12 years-old, Tim Piasentin helped lead the Coquitlam All-Stars to the 2019 Little League World Series in Williamstown, PA.

His ability at the plate was already apparent as a 12-year-old with the All-Stars when he drove home all the runs in the team’s 5-3 win over host Little Mountain in the championship final at the 2019 provincials and another five runs in its semi-final win over Hastings.

Piasentin also hit a home run at the Canadian national championship in Ancaster, Ont.

In 2024, he won the Rawlings home run derby that was part of the Canadian Futures Showcase for the country’s top young baseball prospects hosted by the Blue Jays at the Rogers Centre.

World Series still chills Little League players 35 years later

This story first appeared in the Tri-City News on June 7, 2019

A 35 year-old memory still makes the hairs on Brad Robinson’s arm stand up.

So the former Coquitlam Little League baseball player and current coach expects there will be plenty of chills when he and his teammates from the 1984 team that won a Canadian championship and went on to play in the Little League World Series in Williamsport, Penn., are honoured June 15 with a plaque installed at their home ballpark, Mackin Yard.

The passage of time hasn’t diminished the excitement a 12-year-old Robinson felt when the team’s bus pulled up to the famed stadium in Williamsport, aglow with lights in the August night. Or when they received telegrams of encouragement from hockey stars Wayne Gretzky. and Paul Coffey.

“O my god,” he said. “This is unbelievable.”

A teammate, Chad Hanson, said the experience of playing in the world famous tournament that, even back then, was broadcast live on network television, was “the closest I got to playing pro sports.”

In fact, Hanson’s experience even included an interview by one of television’s most famous broadcasters, the late Howard Cosell.

Although the reason he suspects he was singled out for Cosell’s ABC microphone may not have been so illustrious.

Hanson said he caused a bit of a stir in his team’s first game of the tournament, against Belgium, when he fell for the ol’ hidden ball trick in which a baseman feigns throwing the ball back to the pitcher, then secrets it into his glove and waits for the runner to step off the bag so he can be tagged out.

Hanson said, despite his embarrassing gaffe, that magical summer, in which the team from Coquitlam first bested powerhouse teams from Whalley Little League and Windsor, Ont., to win the Canadian championship in Moose Jaw, Sask., then went on to finish fourth in Williamsport, still resonates.

“It gave you confidence to meet new people through sports,” he said.

CONTRIBUTED PHOTO A team photo of the Coquitlam A’s team that represented Canada at the 1984 Little League World Series in Williamsport, Penn. They are: Front (l-r) Scott Leroux, Ryan Seminoff, Jason Lapierre, Chad Hanson, Brad Purdie, Glenn Wright and Greg mein. Back, Sandy Purdie (coach), Jason Hartshorne, Carl Sheehan, Chad Boyko, John Pollock, Bob McDonald, Brad Robinson, Greg Heximer and Lionel Bilodeau (manager).

A lot of those early connections were forged in barracks where all the kids from the eight teams were bunked through the course of the five-day event, eating their meals together, hanging out and playing between games.

“We were just kids,” Robinson said. “We were lucky enough to win some games and get there.”

While the team’s induction into Coquitlam’s Sports Hall of Fame in 2013 exposed their story to a new generation, Robinson said he tries to inform his approach to coaching his own Little League team with the lessons learned by his 12-year-old self.

“I definitely think it’s given me the experience to share with kids what can happen if you put the work in,” he said. “It just transfers over.”

Hanson said seeing how that team brought so many families together, including his dad who paraded around in a chicken suit as the team’s unofficial mascot, instilled in him a lifelong desire to share and give back through sport, which he still does as equipment manager for the Coquitlam Jr. Adanacs lacrosse team.

“It taught me to be the man I am today,” he said.

Though several players from the 1984 team have moved away, or will be unavailable to attend Saturday’s festivities, Robinson said most stay in contact, checking in through email or the occasional get-together. Their bond will endure, he said, especially as the 1984 team has so far been the only team from Coquitlam to ever get to Williamsport.

“It does make it special,” he said.

Port Coquitlam pitcher toils for his Major League shot

Port Coquitlam’s Curtis Taylor is the definitive journeyman baseball pitcher. Since being selected in the fourth round of the 2016 MLB draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks, he’s toiled for 18 different teams, including one in Mexico.
In February, Taylor signed a minor-league contract with the St. Louis Cardinals, his seventh MLB organization. He’s off to a promising start, with a win, 15 strikeouts and a 3.68 earned run average in seventh appearances for the Memphis Redbirds, the Cardinals’ top AAA affiliate.
I talked to Taylor in January, 2019, early in his journey through baseball’s hinterlands.

This article originally appeared in the Tri-City News in Feb., 2019.

Port Coquitlam pitcher Curtis Taylor is headed to the Tampa Bay Rays spring training camp in Port Charlotte, Fla., Feb. 13, as a non-roster invite. He’s ranked among the top 50 young prospects for the Major League Baseball team.

That’s a long way, and many degrees warmer than when Taylor’s dad, Wes, used to haul the family’s TV into the garage of their Port Coquitlam home in the fall so he could enjoy watching his beloved New York Yankees battle for the playoffs and then the World Series like he was in the same chill air as Yankee Stadium.

The experience instilled in Curtis a love for the game and set him on a path that may yet let him experience fall baseball in New York City for real. From the pitcher’s mound.

Taylor, 23, was drafted in the fourth round of the 2016 MLB draft by the Arizona Diamondbacks, and he’s been rising through baseball’s minor leagues ever since.

The 6’6” right-hander honed his fastball from atop the mound at Coquitlam’s Mundy Park for the Coquitlam Reds of the BC Premier Baseball League. His 91 mph heater landed him a stellar stint at the University of British Columbia Thunderbirds, where he filled out to 225 lbs and increased his velocity to 96 mph.

Those numbers caught the attention of pro scouts and the Diamondbacks made Taylor the highest draft pick out of UBC since former major league ace Jeff Francis was selected in the first round of the 2002 Major League draft by the Colorado Rockies.

Taylor opted to turn pro instead of returning to UBC for his senior year. He took his first step on the ladder to the Major Leagues in Hillsboro, Ore., where the Hops are the short-season A-League affiliate of the Diamondbacks. He pitched 16.1 innings in 17 games as a reliever, allowing only four runs and earning one win along with three saves.

The next season he was off to Geneva, Ill., to play full-season A-ball with the Kane County Cougars where coaches groomed him to be a starter. In 13 starts he won three games, lost four and allowed an average of 3.32 earned runs a game.

Injury problems

But the expanded role took a toll on Taylor’s shoulder and he missed the last month of the season with an impingement injury, where the rotator muscles get too loose and become trapped between the joint.

It was the first major injury of his career, and Taylor said he was terrified.

“It felt like getting stabbed in the shoulder.”

It was also Taylor’s first taste of the drudgery and hard work of rehab, living in a hotel room near the Diamondbacks’ training facility near Scottsdale, without a car, working in the gym every day to strengthen the joint.

“Rehab is a tough place to be,” Taylor said. “All your focus is on getting your arm better. I worked hard to stay positive.”

Traded

Then, on Nov. 30, 2017, Taylor experienced another first. He was traded to the Tampa Bay Rays for an established big leaguer, Brad Boxberger.

Initially, Taylor said he wasn’t thrilled with the move. But once he got to Tampa, and was able to talk to the coaches who wanted to return him to his customary role as a reliever, he was excited to take the next step in his journey.

That started in Port Charlotte, Fla., where he got three wins and two saves in the eight games he appeared in during the month he was there before getting promoted to the Rays’ AA affiliate in Montgomery, Ala.

In 30 games with the Biscuits, Taylor pitched 60 innings, earning three wins, four losses and six of eight save opportunities. More importantly, he was learning what it takes to be a pro baseball player.

“One of the biggest things is staying calm mentally,” he said. “You can’t get too high or too low. If you pitch bad you have to accept you’ll have bad days.”

He also got a sense of what it means to be a pro baseball player in the Deep South, making appearances in the community on behalf of the team, volunteering for charity work, interacting with fans.

“They’re really into it, they pay attention to the game,” Taylor said of the scrutiny. “You have to carry yourself as a reasonable, nice, kind person.”

Expanding his repertoire

A slight injury to Taylor’s elbow late in the season meant he wasn’t able to play in the Arizona Fall League, a prestigious off-season circuit to which only baseball’s top prospects are invited. But he did get to spend some time at a special pitching camp put on by the Rays in Florida where coaches were able to analyze his pitching with special high-speed cameras that track how the ball spins and moves vertically and horizontally.

Taylor said the experience was invaluable as he works to expand his pitching repertoire beyond his fastball and slider.

“It gives you instant feedback and you can compare it to big leaguers,” he said. “It was the best thing I’ve ever done as a baseball player.”

Taylor spent most of his off-season in the Lower Mainland, working out every day at his old stomping ground at UBC to “get stronger and trim body fat.”

And when the baseball playoffs and World Series were on TV last fall, he watched them from the warm comfort of his living room.

“Watching games on TV, you see guys you’ve played against and it’s exciting,” he said. “Hopefully that will be me in a year or two.”