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Canadian women's baseball team honours late longtime player during Friendship Series against USA

This week, the Canadian women's national baseball team is playing its first games against an international team in three years with heavy hearts.

Canada and the United States are competing in a five-game Women's Baseball Friendship Series, which began Thursday and ends Monday at Baseball Central in Thunder Bay, Ont.

It marks the first competitive series for Team Canada since 2019 due to the pandemic, but a familiar face is missing.

Amanda Asay, one of the longest-tenured members of the national team, died in a skiing accident in January at age 33.

Ashley Stephenson, who made her debut this week as Team Canada's manager, took to the diamond alongside Asay for 14 years during her playing career and then coached her the last couple of years.

"Amanda was a good friend of mine. She was probably the best teammate I ever had. Unbelievable competitor — she was our leader, our captain," Stephenson said, struggling to hold back tears, after a team practice before the start of the series.

"This is the first year we haven't had her with us since 2005, [when] she started. So it'll be an emotional time for our group. She was a competitor and we're going to make sure we play the right way for her."

Asay was recognized before the start of Game 1 on Thursday with a moment of silence, and her parents — Loris and George — were welcomed onto the field.

The Canadian players are wearing a special patch on their right sleeve with the word Ace — Asay's nickname — and her No. 19. The national women's team retired the number earlier this year. The players all sport No. 19 on their practice shirts.

Both a pitcher and first-base player, Asay joined the national team in 2005. She was a five-time Women's Baseball World Cup medallist, playing for the

Read more on cbc.ca