Here's the deal:
The Can-Am League is roughly equivalent of high-end High-A // low-end Double-A baseball, but instead of 20 to 23 year-old prospects, what you have are largely 26-30 year-old guys who've already been released by affiliated teams.
In terms of 'Major League' talent, the two players are Wilmer Font and and Andrew Werner. Font came on in relief for five games for the Texas Rangers between 2012 and 2013, and Werner got lit pretty good in eight starts for the Padres in 2012.
The best player on the team is Sebastien Boucher, the team's hitting coach and centre fielder. Let me rephrase that: he was the most consistently good player on the roster while in affiliated ball. The guy was a consistent .280 hitter with plus-speed while in AAA with Seattle and then Baltimore in '07-'08.
However, if you do some digging you'll realize that, while most of the Champions did in fact play in Double- and Triple-A, they burned out at some level. Hence their release from organizational ball, and their arrival in the Can-Am League.
i.e. power-hitting 1B Jon Talley was a decent enough power hitter in High-A ball with Dunedin, hitting .244 across four seasons and cranking 20 homers in 2011. However, he bottomed out in Double-A New Hampshire, hitting .163 in his 29 game audition in 2013.
i.e. starting pitcher Dan Tobik, decent in Angels rookie ball, became a launching pad in the High-A Cal League in 2014, released.
There's guys with all kinds of experience levels, but I'd liken this Champions ballclub to a High-A level minus the blue-chip prospects.
Still a decent level of ball,
substantially better than the FatCats (and even the previous Can-Am team, the god-awful Rapid
z), but not great.
I definitely encourage everybody to get out to the ballpark sometime in July or August, the ballpark isn't too shabby, the craft beer's decent, and there's the occasional jaw-dropping play.