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Druley: No more Sunday night baseball for Kane County Cougars

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Furnaces supplanted hot stoves as primary warming sources long ago.

Still, stoves burn with the energy of offseason baseball chatter, of which there was plenty during a brief Cubs Caravan visit to Fifth Third Bank Ballpark last week.

The Cougars are set to open their first season as a Low-A Cubs affiliate on April 4, with a “Meet the Cubs” fan event scheduled Feb. 1.

Here’s some kindling as those dates approach. Who knows, it might also help with this weather:

• The Cougars added a pair of 5 p.m. Sunday starts as an attendance variable last season. When the twilight crowds – 5,159 on July 15 and 5,285 on July 29 – didn’t distinguish themselves, the club decided its usual Sunday starts were still the one for 2013. As in 1 p.m.

“No real big reason, we just thought that a day game with the Sunday Funday [promotion] might make more sense getting the families out here,” Cougars general manager Curtis Haug said. “Plus, it probably makes more sense for the Cubs. It’s a day game as opposed to a night game.”

The Cougars have 11 Sunday home games scheduled, playing two each in April, May, June, July and August before former Cubs farm club Peoria visits on the Sunday before Labor Day.

• Cubs outfielder Tony Campana played only briefly in the Midwest League for then-Cubs affiliate Peoria in 2009. While his 18-game stint did not include a trip to Geneva, it also didn’t keep Campana from learning about the Cougars’ organization.

“I heard It’s a nice field and they get people to come out,” Campana said. “That always makes it good when you’re a guy in A-ball.”

At that point in Campana’s career, Kane County was about to conclude a long player development contract with the Oakland A’s. The Cougars traditionally have been a top MWL draw even when they were aligned with Baltimore, Florida, Oakland and Kansas City before the Cubs’ partnership took root in September, inspiring fans and brass in both Geneva and Chicago.

“When you have a place that’s close, I think you’ll get some more people coming out and get to see the future of what we’ve got in the organization,” Campana said.

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