Former Toronto Blue Jays Carlos Delgado, Corey Koskie and Matt Stairs along with former Montreal Expos manager Felipe Alou and baseball writer Bob Elliott have been selected for induction into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame.

The induction ceremony will take place on June 13 in St. Marys, Ontario.

"Each of our 2015 inductees has made significant contributions to the history of baseball in our country and they continue to be great ambassadors for the game," said Scott Crawford, the Hall's director of operations. "We're proud and excited to celebrate their careers in St. Marys this June."

Delgado became a regular with the Blue Jays in 1996 and had eight consecutive 30-home run campaigns over the next nine seasons. He was selected to two All-Star games, won three Silver Slugger Awards and was named The Sporting News Major League Player of the Year in 2000. He also finished second to Alex Rodriguez in the American League MVP voting in 2003. He finished his career with 473 home runs (31st all-time) and 1,512 RBI (52nd all-time) in 17 seasons.

Koskie earned a spot on the Topps's 1999 All-Star Rookie team with the Minnesota Twins. Two years later, the Anola, Manitoba native scored 100 runs with 26 homers and 103 RBI and stole 27 bases to become the only third baseman in American League history to record at least 100 runs, 25 homers, 100 RBI and 25 stolen bases in the same season. He joined with the Toronto Blue Jays for the 2005 season and competed for Canada in the 2006 and 2009 World Baseball Classics.

After parts of four seasons in the minors, Stairs made his big league debut with the Expos on May 29, 1992. Over 19 major league seasons (the most by any Canadian position player), the native of Saint John, New Brunswick hit 265 homers, the second-most by a Canadian (Larry Walker hit 383). He also ranks second all-time amongst Canadians in games (1,895) and walks (717) and third in RBI (899) and doubles (294) and is just one of four Canadians to play for both the Expos and Blue Jays. He also suited up for Canada at the 2006 and 2009 World Baseball Classics.

Alou was part of the Expos organization as a player, instructor or manager for 27 of its 36 years of existence. He was hired as the team's manager on May 22, 1992, becoming the first Dominican manager in major league history. In parts of 10 seasons as Expos manager, he accumulated a franchise-record 691 wins and led the team to three second-place finishes and had the Expos sitting in first-place in 1994 when the season was cancelled due to a players' strike. For his efforts, Alou was named National League Manager of the Year in 1994.

Elliott received his first major league assignment in 1978 – the Montreal Expos' home opener. The Kingston, Ontario native quickly became a widely respected reporter and a regular in the Expos press box until he became a Blue Jays beat writer in 1987. He is the founder of the Canadian Baseball Network website which tracks the top Canadian draft candidates, college players and minor league players. In his close to five decades in journalism, Elliott has also penned three books, including the bestseller Hard Ball about George Bell in 1990.