Tag Archives: Grand Lake Mariners

Bates, WHAC champion Indiana Tech bound for NAIA Opening Round

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Indiana Tech has won its first Wolverine-Hoosier Athletic Conference baseball title since 2019.

The Fort Wayne, Ind.-based Warriors, who swept a best-of-three WHAC championship series from Madonna Monday, May 6, find out today (May 9) where they will land for next week’s NAIA Opening Round. The draw show is scheduled for 4 p.m. Eastern Time.

Fifth-year senior Parker Bates has been key contributor for Indiana Tech (32-22) in 2024.

In 53 games (49 starts), the righty swinger is hitting .300 (54-of-180) with seven home runs, three triples, 10 doubles, 40 runs batted in, 35 runs scored and a .883 OPS (.377 on-base percentage plus .506 slugging average). 

“I’m a guy that likes to swing a bat,” says Bates. “I’m not going to say I look for the perfect pitch every single at-bat. My focus is finding the barrel and trying to put the ball in-play hard. Sometimes that gets me in trouble. I’m a guy who likes to swing early because a lot of times the pitcher is coming with a fastball (up in the zone). That’s the one I like to hunt.”

There are times a pitcher knows Bates’ tendencies and he has learned to adjust when they flip an off-speed pitch his way.

Batting in the No. 2 or No. 6 hole based on the match-up and playing a shortstop, third base or left field depending on the team’s need, Bates has 13 multi-hit games with three March 30 at Rochester, May 1 vs. Aquinas and May 2 at Concordia.

Bates has similar keys whether at short, third or in the outfield.

“I want to get a good first-step reaction and good read on the ball,” says Bates, a 6-foot-2, 190-pounder. “Sometimes I get caught flat-footed. But as long as I’m staying loose, fluid and working through things, that’s when I’m playing best defense. 

“I try to keep my hands out-front and keep moving and making the plays.”

Bates does much of his offensive work with Indiana Tech assistant Sean Herberger. Brent Alwine coaches Warrior hitters and infielders.

Kip McWilliams is in his 17th season as the program’s head coach.

“He’s an old-school guy,” says Bates of McWilliams. “He’s definitely going to hold you accountable. Nothing’s ever easy around here. If you’re slacking off or not working hard or performing, you’re going to know it. There’s no favorites around here. You have to earn every single bit of playing time, every at-bat, every chance on the mound.”

The Warriors has won 28 of its last 34 after a rough start to the 2024 season. 

What makes this Indiana Tech group so sturdy and resilient?

“I think what makes us as tough as we are is what we’ve all been through,” says Bates. “We actually played really good in the fall. I think we lost one or two games. We got our confidence way up. Heading into the winter we were thinking we’re going to be a good team. We got inside and it got tough. Our own pitchers started tearing us (hitters) up.”

Then the spring season started.

“We were dropping games on walk-offs and by one run. It came down to one play sometimes. It was us just sticking together, knowing we are a good team. We started putting some wins together and winning some big games.”

Bates graduated from Indiana Tech with a Mechanical Engineering degree and is a few more classes from finishing a Master’s in Project Management. He just accepted a job in that field with Fleming’s Excavating in Decatur, Ind.

He played for the Indiana Summer Collegiate Baseball League’s Kekiongas in Fort Wayne in 2020 and 2021, did an internship in 2022 and was with the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate Baseball League‘s Grand Lake Mariners (Celina, Ohio) in 2023.

With no more eligibility after 2024, Bates is heading into the last college games.

“This is it,” says Bates, who turns 24 in September. “It’s kind of surreal. It’s pretty bittersweet. I’ve enjoyed my career. I’ve been able to play on some great teams and play with some great guys. 

“I got blessed with one extra year. It’s the only good thing that came out of COVID. We’ve been trying to win the WHAC for five years and we finally did it.”

Born in Decatur, Ind., Parker got his baseball start playing around 10 in a Wilshire, Ohio, farm league for uncle Brendan Bates (who is now a softball assistant at Parkway in Rockford, Ohio).

After that came youth ball through Koufax League in Monroe, Ind. Travel ball included a team consisting of Adams, Jay and Wells counties including Grant Besser (who now pitches for Indiana Tech).

Adams Central Middle/High School in Monroe, Bates was a three-sport athlete (football, wrestling and baseball).

His head football coach was Michael Mosser.

“He’s just an awesome guy,” says Bates of the man who has led AC on the gridiron since the 2009 season. “He’s not the kind of guy that’s going to yet and scream at you. He’s going to get the best out of you.”

In football, there was also assistant defensive coordinator Tyler Roach.

“That guy helped me more than I can put into words,” says Bates. “He’s been a fantastic coach and role model in my life!”

Tony Currie led the Jets matmen aka the BAGUBAs (Brutally  Aggressive Guys Uninhibited By Adversity).

“I cannot give enough thanks to Tony Currie and the sport of wrestling,” says Bates, who helped the Jets to an Indiana High School Wrestling Coaches Association State Duals title and lost three times in the “ticket round” at the Fort Wayne Semi-State as an individual. “I don’t think I’d be the athlete or the competitor that I am without having wrestled. I love baseball, but wrestling in the hardest sport there is. If you can wrestle and be successful, there’s nothing you can’t do.

“Tony was a guy that was always helping me out and encouraging me. He was making me a better athlete and competitor. He’s a guy I very highly look up to.”

Dave Neuenschwander was head baseball coach.

“He and I would butt heads sometimes, but it was because we were both such tough competitors,” says Bates of Neunschwander. “He wanted to win.”

Bates roots for the New York Yankees. His all-time favorite player is Hall of Famer Derek Jeter

Among actives it’s Yankees outfielder Juan Soto.

“I just love the way that he swings the bat,” says Bates. “That dude’s just a hitter through and through.”

Bates took some cues from Soto while struggling last summer and has carried it forward.

“He gets so wide and low and is so quick through the zone,” says Bates of the lefty-swinging Dominican. “I widened out my stance and shortened up to be able to do little more at the plate this year.”

Harness racing driver/trainer Brandon Bates is Parker’s father and Berne, Ind.-based nurse practitioner Alicia Bates is his mother. 

Brother Hunter Bates (Adams Central Class of 2016) played the same three sports in high school as his younger brother then a little football and was a national qualifier in wrestling at Wabash College. He now works at a hospital in Fishers, Ind.

Half sister Halle Bougher is a teacher in Convoy, Ohio.

Parker Bates. (Indiana Tech Photo)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)
Parker Bates. (McKenzie Noble Photography)

Former Ivy Tech Northeast righty Bultemeier taking his talents to Tiffin U.

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

At 6-foot and 155 pounds, Justin Bultemeier is not one of the bigger pitchers on the college baseball scene.

But the determined right-hander has applied what he’s learned and it has landed him another opportunity following two seasons of junior college ball.

Bultemeier, who turns 21 in July, is headed to NCAA Division II Tiffin (Ohio) University (where Joe Wilkins is Dragons head coach) after pitching for Ivy Tech Northeast Community College in Fort Wayne, Ind., in 2022 and 2023.

“It took a lot of work,” says Bultemeier. “Not being biggest guy or the throwing the hardest I had to learn to pitch.”

Like brother Brandon Bultemeier before him, Justin became a Ivy Tech Titans. Javier DeJesus was his pitching coach.

“I learned a crazy amount from him,” says Bultemeier. “My time with him is something I’m never going to forget. It’s something I will never take for granted. I wouldn’t be here today if it wasn’t for him. He helped me in an incredible way.

“Mechanically, he helped me move more efficiently and stay healthy. Mentally, he helped me learn the game of pitching, the game of baseball to just how to set up hitters, how hitters think and to maintain the best mindset on the bump.”

Titans head coach Connor Wilkins also gets credit for his impact.

“He really taught us the overall mindset with baseball — not only how to be the best player but to be a great man after college. He taught us about integrity and how we should live our lives on and off the baseball field.”

Brandon Bultemeier (a 5-foot-9, 140-pound righty heading into his third season at Indiana University-Kokomo in 2023-24 while pursuing a Master of Business Administration after earning an Accounting degree) and younger brother Justin have both been underdogs during their diamond days.

“We’ve always been on the smaller side,” says Justin. “We were overlooked with each of our recruiting processes.

“We’ve both fed off that and out-worked a lot of people to get where we’re at.”

In 2023, Brandon Bultemeier made 16 mound appearances (all in relief) and went 4-1 with a 3.18 earned run average, 12 strikeouts and nine walks in 22 2/3 innings. Justin Bultemeier pitched in 11 mound games (9 starts) and went 4-3 with four complete games, one shutout, a 2.45 ERA, 53 strikeouts and 17 walks in 55 innings.

Tiffin coaches came to see him against Lakeland Community College in March and were impressed.

“The decision process was tough,” says Justin Bultemeier of where to go after Ivy Tech. “I prayed a lot over it. I trusted God in my decision.

“I feel good with where I’m at now.”

After earning an associate degree, Bultemeier says he intends to pursue an Exercise Science degree at Tiffin then go into a three-year doctorate program in Physical Therapy.

Born in Fort Wayne, Bultemeier grew up in Decatur, Ind., and played on youth teams in Hoagland, Monmouth and Monroe and some travel ball with the Berne (Ind.) Bears and Monroe-based Indiana Bandits.

Bultemeier played one full varsity season at Adams Central Middle/High School in Monroe — his final prep campaign in 2021. He played a few varsity games as a freshman and sophomore and COVID-19 pandemic took away the 2020 season.

Dave Neuenschwander was the Jets head coach.

“I appreciate everything he’s done for me,” says Bultemeier. “He helped me get to this point in my journey. Everyone that has been a coach for me has helped me in some sort of way. He gave me the opportunity to grow as a senior on the mound.

“That’s where I found my passion for pitching.”

The summer after high school, Bultemeier played for an 18U team in a Fort Wayne league. In 2022 and 2023, he’s been with the Grand Lake Mariners (Celina, Ohio) in the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League.

Throwing from a high three-quarter arm slot, Bultemeier uses a four-seam fastball, two-seam fastball, sinker, curveball, slider and change-up.

The four-seamer sits and 87-88 mph and has topped out at 92.

He mixed the two-seamer with the sinker — a pitch taught to him by DeJesus which runs into right-handed hitters and has a lot of late movement.

“It tunnels off my fastball very well,” says Bultemeier.

The curve is closer to 1-to-7 than 12-to-6.

The slider became part of the mix in the last one and a half.

“It’s become one of my better pitches to get strikeouts, swings and misses  and weak contact,” says Bultemeier.

His “circle” change dives away from left-handed hitters.

Terry Bultemeier — father of Justin and Brandon — played baseball at Bellmont High School in Decatur and Southeastern Louisiana University and is now an insurance agent in New Haven, Ind. Mother Angie Bultemeier is a loan processor in Berne.

Justin Bultemeier. (Ivy Tech Northeast Community College Photo)
Justin Bultemeier (left) and Javier DeJesus. (Ivy Tech Northeast Community College Photo)
Justin Bultemeier. (Grand Lake Mariners Photo)
Justin Bultemeier. (Kaitlin Rickert Photo)
Justin Bultemeier. (Kaitlin Rickert Photo)
Justin Bultemeier. (Kaitlin Rickert Photo)
Justin Bultemeier. (Grand Lake Mariners Photo)
Justin Bultemeier. (Tiffin University Image)

Baseball in Richmond played to the tune of Jazz

rbilogosmall

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Richmond, Ind., has long appreciated the crack of the baseball bat.

The Rose City fielded professional teams throughout most of the first half of the 20th century and brought pro ball back with the independent Frontier League’s Richmond Roosters (1995-2005).

Charles Weeghman, the man who built what would become known as Wrigley Field, was born in Richmond in 1874.

These days, the crack comes in the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League with the Richmond Jazz.

Playing at John Cate Field at Don McBride Stadium (which dates back to 1936), the Jazz came into the league in 2016. The Richmond RiverRats played collegiate wood-bat baseball in the Prospect League. That team sold and moved to Lafayette, Ind. The GLSCL approached Richmond about joining and a new baseball brand came to town.

Richmond native Deanna Beaman has been a part of the Roosters, RiverRats and Jazz.

A 1996 Richmond High School graduate with a sports management and marketing degree from Indiana University, Beaman served as an intern with the Roosters and served in several capacities with the club for eight seasons.

When the Roosters sold and moved to Traverse City, Mich., to become the Beach Bums of the Frontier League beginning with the 2006 season, it left a baseball void in Richmond.

The hole was filled with changing from pro to college ball and joining the new Prospect League for the summer of 2009 for what turned out to be a seven-season run.

“The college wood bat model is better in this market,” says Beaman.

Then with expansion, costs began to rise in the collegiate summer league world.

“The Prospect League grew and is became more and more expensive to be in that league,” says Beaman, who estimates the team was spending $40,000 per season on travel, not including hotels. “The Great Lakes League approached us. We found that the business models are different in the two leagues.

“There was an interest to keep baseball in the community. You have to be a 501 (c) 3 (non-profit organization) to be in the (GLSCL).”

Beaman is president and general manager of Hitters Hangout Sports Foundation, which operates as the Richmond Jazz.

Richmond players are charged a participation fee (similar to travel baseball) and the club pays a frranchise fee to the league, which must abide by NCAA regulations.

She identifies the top benefits of Great Lakes membership for Richmond is the short season (the team plays a 42-game regular season) and travel is relatively short with no overnight trips.

Richmond is in the GLSCL’s Southern Division with Ohio teams Cincinnati, Hamilton, Southern Ohio and Xenia.

The Central Division features five Ohio teams — Galion, Grand Lake, Licking County, Lorain County and Lima.

Making up the Northern Division are Grand River, Irish Hills, Lake Erie and Muskegon in Michigan and Saint Clair in Ontario, Canada.

Richmond would not see Northern teams until the playoffs.

There were growing pains with the transition from to the Great Lakes. Richmond got a new mayor and park superintendent and the baseball team got a new lease at McBride Stadium in 2016. On the field, Matt Brankle managed the Jazz to a record of 12-29.

Things were completely revamped on the baseball side for the 2017 season. Floridians Brett “Buster” Schneider (assistant coach at NCAA Division I Florida Atlantic University) and Brian Thomas (coach at Gainesville High School) were recruited to be head coach and pitching coach, respectively, and former RiverRats players Joe Pourier was named as a volunteer assistant.

“We have to get a winning ball club in the community,” says Beaman. “Buster has been a great addition for us — both on and off the field. He’s changed some lives in our community. If you want to play at the D-I level, he can tell you what it takes.”

Schneider came to Richmond through a connection Beaman made with a former player.

Jeremiah Klosterman was a catcher on back-to-back Frontier League championship teams in Richmond in 2001 and 2002. The former Florida State University standout owns Hard Knoxx Baseball Academy in Jacksonville, Fla., and Schneider was one of his instructors.

Schneider is in his first season as a summer collegiate head coach, but he did serve three seasons as an assistant for Green Bay of the Northwoods League.

Hitting the ground running (leaving Florida June 2 and beginning practice June 4), Schneider immediately began working on team chemistry with a roster made up of players with hometowns in eight different states. Some players live close enough to commute for games and workouts while others stay with host families.

“You have to get them to buy into your system and play for a chgampionship,” says Schneider. “You have to have a plan in place and you have to win early (with such a short season).”

Through their connections, Beaman and Schneider helped form a Jazz roster that includes players with hometowns in eight states.

“You reach out and get as many good, quality players as you can,” says Schneider. “I want them to use the summer to get better and go back and be conference players of the year and All-Americans.”

By rule, league members must carry a certain number of Division I players in order to be funded by Major League Baseball for developmental reasons. There are numerous collegiate wood bat leagues across the country.

This summer, Richmond has pitchers James Meyer (Valparaiso), Ben Nelson (Virginia Commonwealth) and R.J. Wagner (Dayton), catchers Chase DeBonis (Bethune-Cookman) and Jordan Stacy (Bethune-Cookman), infielder Jordan Gillerman (St. John’s) and outfielders Jack Holden (Eastern Illinois) and Cole Parks (Bethune-Cookman).

“We can get hitters all day long,” says Beaman. “Pitching is the issue. D-I coaches are protecting their starters (and often shutting them down for the summer).

“Across the league, bullpens are very thin. Sometimes we have to go ‘Mississippi State style 3-3-3’ to finish a game.”

Says Thomas, “We’ve done pretty well with the guys we’ve received … We try to keep their pitch counts down … I try to get to know everyone at a personal level.”

GLSCL rules do not allow for a disabled list and player can’t be released based on talent or performance. That means the roster is pretty steady throughout the season.

RICHMONDJAZZ