Tag Archives: NECBL

Driven right-hander Olejnik helping Miami U. RedHawks win ball games

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Peyton Oljenik has gotten better as his college baseball career has progressed.

A junior right-handed pitcher in his first year at the Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, is driven to put away hitters and add to the RedHawks’ win column.

Miami is 25-23 overall and 17-13 in the Mid-American Conference in no small part to the contribution of 6-foot-10 3/4, 210-pound Olejnik, who has made 17 mound appearances (14 in relief) is 7-1 (seven straight victories) with one save, a 5.29 earned run average, 71 strikeouts and 23 walks in 56 1/3 innings. He has faced 249 batters and opponents are hitting .250 against him.

In his last two trips to the bump, Olejnik worked 1 1/3 hitless innings Friday, May 10 against Ohio and picked up the win then came in for four frames the next day, giving up four hits and three runs against the Bobcats.

“I’m a competitor,” says Olejnik, a 2021 graduate of Hanover Central High School in Cedar Lake, Ind. “I hate to lose and I love to win. The love-hate relationship makes me try even harder for the team. At the end of the day, it’s about how many victories we get as a team. It’s been like that since Day 1.

“(Miami head coach Brian Smiley) tells us all the time that you make your bed, you lay in it. He’s told me that I just need to produce. I have that hard-working, blue-collar grit mentality. You don’t give up. You get knocked down and you get back up.”

Polish-American Olejnik (pronounced Oh-len-ick) has also seen that kind of spirit from his team.

“We may get down and we may get punched early in the game, but we don’t ever give up,” says Olejnik, 21. “We’re going to fight all the way to the end. For myself, there’s a few pitches I wish I could get back. But I still need to do my job and minimize the damage. I go out there with that grit and give my team the best chance to win the game.”

Larry Scully is the RedHawks pitching coach. 

“Coach Scully’s been around the game for many, many years and has top draft picks year in and year out,” says Olejnik. “I’m picking his brain as much as I possibly can, learning about myself, hitters and things I could do right.”

Olejnik is often called on to take the baseball in latter innings or be a bulk guy out of the bullpen.

“It’s about a trust thing,” says Olejnik. “(Smiley and Scully) trust me late in the game. That’s a huge role to have. I’ll close the game on Friday and if they want to bring me back on Saturday or Sunday for long relief and let somebody else close in the ninth, that’s what we’ve been doing.

“We’ve seen a lot of success with it.”

Miami’s regular season is winding down. The team has a three-game home series May 16-18 against East Tennessee State before heading to the MAC tournament after an extended absence from the postseason. The 2024 six-team event is slated for May 22-26 in Avon, Ohio.

Throwing from a high three-quarter arm slot and whip-like release, Olejnik mixes a four-seam fastball that hits 96 mph, a slider that goes 84 to 86 when adrenaline takes over and a “circle” change-up. He did not have a slider in high school or the beginning of his college days and used an 11-to-5 curveball and can still show that pitch to batters when needed.

Olejnik was at the University of Oklahoma in 2023, making five appearances with a 4.15 ERA. Opponents his .154 against him. 

“Mentally, I grew stronger,” says Olejnik of his time with the Sooners. “It was a learning experience for me and I just needed to get better, put on weight and get stronger.”

He entered the NCAA Transfer Portal after the season and wound in Oxford.

“I really didn’t know what to expect coming to Miami. Now that I’ve been here for almost a year now, I love it. There are guys here I will be friends with for life. There are great relationships with coaches and teammates.

“It’s crazy to see how we’re changing the culture here. This is where I belong.”

Triton College in River Grove, Ill. was Olenik’s baseball home in 2022. At 6-9 and 175, the righty pitched in 11 games (eight starts) and was 2-1 with a 2.14 ERA, 73 strikeouts and 26 walks in 46 1/3 innings.

“Going through that grind has helped me,” says Olejnik of his time in junior college baseball. “For me, a JUCO Bandit is a guy who gets down and dirty and plays hard. It takes a different character to play JUCO ball. 

“You’ve got to be there to experience it.”

Olejnik spent the summer of 2022 with the MLB Draft League’s West Virginia Black Bears and the summer of 2023 with the New England Collegiate League’s Martha’s Vineyard Sharks.

He has options this summer. Depending on his work load at Miami, he could pitch in the Cape Cod League or train in preparation for the July 14-16 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.

The Sport Management major has one year of remaining college eligibility.

Born in La Porte, Ind., to Tom and Toni Olejnik, Peyton moved with his family to Lake County by 4. 

Peyton played until 14 for the St. John Tomahawks (now part of the Indiana Bulls) and was coached by his father.

Tom Olejnik pitched at Thornton Fractional South High School in Lansing, Ill., and then Michigan State University in the mid-1990’s and now gives pitching lessons at “The Armory” in Cedar Lake.

Peyton’s mother was a cheerleader at Monmouth (Ill.) College. Sister Brooke Olejnik (Hanover Central Class of 2024) is a dancer bound for the University of Alabama.

From 15U to 18U, Peyton experienced his travel ball with Top Tier

Along the way, he was headed toward being at the top of his teams on the height chart thanks to quite a growth spurt.

As a Hanover Central freshman in 2018, Olejnik was 5-foot-10. That means he has grown more than a foot in the past six years. 

In his senior prep season, Peyton was part of a IHSAA Class 3A state runner-up team and earned Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association honorable mention all-state honors. The Wildcats were coached by Ryan Bridges.

“My senior class is still close to him today,” says Olejnik. “We’re grateful for the spot he got us to. He’s one of the best thought-out coaches I’ve had.”

Peyton Olejnik video by @Nick_Feigl7.
Peyton Olejnik. (Miami University Photo)
Peyton Olejnik. (Miami University Photo)
Peyton Olejnik. (Miami University Photo)

Segal brings decades of experience as new Gibson Southern head coach

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Structure. Expectations. Accountability.

Those are things Bobby Segal plans to make a priority as the new head baseball coach at Gibson Southern High School in Fort Branch, Ind.

“Coaching staff and players will be held to a high standard both on and off of the field,” says Segal, whose hiring came in October 2023. “We represent a great community that supports great educational opportunities and extracurricular activities. 

“The accumulation of great days with discipline and focus will determine how successful this program can become.”

Gibson Southern (enrollment around 775) is a member of the Pocket Athletic Conference (with Boonville, Forest Park, Heritage Hills, Mt. Vernon, North Posey, Pike Central, Princeton Community, Southridge, South Spencer, Tecumseh, Tell City and Washington).

The Titans are part of an IHSAA Class 3A sectional grouping in 2024 with Boonville, Evansville Bosse, Evansville Memorial. Mt. Vernon and Princeton Community. Gibson Southern has won nine sectional titles — the last in 2014.

“With the size of school and the amount of athletes that compete on other teams, we started baseball-related and weight training workouts in December,” says Segal, who is just the third head coach in program history after Jim Reid and Chris May. “The emphasis was to have a detailed plan of work that would help our players in their skill development by position, and to prepare for upcoming game situations.”

Segal is a 2002 graduate of North Central High School in Indianapolis where he played for Rick Shadiow and Indiana University where he played three seasons for Bob Morgan (2003) and one for Tracy Smith (2004-06). 

A catcher, Segal helped IU qualify for the 2003 Big Ten Conference tournament and was and letterwinner and academic all-Big Ten 2004-06.

After his playing career, Segal embarked on a career as a baseball coach and instructor. 

Most recently, Segal was hitting coach for the independent professional Frontier League’s Evansville (Ind.) Otters (2016-23). He was the FL Coach of the Year in 2017.

The owner of more than 800 wins as a manager and assistant coach, Segal won two league championships and one league runner-up as hitting coach with the independent pro Gary SouthShore RailCats.

Segal has been part of seven playoff series and had more than 30 players signed by Major League Baseball organizations.

Collegiately, Segal has served on staffs at Butler, Tarleton State (Texas), Wabash Valley College, Iowa Western and Union (Kentucky). He was a part of seven nationally-ranked squads and has made both a World Series appearance in both the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) and National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). 

In his nine seasons as a collegiate coach, more 70 players went on sign pro contracts.

Segal was the head coach for the summer collegiate North Adams (Mass.) SteepleCats in 2010 and Terre Haute (Ind.) Rex in 2015. With the SteepCats, he managed in the New England Collegiate Baseball League All-Star Game, The Rex won the Prospect League and Segal was named PL Manager of the Year.

In 2007, Segal was a baseball operations intern with the Cincinnati Reds, preparing advanced scouting reports and providing support to the Director of Scouting Administration.

Segal has also been an instructor at Britton’s Bullpen in Boonville, Ind.

“I was very fortunate to have played for and coached with many highly-motivated, positive individuals that had a true passion for the game,” says Segal. “The key is to pull certain nuggets from all of those you come in contact with, so that you can continue to grow and share in the industry.”

At Gibson Southern, Segal’s coaching staff will include May, Zach Pullum, Reed Farmer, Chris Wilkerson and Axel Freudenberg.

May, a former Indiana State University-Evansville (now University of Southern Indiana) infielder, was Titans head coach the past 16 seasons.

Pullum, an Indiana State University graduate, enters his seventh season at Gibson Southern. He is Director of Baseball Operations and bullpen coach for the Titans as well as an IT Computer Support Specialist for the school.

Farmer, an Oakland City University alum, is going into his fourth season of coaching high school baseball.

Wilkerson is also going into his seventh campaign at Gibson Southern.

Freudenberg, another OCU graduate, is heading into his third season.

Titan Baseball Field, located on-campus, has natural grass. Dimensions are 309 feet down the left field line, 370 to center and 305 to right.

Feeder system includes the Fort Branch, Haubstadt and Owensville youth baseball programs. Local travel teams in Gibson County include South Gibson Heat and Southern Smoke.  

Recent Gibson Southern graduates to move on to college baseball include the Class of 2022’s Justin Stimpson (Rend Lake), Oliver Hamilton (Oakland City), Kaden Hurless (Oakland City) and Colton Okes (Wabash Valley) and 2023’s Garrett Reid (Post Grad Sports in Scottsdale, Ariz.) and Adam Thompson (Asbury).

Segal says no one on the current roster is committed, but there are players who are interested in taking that path.

Bobby and wife Rachel Segal live in Fort Branch with children Asher, Jacob and Lillian. 

Bobby Segal, who has a Master of Education degree from Union College in Barbourville, Ky., is to being teaching at Gibson Southern in the fall of 2024.

Bobby Segal.
Gibson Southern High School.

Kokomo Jackrabbits field boss Hobbs values experience, development

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Johnston Hobbs splits his time in the baseball off-season between Raleigh, N.C., and Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

This summer he is back in Indiana — a state where he has studied, coached and established a business.

Hobbs, who earned a Master of Kinesiology degree from Indiana University and a served as a graduate assistant under former Hoosiers head baseball coach Bob Morgan, is the head coach/manager summer collegiate wood bat Northwoods League’s Kokomo (Ind.) Jackrabbits

The former college and independent player has been a manager for the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League’s Glen Falls (N.Y.) Dragons, South Florida Collegiate Baseball League’s West Palm Beach (Fla.) Sharks, New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Vermont Mountaineers, Puerto Rico’s Aguadilla Nevegantes and Corn Belt Baseball League’s Omaha Filthballers (winning three regular-season titles and three champions in four seasons 2019-22). He has also coached the Hungarian National Team and assisted at Flanagan High School in Pembroke Pines, Fla.

Hobbs, who also earned a degree in English, Political Science and Exercise Sports Science from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and a Master of Education in Psychology and Communication from the University of South Carolina, and created a commercial swimming pool business in Indianapolis in 1999. He was a competitive swimmer and has coached the sport at South Carolina and the North Carolina State University.

He is now CEO/President of 224 Performance — a company Hobbs founded in 2017 — that “provides customized training for individual athletes and teams to maximize performance and health, Athlete and Talent Management, Player Evaluations, and Practice/Business structure.”

He has been a frequent clinic speaker.

Hired in Kokomo in late summer of 2022, Hobbs recruited talent from all over the country to showcase their skills and be developed in the City of Firsts.

“I don’t necessarily measure everything in wins or losses. I measure it in experience and development,” says Hobbs. “There’s no part of this game that we don’t have some influence or input on. I can’t sit and watch somebody do anything wrong and not give them some feedback.

“You have to be a well-rounded, completely-developed player to be one of 750 guys on the planet that make Major League Baseball. You can’t have a weakness in your game. If you come out here and don’t listen to your coach in college and you don’t listen to us you have 0 percent chance of making it.”

Hobbs says the players who set and achieve the highest goals are those who don’t give up or make excuses. They are willing to go through the process.

“How can you go wrong in the development of anything?,” says Hobbs. “If you’re a business person, you’re developing business and it helps your business. 

“In baseball it’s even more so because you have to manage failure so often. If you were 30 percent successful in business the doors close. If you’re in college and you make 30s on your exams, you get kicked out of school.”

But hitters with a .300 average are considered special.

“You’ve got to try to make a difference in every little aspect of the game,” says Hobbs. “Sometimes I know it gets tiring for kids to hear because it seems like we’re giving them feedback on everything they do, but that’s our job. If we don’t do that, then we’re cheating.

“It’s not hard to communicate (with players). I’m a firm believer if kids aren’t learning what you’re trying to teach them you’ve got to change the way you teach it.

“I would like to see players evolve mentally at the same pace as the game. Baseball I.Q. is in high demand.”

Hobbs calls the Northwoods League the “the highest level developmental league in the world.”

“This is a developmental league for elite talent,” says Hobbs. “This is to fine-tune the best of the best.”

Clubs in the 24-team league play 72 games between late May and mid-August with a handful of days off.

“We have a lot of higher-end (NCAA) Division II guys that started 50 of 55 games (in the spring) and come here and play 70,” says Hobbs. “We’ve tried to keep the pitching staff on first-half and second-half contracts and then double up on the position guys.

“It’s tough to make an arm last the whole (summer) season when you’ve got 72 games.”

In the past decade, the coach says he has seen shift in attention span and diminished problem-solving and structure.

“These are good kids,” says Hobbs. “They want to do the right thing. They just don’t know how to do it when it doesn’t go the way it’s supposed to go or how they’d like it to go.”

A bad attitude, poor body language and jawing at opponents are things Hobbs will not tolerate.

“You won’t hear us chirp at the other bench,” says Hobbs. “You won’t hear us making fun of other players. You don’t do that because it’s solely against rules.

“They’ve been getting away with that forever and they think it’s acceptable and they see it at the highest levels.”

Taking responsibility for your actions is also a non-negotiable with Hobbs.

“As a human being in anything you do take accountability for your actions and your maturity,” says Hobbs. 

Jackrabbits assistant Steven Sunagel, who hails from northeast Ohio, has four decades of coaching experience and has been with Hobbs for many of his baseball stops.

“Sonny” Sunagel sees a problem at the game’s lower levels.

“My kids aren’t starting so I going to start my own travel team,” says Sunagel. “What they’re doing back home where I’m from the Little League has been decimated. A travel ball team is formed and pulls the good kids out of the organization that used to be strong. 

“The Little League says we need these kids so they’ll play during the week for us and play weekend travel (perhaps pitching for both teams). But the two coaches don’t talk.

“They’re not coordinating and it’s starting to show up in the injuries.”

The Jackrabbits, which play home games at Kokomo Municipal Stadium, are coming down the stretch for 2023. The team played its 61st contest Monday, July 31 against visiting Traverse City and has three remaining home dates — Aug. 2, 5 and 8.

Hobbs has been told by Kokomo general manager Nathan Martin that he is welcome back in 2024.

“A lot of the people in the community like Coach,” says Martin of Hobbs.

Johnston Hobbs. (Steve Krah Photo)

Bloomington North alum Deliyannis learning many lessons on, off baseball field

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Harilaos “Harry” Deliyannis comes from a family that values education.

His parents — Dr. Constantine Deliyannis (Astrophysics) and Dr. Deborah Deliyannis (History) — are both professors at Indiana University in Bloomington.

Older brother Plato Deliyannis is PhD. student at Duke University. 

Younger brother Simon Deliyannis graduated Bloomington High School North in 2023 and is going to study at IU.

Both brothers played golf in high school — Plato at Bloomington South and Simon at Bloomington North. Plato has played Ultimate at Duke.

The middle Deliyannis (pronounced Dell-E-Yah-ness) boy, Harry goes to Pomona College in Claremont, Calif., as an Economics major and Religious Studies minor.

This summer, Deliyannis (who is of Greek descent) is learning on the diamond as a starting pitcher for the New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Martha’s Vineyard Sharks.

A 6-foot, 175-pound right-hander has made two mound appearances and is 1-0 with a 0.00 earned run average, six strikeouts and five walks in 10 innings.

Pitching in the spring for the Frank Pericolosi-coached Pomona Pitzer Sagehens, Deliyannis was in 13 games (12 starts) with 3-5 record, 4.50 ERA, 77 strikeouts and 28 walks in 76 innings. 

The 2023 season marked his second full college slate, meaning he has two remaining years of eligibility. The COVID-19 pandemic curtailed 2020 and Pomona Pizer did not field a team in 2021. 

Not enrolled in school, Deliyannis came back to Indiana and was the pitching coach at his prep alma mater — Bloomington North — just two years after his senior year with Richard Hurt as Cougars head coach and Erik Pearson as an assistant. It’s an experience that makes Harry want to coach after his collegiate days.

“A lot of high schoolers think they know more than their coaches,” says Deliyannis. “From coaching alongside Coach Hurt I can say that high schoolers don’t.”

Deliyannis credits the coach/educator for having a big impact on him.

“Coach Hurt is by far the most-organized person I’ve ever met,” says Deliyannis. “The work ethic, organization and attention to details that (he) coaches with and his even-keel demeanor I appreciate more than I can express now. I really look up to Coach Hurt.

“I feel lucky that I had him as my high school coach. He prepared me for college and I think for life better than anybody else.”

Deliyannis fell in love with Pomona — located east of Los Angeles — after his first visit.

Pomona Pitzer — an athletic co-op between private schools Pomona College and Pitzer College — is part of the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.

The former second baseman and designated from both sides of the plate, who turned 22 in March and will be a senior in 2023-24, prefers starting over relieving.

“I get to see hitters three or four times,” says Deliyannis. “I like the interesting game that comes up after I’ve gone through a lineup once. I have to re-figure out how to pitch to them again.

“I like going deep into games and give my team a chance (to win). That’s my responsibility as a starter.”

Throwing over-the-top, Deliyannis uses a four-seam fastball, curveball, slider, change-up and cutter.

“I use them all at least 10 percent of the time,” says Deliyannis. “There’s no pitch I won’t throw.”

The four-seamer sits at 88-89 mph and has hit 90 several times the past two springs.

His 12-to-6 curve has a high spin rate (3200 rpm).

His slider is sometimes horizontal and sometimes has gyro movement.

The “circle” change-up, which has overtaken his curve as his best pitch, is really a screwball.

“When I throw it hard it has a dot and moves like a lefty slider,” says Deliyannis. “I throw from the high arm slot and let it naturally pronate. I don’t think of turning it over. I let the grip do what it does.”

He throws the cutter often to right-handed batters. 

“I think it looks like a fastball and they get out in front of it,” says Deliyannis.

A lifelong Bloomington resident, Deliyannis was in what is now the Bloomington Junior Baseball Association before playing travel ball for the Indiana Chiefs and then Indiana Prospects, where Mark Taylor was one of his early head coaches.

The summer after high school (2019), Deliyannis was supposed to play for the Cortland (N.Y.) Crush but was bedridden for a month with mononucleosis then competed in a few non-league games in Indiana.

He played in the College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind., in 2020 on a team managed by Mark Walther. He was with the Northwoods League’s Kenosha (Wis.) Kingfish in the summer of 2021 and West Coast League’s Victoria (British Columbia) HarbourCats in the summer of 2022.

Harry Deliyannis. (Pomona Pitzer Sagehens Photo)
Harry Deliyannis. (Victoria HarbourCats Photo)
Harry Deliyannis. (Pomona Pitzer Sagehens Photo)
Harry Deliyannis. (AMXL Photography Photo)

Former Southridge standout Gasser spending summer in New England

By STEVE KRAH
http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Southern Indiana native Camden Gasser is spending his summer with the North Adams (Mass.) SteepleCats of the New England Collegiate Baseball League.
In his first five games, starting shortstop Gasser has walked nine times, scored five runs and stolen three bases.
Gasser, a 5-foot-10, 165-pounder who swings from the left side, explains his offensive approach.
“I make sure I’m balanced and into my legs and not swinging all upper body,” says Gasser. “The main part is just being on-time (with the pitch). If you’re not on-time for a fastball you’re going to get beat 90 percent of the time.
“Stealing bags is one of my favorite things to do. Stealing a free 90 in awesome. It helps the team.
“Speed in general in baseball gets undermined. It’s nice when you have speed all around the field. When you have guys who can run you can create so much pressure for the other defense. It makes them play a completely different game.”
While he has moved around the infield, his preferred defensive position is short.
“My internal clock at shortstop is pretty good,” says Gasser. “I like being the leader and being the voice.”
Gasser, who turns 21 in December, is coming off his first collegiate season at the University of Michigan in 2023. In 15 games (two starts), Gasser hit .273 (3-of-11) with one run batted in and one steal for the Tracy Smith-coached Wolverines.
Graduate student and Carmel (Ind.) High School graduate Jack Van Remortel was Michigan’s everyday first baseman.
Gasser, who was recruited to school by Erik Bakich (now head coach at Clemson) and committed early in his sophomore year of high school, has entered the NCAA Transfer Portal but does not rule out going back to U-M to play baseball and continue to study Communication.
“I love the university,” says Gasser.
A three-sport standout at Southridge High School in Huntingburg, Ind., Gasser earned 11 letters (four each in football and basketball and three in baseball when the 2020 season was lost to the COVID-19 pandemic).
On the football field, Gasser was a wide receiver, running back, defensive back, punt/kick returner and holder for extra points and field goals. He was the Pocket Athletic Conference and team MVP as a senior.
“I would have loved to play college baseball but I don’t think my body would’ve appreciated that,” says Gasser.
On the basketball court, point guard Gasser earned all-conference and all-Southwest Indiana honors after setting school’s single season record for assists.
As a baseball senior, he batted .546 with 53 hits, 25 RBIs, 39 runs and 46 stolen bases. He also went 3-0 with the 1.09 earned run average on the mound and was named first team all-state by Prep Baseball Report Indiana and was selected for the Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association North/South All-Star Series.
Gasser played for two state championship teams at Southridge — 2A football in 2017 and 3A baseball in 2021.
Gene Mattingly is the Raiders head baseball coach.
“He’s a very good dude,” says Gasser of Mattingly. “I have a lot of respect for that guy. He ran the organizational very well.
“I probably got under his skin a couple of times. I definitely pushed his buttons. He pushed mine. They were all good buttons to push.
“He’s a great leader. I couldn’t have asked for a better high school coach.”
In the state championship game, Gasser started at third base and led off.
Classmate Colson Montgomery played shortstop and hit in the 3-hole. That summer he was selected 22nd overall in the 2021 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft by the Chicago White Sox.
Gasser and Montgomery played three high school sports together.
In the middle of senior year, Gasser tore the labrum in his left shoulder while swinging the bat. He spent the summer of 2021 rehabbing, but it popped out in the first live fall scrimmage at Michigan.
“I had to bite the bullet and get surgery,” says Gasser. “It was a lot of pain.”
He took a regular redshirt season in 2022, played for the Ohio Valley League’s Dubois County Bombers in Huntingburg that summer.
Born in Jasper, Ind., Gasser grew up in Huntingburg.
He was in T-ball and Rookie leagues before playing travel ball for the J-Cards, Indiana Bulls, Mark Peters-coached Ironmen and Canes Midwest. He and Montgomery were in Team Indiana in the fall of 2020.
Ryan Gasser, a plant manager, and Jamie Gasser, who works in human resources, have two sons — Colton and Camden.
Colton Gasser (Southridge Class of 2017) played football, basketball and baseball in high school and now works for Amazon.

Camden Gasser. (University of Michigan Photo)
Camden Gasser. (University of Michigan Photo)

Toledo southpaw Walker tries to stay even-keel on the mound

By STEVE KRAH
http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Something Jack Walker likes best about himself is the mindset he maintains on the pitching mound.
Walker, a 6-foot-6, 230-pound left-hander who recently completed his first season at the University of Toledo in 2023 after three years at Indiana University (2020-22), tries not to get too high or too low with the situation at-hand.
“I don’t necessarily get discouraged or down when something I can’t control doesn’t go my way,” says Walker. “The only thing I can control is throwing the ball. Once the ball leaves my hand I have no control over what happens.
“I’ve seen it effect guys real badly. I try to keep an even-keel even in success because I know baseball is a humbling game.
“I just take it pitch by pitch.”
Over time, he has learned to make each delivery its own thing and put the previous pitches behind.
Walker, who turns 23 in December, also likes to show the way for his teammates.
“I think I’m a good leader by example in terms of getting all my work done and extra work and bringing up all those young guys.
Walker, who has one remaining year of college eligibility, delivers his pitches from a high arm slot.
“It’s very over-the-top — almost to an extreme,” says Walker. “I come straight down to the catcher.”
He has been using a four-seam fastball, curveball and change-up and has introduced a cutter to the mix while striking out 61 and walking 44 over 54 1/3 innings and 15 outings (12 starts) in 2023.
The four-seamer touched 96 mph in 2022 but has sat at 89 to 92 and sometimes gotten to 93 in 2023.
“My control got a lot better (this year),” says Walker.
His curve is of the 12-to-6 or 11-to-5 variety.
He employs a “circle” grip on his change-up.
“I split two seams between the ring finger and middle finger and it goes between running away from a (right-handed) hitter and dropping off the table,” says Walker. “It has some run and some depth.”
Walker’s cutter has the closed end of the seam on his index finger with his fingers closer together.
Rob Reinstetle is the Toledo head coach and John Sheehan is the Rockets pitching coach.
“He is honest with everyone,” says Walker of Reinstetle. “He will be hard on us when we make those mistakes but it definitely makes us better.
“He lets us know he still know that he has confidence in us. There’s an open relationship. We can go to him about anything.”
Walker notes that Sheehan is not that far-removed from being a minor league player and has a feel for the present state of pitching.
“He definitely knows what he’s talking about,” says Walker of Sheehan.
A 2019 graduate of New Palestine (Ind.) High School, Walker played for Dragons head coach Shawn Lyons.
“He did a great job of holding everyone accountable,” says Walker of Lyons. “He treated everyone with the same amount of respect.
“I still have a good connection with him today.”
Walker has earned a Marketing degree and says its likely that he will begin work on his Master of Business Administration in 2023-24.
The big southpaw is weighing his summer ball options. He says he will likely join the New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Vermont Mountaineers then train at 108 Performance in Knoxville, Tenn.
In the summers of 2021 and 2022, he was with the Perfect Game Collegiate Baseball League’s Saugerties (N.Y.) Stallions. The 2021 team won the league title.
Walker did not play in the summers of 2019 (going to IU early for summer classes) and 2020.
Born in Indianapolis, Walker grew up in New Palestine. His early diamond days were spent in the New Palestine Youth League. He then played with a local travel organization called the Diamond Cutters.
In junior high, Walker went with USAthletic followed by the Pony Express. In high school, he played for the Indiana Prospects.
Jack is the only child of Donald and Laurie Walker. His father is a service manager and his mother is both a massage therapist and school bus driver.

Jack Walker. (University of Toledo Photo)
Jack Walker. (University of Toledo Photo)
Jack Walker. (University of Toledo Photo)

Love of baseball, numbers lands Heaton at Belmont U.

BY STEVE KRAH
http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Moneyball — the film based on the non-fiction book “Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game” by Michael Lewis — came out in 2011.
Brodey Heaton was 9 or 10 and living in Newburgh, Ind., when he first saw it.
“I liked the storyline and as I grew up and started getting more into math and statistics it just started becoming my favorite movie,” says Heaton, who is a first baseman — the same position played by Scott Hatteberg of the Oakland Athletics in real life and the film.
Now 22 and a 6-foot-5, 235-pounder at NCAA Division I Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn., Heaton has already earned an undergraduate degree in Applied Mathematics.
With an extra year of eligibility because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Heaton plans to play for the Bruins again in 2024 while pursuing a Master of Sport Administration.
Batting primarily in the 3-hole, Heaton has played in 52 games (50 starts) in 2023 and is hitting .241 (46-of-191) with six home runs, 10 doubles, 33 runs batted in, 28 runs scored and .724 OPS (.326 on-base percentage plus .398 slugging average).
“I try to drive in runs or be productive for the team — try to have a tough at-bat and set up the rest of the lineup the best I can,” says Heaton, who went 2-of-3 and scored a run Tuesday, May 16 at Tennessee.
For his college career, the righty swinger/thrower has played in 174 games (172 starts) and is hitting .286 (191-of-669) with 23 homers, 39 doubles, 149 RBIs, 97 runs and .825 OPS (.360/.465).
Heaton was an all-Ohio Valley Conference tournament team in 2022. If Belmont (23-30, 8-16) qualifies for the 2023 Missouri Valley Conference tourney, that event is May 23-27 at Indiana State.
Teammates voted Heaton and left-handed pitcher Andy Bean as co-captains for 2023.
“Part of my job is the communicate between the coaches and the rest of the team,” says Heaton. “And to be an extra coach out there. Since I’ve probably been here the longest I help the new guys out and give them little pointers when they need it.
“It’s also being a relaxing presence for people and showing them the way we do things at Belmont.”
In that way, Heaton is a reflection of his veteran head coach.
Dave Jarvis is in his 26th season as Belmont head coach and 41st year of coaching overall.
“He’s a calm presence in the dugout,” says Heaton of Jarvis. “He’s always positive. He’s always telling us to be calm and ready for the moment.”
Heaton benefits from physical strength and mental acuity, honed by playing football (tight end), basketball (power forward) and baseball (first base) at Castle High School, where he graduated in 2019.
“Strength is a big part of my game now,” says Heaton. “I’ve always been naturally strong but in my years at Belmont I’ve put in a lot more work in the weight room. I’ve gotten a lot more strength, especially in my lower body. I’ve worked with our strength coach (assistant sports performance coach Jarett Thompson) just to stay healthy and strong.
“It’s paid dividends for me.
“I’m not the quickest. Playing three sports in high school has made me more athletic. My Baseball I.Q. helps me know what’s going on and get to balls or take extra bases.”
Curt Welch was Heaton’s head baseball coach in high school, instilling drive and providing life lessons.
“He is super competitive,” says Heaton of Welch. “He wants it a lot out there and he takes that into his teams.
“He has that attention to detail. You can just tell that he wants to make us competitive. I really appreciated playing for him.”
As a senior, Heaton hit .392 and was named to the Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association North/South All-Star Series in Madison and was all-state honorable mention, first-team all-Southern Indiana Athletic Conference and the All-Metro Player of the Year. He helped the Knights win two sectionals and two regionals.
Growing up in Newburgh, Heaton started out with local teams, played Newburgh Junior Baseball in middle school and was with the Indiana Bulls travel organization from 11U to 17U. Sean Laird was the head coach in his 17U summer. He then went with the Jeremy Johnson-coached Evansville Razorbacks before heading to Belmont.
After his freshman season with the Bruins, Heaton went to College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind.
Early in the 2021 spring season, he suffered a torn labrum in his left hip and partially-torn quadriceps and played through it. Surgery kept him off the field that summer.
Heaton played for the New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Ocean State Waves in 2022 and expects to go back to South Kingstown, R.I., this summer.
Bryan and Crystal Heaton have two children — Brodey and Katelyn (19). Bryan Heaton is a project manager for Toyota. Crystal Heaton is in the finance department of Deaconess Health System. Katelyn Heaton is studying speech therapy at Murray (Ky.) State University.

Scholar Athlete Spotlight on Belmont U.’s Brodey Heaton (Missouri Valley Conference)
Brodey Heaton. (Belmont University Photo)
Brodey Heaton. (Belmont University Photo)

Righty Albright heading into third season in Diamondbacks system

By STEVE KRAH
http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Luke Albright is preparing for his third professional baseball season.
The right-handed pitcher from Fishers, Ind., is honing his offerings while participating in spring training at the Arizona Diamondbacks complex — Salt River Fields at Talking Stick.
Albright spent most of his time following the 2022 campaign in Fishers and worked out five days a week at PRP Baseball at Mojo Up Sports Complex in Noblesville.
“It was pretty much full-go most of the off-season,” says Albright. Fridays featured “live ABs” and “high-intent bullpens.”
He reported to instructional league in Arizona Jan. 15, went home for a week and came back for early spring camp.
Albright, who stands 6-foot-4 and weighs 230 pounds, throws a four-seam baseball, curveball, slider and change-up from a high three-quarter arm slot.
Early this spring, his fastball has been clocked around 93 to 95 mph. It touched 95 mph during the 2022 season.
“I’ve made some adjustments in the off-season and it’s gotten a little better,” says Albright.
His curve is of the 11-to-5 or 12-to-6 variety.
The cutter/slider is “short, late and tight, just barely misses bats and gets a lot of strikeouts.”
There is true arm-side fade to the change-up.
Albright has been working on adding a “gyro” slider to the mix.
“We’re tinkering with it and seeing where it’s going to play,” says Albright.
Albright was selected in the sixth round of the 2021 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft by the Diamondbacks after three seasons at Kent (Ohio) State University, where Jeff Duncan is head coach.
With veteran pitching coach Mike Birkbeck guiding him, Albright made 33 mound appearances (21 as a starter) and went 12-7 with two saves and a 2.98 earned run average. In 157 innings, he struck out 178 and walked 71.
“As a freshman I had good stuff,” says Albright. “I just didn’t use it effectively. (Birkbeck) got me to be myself and not try to do too much.
“Over time, we developed a curveball and change-up and added a slider.”
In his 25th season, Birkbeck has worked with 53 student-athletes who have been drafted or signed into professional baseball, including 2011 first-rounder Andrew Chafin and 2016 first-rounder and National Player and Pitcher of the Year Eric Lauer.
In 2021, Albright was named second-team all-Mid-American Conference and was MAC Pitcher of the Week after holding No. 2 Mississippi State to one hit over six innings. He set a career-best 13 strikeouts against Ohio. He whiffed 10 or more three times during the 2020 season.
Albright pitched sparingly during the summer of 2018 before going to Kent State. He did go to South Bend for the Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association North/South All-Star Series.
He was with the New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Keene (N.H.) Swamp Bats in the summer of 2019 and split the summer of 2020 between the College Summer League at Grand Park and the Northwoods League’s St. Cloud (Minn.) Rox.
Since Albright logged 82 innings at Kent State in 2021, he hurled just 23 1/3 innings over six starts at Low Class-A Visalia (Calif.) that summer, going 2-0 with a 3.47 ERA, 22 strikeouts and 11 walks.
Albright spent the 2022 season at High Class-A Hillsboro (Ore.). The righty made 26 starts and went 6-10 with a 5.49 ERA. In 123 innings, he fanned 130 and walked 56.
Albright grew up in Fishers and played travel ball for the Indiana Mustangs and Indiana Travelers.
His pitching instructor before and during high school was Mike Farrell.
“He helped bridge that gap from high school to how it would be in college,” says Albright of Farrell. “He told me what you need to do and what you need to learn.
“(Birkbeck and Farrell) are two of the most impactful people I’ve met in my baseball career,” says Albright. “They are a tremendous help.”
Going into his sophomore year is where Albright saw himself more as a pitcher and less as a hitter.
“My hitting skills diminished, but pitching really took off for me,” says Albright. “I saw it could lead to college. At the time that’s all I wanted.”
In three varsity seasons at Fishers High School, Albright won 16 games and posted a 2.69 ERA over 143 innings.
He fanned 91 as a senior and helped the Matt Cherry-coached Tigers to dogpile with a 2018 IHSAA Class 4A state championship.
Albright was the winning pitcher and Grant Richardson picked up the save in the title game. Richardson went on to Indiana University and is now an infielder in the New York Yankees organization.
“We weren’t very good my sophomore year (at Fishers),” says Albright. “We had a great team junior year and fell a little short in the (Lafayette Jeff) Regional.
“Senior year I got to enjoy what it was like to win the state championship.”
Luke, who turned 23 in December, is the oldest of Mark and Amy Albright’s two sons. Brock Albright is now a junior in the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University in Bloomington.
By going back to Kent State after his first pro season and taking online classes, Luke Albright earned his Business degree this past winter and is a few classes shy of a Marketing degree.

Luke Albright. (Hillsboro Hops Photo)
Luke Albright. (Arizona Diamondbacks Photo)
Luke Albright. (Arizona Diamondbacks Photo)
Luke Albright. (Arizona Diamondbacks Photo)
Luke Albright. (Arizona Diamondbacks Photo)
Luke Albright. (Kent State University Photo)
Luke Albright. (Kent State University Photo)

Peterson in Guardians system after special run with UConn

BY STEVE KRAH
http://www.IndianaRBI.com

University of Connecticut baseball enjoyed one of the best seasons in the program’s 126-year history in 2022 and a player from northwest Indiana played a major part.
Austin Peterson, a right-handed pitcher and 2018 Chesterton (Ind.) High School graduate, was a dominant force in the Huskies starting rotation as UConn won a New England record 50 games and went to the NCAA tournament for the fourth straight year and eighth time on head coach Jim Penders’ watch.
Peterson, a 6-foot-6, 234-pounder, made 18 mound appearances (17 starts) and went 11-3 with a 3.83 earned run average, 147 strikeouts and 25 walks over 110 1/3 innings.
Before he was taken in the ninth round of the 2022 Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft by the Cleveland Guardians, many accolades came Peterson’s way.
He was chosen as an All-American by National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (first team), Collegiate Baseball (second team), American Baseball Coaches Association (third team) and D1Baseball.com (third team).
Peterson was also New England Pitcher of the Year, NCBWA District 2 co-Pitcher of the Year, East Coast Athletic Conference Pitcher of the Year as well as all-Big East Conference (first team), all-New England (first team) and all-Big East tournament.
The tall righty also set a UConn single-season record for strikeouts and tied for second in single-season wins. He went six or more innings in 14 of 17 starts.
Peterson was a team captain for a UConn team that finished 50-16 and bowed out in the NCAA Super Regional at Stanford.
“It meant a lot, especially going to a historic baseball program like UConn” says Peterson of the leadership role voted upon by his teammates. “Being a leader of that culture is something I’ll never forget. I was a guy from the Midwest and was welcomed with open arms.
“I gained a lot of respect out there.”
Since 2004 — Penders’ first season as head coach — 65 Huskies have signed pro contracts with MLB teams and Peterson is part of that group.
Joshua McDonald is Huskies pitching coach.
“Coach Mac teaches you the mental side of baseball a little bit better than a lot of guys,” says Peterson. “He helps you find something you’re good at and make the most out of that.
“I had to get my slider back. We worked together to figure what was going on. It came back this year and the strikeout numbers took a jump.”
In 2021, Peterson was all-Big East (second team) and in 15 games (14 starts) went 7-1 with a 2.58 ERA, 82 strikeouts and 21 walks over 80 1/3 innings.
Throwing from a three-quarter arm slot, Peterson uses a four-seam fastball, two-seam fastball, change-up, slider and curve.
This past spring, the four-seamer sat at 90 to 93 mph and touched 94.
The two-seamer “has a little big of late life to it,” says Peterson. “I like to throw it toward a lefty’s front hit and it runs back inside for a strike. It runs and sinks more than it cuts.”
The change-up is of the “circle” variety. The curve has a sweeping motion and is like 1-to-7 on the clock face.
Peterson landed in Storrs, Conn., after playing at Wabash Valley College (a junior college in Mount Carmel, Ill.) in 2020 at Purdue University in 2019.
He went the JUCO route because he would immediately become eligible for the MLB Draft and at the time transferring from one NCAA D-I school to another meant sitting out for a year.
“I just wanted to compete,” says Peterson.
The COVID-19 pandemic helped cut the 2020 season short and the draft was cut to five rounds and Peterson was not selected.
At Wabash Valley, Rob Fournier was then the Warriors head coach. Peterson worked closely with then-pitching coach Aaron Biddle (who is now WVC head coach).
“Both were fiery guys,” says Peterson of Fournier (now an assistant/recruiting coordinator at Western Kentucky University) and Biddle. Coach Fournier hated losing more than anybody I’ve ever seen in my life.
“The competitiveness they brought to the table helped me in my competitiveness.”
Peterson got into 25 games (25 in relief) as a Purdue freshman and went 1-5 with one save, a 4.50 ERA, 49 strikeouts and 11 walks in 2019.
At Wabash Valley, he got into five games (three starts) and went 2-0 with a 3.05 ERA, 29 strikeouts and seven walks in 20 2/3 innings.
Born in Valparaiso, Ind., Peterson grew up in Chesterton. He got his organized baseball start at State Park Little League. His first travel team was the Duneland Flyers at 13U. Then came one season with Chicago’s Coyote Select then three (15U to 17U) with the Indiana Prospects. The 2017 Ed Woolwine-coached 17U Prospects won the Marucci World Series with the help of Peterson.
Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Famer Jack Campbell led Peterson and his Chesterton Trojans teammates for Peterson’s last three prep seasons.
“Coach Campbell and I had a great relationship,” says Peterson. “We didn’t have the most talented group, but we played together our whole lives. Coach Campbell realized that and let us take it on our own.”
With Peterson on the team, Chesterton won sectional titles in 2016 and 2018, a Duneland Athletic Conference crown in 2017 and a regional championship in 2018.
Peterson was a two-time DAC Pitcher of the Year and three-time all-DAC, all-area and team MVP. He struck out 277 and posted an 0.80 ERA during his high school mound career.
He was named Region Player of the Year in 2016 and Chesterton Male Athlete of the Year in 2018.
On the basketball court, power forward/center Peterson was a two-time all-conference, all-area and team MVP honoree as a junior and senior. The Marc Urban-coached Trojans went 16-9 on the hardwood in 2016-17 and 21-4 in 2017-18.
While rehabbing a knee injury, Peterson did not play baseball and attended classes at Purdue during the summer of 2018.
The next two summers, he was with the 2019 New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Martha’s Vineyard Sharks and 2020 Coastal Plain League’s Peninsula Pilots (Virginia Beach, Va.).
Peterson used the 2021 season as developmental time, getting his body right and working with UConn athletic trainer Joel DeMarco.
Peterson earned an Applied and Resource Economics at Connecticut in the spring.
Since signing with the Guardians July 30, Peterson has been in Goodyear, Ariz., building back up after not pitching since mid-June.
He expects to begin pitching in games during instructional league at Goodyear Ballpark in mid-September then come back to Indiana in October and see what the Guardians have in-mind for him for November and December.
Glenn and Audra Peterson have three sons — Glenn (31), Jordan (29) and Austin (22).
The elder Glenn played baseball at Chesterton High and recently retired after three decades as a UPS driver. Audra Peterson is director of career and technical education for Porter County.
The younger Glenn Peterson played baseball at Chesterton and walked on at Purdue before giving in up while pursuing at Civil Engineering degree. He works in that field in Munster.
Jordan Peterson played baseball in high school and a Saint Joseph’s College in Rensselaer, Ind., and is now a financial consultant in Kalamazoo, Mich.

Austin Peterson (University of Connecticut Photo)
Austin Peterson (University of Connecticut Photo)
Austin Peterson (University of Connecticut Photo)

Austin Peterson (University of Connecticut Photo)

Austin Peterson (Cleveland Guardians Photo)

Rutgers-bound Besser keeps on buzzing the ball past batters

By STEVE KRAH
http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Grant Besser’s habit of dodging bats with his pitches got him noticed during his prep days and it continues at the collegiate level.
At South Adams High School in Berne, Ind., the left-hander and four-time first-team all-Allen County Athletic Conference selection whiffed 451 in 241 innings with a 1.27 earned run average. He also hit .397 with eight home runs and 58 runs batted in.
As a senior, Besser fanned 130 in 54 frame and posted a 0.77 ERA and hit .426 with two homers and 17 RBIs for the Brad Buckingham-coached Starfires. He began working out that winter in Fort Wayne with Pittsburgh Pirates strength trainer Dru Scott.
When not pitching, lefty Besser was the unorthodox choice for South Adams at shortstop his last three seasons.
“I knew it looked silly, but I had been playing shortstop all my life,” says Besser. “I can throw from any arm angle. I had a great time doing it.
“Besides I knew I wasn’t going to be able to do it for long. I knew pitching is what I wanted to do.”
Besser played in the 2019 Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association North/South All-Star Series in Madison. He was honored as the 2019 Northeast Indiana Baseball Association/Dick Crumback Player of the Year.
The 2021 recipient of the award — Carter Mathison (Homestead/Indiana University) is Besser’s teammate this summer with New England Collegiate Baseball League’s Keene (N.H.) Swamp Bats. Mathison was also the 2021 Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Player of the Year.
The 5-foot-10, 185-pound Besser shined on the mound at Florida SouthWestern State College in Fort Myers.
In 36 appearances (10 starts), he went 6-4 with eight saves and a 2.66 earned run average as the National Junior College Athletic Association Division I Buccaneers posted marks of 16-11 in 2020 (COVID-19 shortened), 44-16 in 2021 and 42-15 in 2022. He amassed 125 strikeouts and 42 walks in 94 2/3 innings.
Besser played no summer ball in 2020 and dealt with an injury at the beginning of the 2021. He came back and hurled five innings in the state tournament and did not allow a baserunner.
“I really saw a spike in all of my numbers for the good (in 2022),” says Besser. “I blew every category away from the previous years.”
He was in 20 games in 2022 and went 3-2 with six saves, a 1.28 ERA, 61 K’s and 16 walks in 42 1/3 innings.
Ben Bizier is head coach at Florida SouthWestern State. Derrick Conatser is Bucs pitching coach.
“I like that toughness to he brings to the table,” says Besser of Bizier.
In his exit interview with Bizier Besser was told that 18 Major League Baseball organizations have been following him as they prepare for the 2022 First-Year Player Draft (July 17-19 in Los Angeles).
“He said there’s a really good chance it happens this year,” says Besser, who turns 22 in September. “Out of high school I had zero (college) offers. Coach Buckingham offered me to Florida JUCO’s. I earned a scholarship at FSW in the spring.
“Money has never been the big thing for me. It’s opportunity and getting my foot in the door.”
This is Besser’s second straight summer at Keene and he has had several meaningful chats with Swamp Bats president and general manager Kevin Watterson.
So far, Besser has made four appearances (one start) and is 1-0 with an 0.87 ERA. In 10 1/3 innings, the southpaw has 10 strikeouts and one walk. The NECBL regular season ends July 30.
Throughout his college experience, Besser has been used in multiple pitching roles, including starter, long reliever and a closer.
“It doesn’t matter to me as long as we get a win,” says Besser. “I’m very versatile.”
Besser has excelled with an ability to keep his head when things get tense.
“It’s mental toughness. I preach it,” says Besser. “I can spot when somebody doesn’t have that mental toughness.
“I’m ready for the situation. I’m consistent with all that I do. I work quick and throw strikes. Preparation and a steady mindset is key.”
Throwing from a three-quarter arm slot, Besser uses a four-seam fastball, two-seam fastball, change-up and curveball.
“My four-seamer has natural run and a high spin rate,” says Besser. “Up in the zone is where I get the most out of it.
“This summer it’s been sitting 89 to 91 mph (it hit 92 at Florida SouthWestern State).”
Besser’s two-seamer moves in to left-handed hitters and away from righties.
His “circle” change-up break to his arm side and is usually clocked around 83 mph.
“My curveball is more of a slurve,” says Besser of the pitch that’s often delivered at around 78 mph. “I mix and match. Sometimes it’s 12-to-6 and sometimes I sweep it. It depends on the situation.”
Grant is the oldest of Mike and Katina Besser’s two sons. Adam Besser, a right-handed pitcher for Ivy Tech Northeast in Fort Wayne, turns 20 in August.
Mike Besser is a salesman for Moser Motor Sales. Katina Besser is chief financial officer at Swiss Village Retirement Community.
The family moved from Geneva and Berne when Grant was in the fifth grade. Beginning at 9U, he played travel ball for the Muncie Longhorns and Indiana Bandits and then Summit City Sluggers founder Mark DeLaGarza reached out to him and he spent two summers with the 17U Sluggers, playing for head coaches Todd Armstrong and Brent Alwine.
“My parents’ sacrifices let me do that,” says Grant. “The Sluggers gave me a lot of knowledge on baseball.”

With two years of eligibility remaining, has committed to NCAA Division I Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. He signed with the Scarlet Knights over the winter.
Why Rutgers?
“What really attracting me was coming home to the Big Ten,” says Besser, who was born in Fort Wayne and grew up in Geneva and Berne. “It’s up-and-coming program and pretty hard-nosed.”
With Steve Owens as head coach and Brendan Monaghan guiding pitchers, the Scarlet Knights posted an overall mark of 44-17 and Big Ten record of 17-7 in 2022. Rutgers played Michigan in the conference tournament championship game.
After earning an Associate of Arts degree in Business Management at Florida SouthWestern State, Besser is considering a Labor and Relations major at Rutgers.

Grant Besser (Florida SouthWestern State College Photo)

Grant Besser (Florida SouthWestern State College Photo)
Grant Besser (Florida SouthWestern State College Photo)
Head coach Ben Bizier (left) and Grant Besser (Florida SouthWestern State College Photo)

City of Palms Park in Fort Myers, Fla.
City of Palms Park in Fort Myers, Fla.
Grant Besser (Keene Swamp Bats Photo)