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White producing for Indiana University Southeast Grenadiers

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

If it seems like every time Indiana University Southeast baseball followers look up they see Mason White on the bases, it’s because he is there very often.

The lefty-swinging outfielder for a squad that’s 25-15 overall and 17-4 in the NAIA-affiliated River States Conference so far in 2024 has played in 41 games (all starts) and is hitting .430 (65-of-151) with 14 home runs, one triple, 16 doubles, 56 runs batted in, 45 runs scored and a 1.328 OPS (.500 on-base percentage plus .828 slugging average). He has been hitless in just four games and has 20 multi-hit contests. He gathered four hits March 13 against Campbellsville.

The lefty thrower was the everyday right fielder for IUS then moved to center field a few weeks into the season.

White, who is 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds, was recognized as RSC Player of the Week on March 18, 2024.

He also received that honor March 28, 2023. The ’23 season — his first with the New Albany-based Grenadiers — White appeared in 53 games (all starts) and hit .320 (65-of-203) with 13 homers, two triples, 25 doubles, 57 RBIs, 48 runs and 1.037 OPS (.382/.655).

Brett Neffendorf is in his first season as IU Southeast head coach. Previous head coach Ben Reel stepped down at the end of 2023 and joined the Grenadiers as an assistant in recent weeks.

“My first impression when I came is that (Coach Neffendorf) really cared,” says White. “He is very organized.

“(Coach) Reel has been a big influence in my life. He’s done a lot of things for me personally. He’s a good guy to talk to one-on-one and you can talk about anything. He knows the game of the baseball and I’ve learned a lot from him.”

IUS assistants Joe Nattermann and Gregg Oppel oversee the team’s hitters.

“They have a very simple approach to hitting,” says White. “They don’t try to do too much. They only (make adjustments with) with guys if they need it or see something.”

His approach in the batter’s box?

“I envision myself doing my job,” says White. “I don’t try to do to much at the plate.

“I hit the ball back to where it came from. That’s my mental cue.”

While White has driven a few balls over the fence, including in the first inning Tuesday, April 16 against Georgetown (Ky.), he does not consider himself a classic power hitter.

“I’m a gap-to-gap guy,” says White. “Every once in awhile a pitcher will give me something I like and I’ll take advantage of that.”

On defense, White and the other outfielders meet with Nattermann to talk about the tendencies of opposing hitters and what the Grenadier flyhawks are going to do in certain situations.

White likes what the Grenadiers have going on.

“This group is special,” says White. “We’re an older team.

“The connection is strong. We get along very well.”

White played with three IUS mates — Ryan Kassel, Colin Long and Kody Putnam — at Southeastern Illinois College, a National Junior College Athletic Association member in Harrisburg, Ill. Putnam (Evansville Central Class of 2019) shared the field with White in high school while Kassel (Evansville Reitz Class of 2019) and Long (Evansville Reitz Class of 2020) were opponents.

The 24-year-old is scheduled to graduate from IUS this spring as a General Studies major. He is uncertain about additional college eligibility.

“My goal is the play the next level,” says White. “If I want to do that I can’t be too old.”

White redshirted for the 2022 season after transferring from SIC. 

In three seasons for the Jeremy Irlbeck-coached Falcons (2019-21), White played in 108 games as an outfielder, first baseman and left-handed pitcher and hit .313 (108-of-344) with six homers and 61 RBIs.

Says White, “I grew into my body, got a little more athletic and moved to the outfield.”

White did not play college summer ball in 2019. He was with the Ohio Valley League’s Henderson (Ky.) Flash in 2020, OVL champion Dubois County (Ind.) Bombers in 2021, Prospect League’s Terre Haute (Ind.) Rex in 2022 and New York Collegiate Baseball League-winning Rochester (N.Y.) Ridgemen in 2023. 

Born and raised in Evansville, Ind., White got his diamond start at the Stringtown fields, Highland Baseball and Garvin Park. He played travel ball for the Southern Indiana Spikes and was with Eugene Pate American Legion Post 265 as a high schooler.

White played baseball and basketball at Evansville Central High School, graduating in 2018. His coach on the diamond was Mike Goedde. Scott Hudson guided him on the hardwood.

“Coach Goedde was more of a quiet-minded individual,” says White. “He really knows the game. He coached the University of Southern Indiana and the University of Evansville. He had a good idea on what he was doing.

“Coach Hudson (who went on to steer Wapahani girls) was a firecracker. He was a guy was couldn’t stop moving. He was all over the plate all the time, but that’s what made him such a good coach. He’s a genius at the game.”

Mason is the son of Jason White and the late Tara Mattox. He has three sisters (Kendra, McKenzie and McKenna) and a half-brother (Maddox). 

Jason White coached Mason until college.

“My dad has always been the reason I’m as good as I am,” says Mason. “He texts or calls me after every game and supports me mentally.”

Former Evansville Central cheerleader and basketball player Kendra White the oldest and is married with a child. McKenzie White (Evansville Central Class of 2024) played volleyball and basketball and is preparing for college. Seventh grader McKenna White plays in the school band. Maddox Ferrari, 8, attends Stringtown Elementary and plays basketball.

Mason White has been around folks with an affinity for the MLB team in St. Louis.

“Our family favors the Cardinals,” says White. “I just like watching good players play.

“I like Bryce Harper and Paul Goldschmidt. Those are my top two players right now. I like how Goldschmidt keeps it simple (while hitting). Even though he’s a righty, I reflect it in the lefty batter’s box.”

Mason White. (Indiana University Southeast Photo)
Mason White. (Indiana University Southeast Image)
Mason White. (Terre Haute Rex Image)
Mason White. (Indiana University Southeast Photo)
Mason White. (Indiana University Southeast Photo)
Mason White. (Indiana University Southeast Photo)
Mason White. (Indiana University Southeast Photo)

Pawlik to spend graduate year at Indiana Wesleyan

By STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Jeff Pawlik has enjoyed competing with friends throughout his athletic life.

He will get to do that with a new set of pals as a baseball graduate transfer at Indiana Wesleyan University in Marion, Ind.

Pawlik, a 2019 graduate of Penn High School in Mishawaka, Ind., spent the past four seasons (2020-23) at Grace College in Winona Lake, Ind., with 2020 being curtailed by the COVID-19 pandemic leading to an extra year of eligibility which he will use at IWU. 

The Lancers and Wildcats are both members of the NAIA and the Crossroads League.

“I’m thankful to Grace baseball for the four years I was able to play there,” says Pawlik, who turned 23 in June. “It was a big part of my life and where I found a true passion for the game.

“I’m thankful for everyone who helped me there and all the relationships I was able to build.”

Pawlik’s head coach with the Lancers was Ryan Roth.

“I really enjoyed it,” says Pawlik of his time playing for Roth. “He treated me with care and gave me an opportunity to play which is something I’m really thankful for in my life.”

Pawlik developed a special bond with Grace assistant Justin Love.

“The coach that has impacted me the most is Coach Love,” says Pawlik. “He developed a work ethic and a mindset in me that helped me be successful in baseball. I don’t think I’d be in the place I am now without him coaching me and being there for me on and off the field. 

“He’s definitely a big part of my life and my baseball career.”

Deciding not to play in the summer of 2021, Pawlik stayed at Grace, lifted weights and worked with Love on his swing.

“It’s probably one of the best things I’ve done,” says Pawlik.

In 153 games at Grace, the lefty swinger hit .267 (136-of-509) with 11 home runs, two triples, 35 doubles, 94 runs batted in, 102 runs scored, a .788 OPS (.379 on-base percentage plus .409 slugging average) and 16 stolen bases.

In 2023, Pawlik batted at a .293 (43-of-147) clip with seven homers, one triple, 10 doubles, 35 RBIs, 40 runs, .962 OPS (.445/.517) and 11 steals in 46 games.

Pawlik, a 6-foot-3, 205-pounder, knocked in five runs in a Feb. 19 against Aquinas at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind.

He tied a program record with three doubles in a game vs. Aquinas in 2022.

After producing 12 multi-hit games in 2022, he posted 11 in 2023 as Grace tied the single-season school record for victories with 21.

In his first 11 games with the 2023 Xenia (Ohio) Scouts of the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League, Pawlik was hitting .250 (8-of-32) with nine RBIs and six runs.

The Colby Watilo-managed Scouts are affiliated with Athletes In Action

Pawlik played for AIA’s Rochester (N.Y.) Ridgemen (managed by former Richmond (Ind.) Roosters infielder Taylor Hargrove) during the 2022 New York Collegiate Baseball League summer slate and had such a good experience that he jumped at the chance to play in Xenia.

A lefty-throwing first baseman, Pawlik prides himself on his D.

“At a young age I learned defensive play wins the game so I’ve always had a big drive to the best at that,” says Pawlik, who counts reading the hitter and making the necessary plays as keys at first base. 

While Penn now his turf, that was not the case when Pawlik was there. Grace has also had grass and dirt. IWU has a turf field.

“The natural field has helped me become the fielder I am because you don’t get the luxury of turf hops and you learn to deal with bad hops,” says Pawlik.

After Pawlik announced he would transfer for his grad year, he talked to Ian MacDonald — who is now head coach at Indiana Wesleyan.

“There was super high interest from both sides,” says Pawlik. “I just really like how they carry themselves and what they’re about at (Indiana) Wesleyan.”

He visited the campus a couple of weeks into the summer.

“I loved everything about it —  the coaches, the facilities. A couple of days after that I decided to make it official and make it my home for my fifth year.”

IWU went 41-20-1 overall and 26-10 in the Crossroads League and made its first NAIA World Series appearance in 2023.

Born in South Bend, Ind., Jeff Pawlik grew up in nearby Granger with parents Rod and Lisa and sister Lexie.

Rod Pawlik is a longtime Penn football assistant coach.

Lisa Pawlik is a Health/Physical Education teacher and former head volleyball coach. She guided Penn to state championships in 2010 and 2011 — the first one with the help of Lexie Pawlik (Class of 2011), who went on to play at the University of South Carolina and Western Michigan University and was a coach as Lexie Banks.

“(My parents) instilled in me the hard work ethic growing up,” says Pawlik. “I was always in the gym with them or on the field. I got to see them go about their business. 

“They also taught me to have short-term memory if things aren’t going well and just move on to the next.”

Jeff played at what is now Harris Township Baseball Softball and was in travel ball with the Granger Irish, Michiana Scrappers, Mark Haley-coached South Bend Cubs and Mike Marks-coached Hitters Edge (Sturgis, Mich.).

Pawlik was on the Penn varsity as a junior and senior, playing for Greg Dikos (who is Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Famer and recently became a six-time state champion coach).

“It was a good experience,” says Pawlik of his time with the Kingsmen. “I had a lot of fun. Those were my buddies growing up. 

“We just got along really well and it was a super-competitive atmosphere.”

Rod and Lisa also played videos of Michael Jordan for their son.

“I could see how competitive he was and how intensely he played the game,” says Pawlik. “Watching how successful that made him made me want to play the same way.

“Obviously I don’t have the same talent he does, but I can carry myself in the same way.”

Pawlik, who has been honored as CSC Academic All-District and Academic all-conference during his career, earned a Sport Management degree with a Business Administration minor and began working on his Master of Business Administration (MBA) at Grace and says he will look to finish it at IWU.

Jeff Pawlik. (Grace College Photo)
Jeff Pawlik. (Grace College Photo)
Jeff Pawlik. (Grace College Photo)
Jeff Pawlik. (Grace College Photo)
Jeff Pawlik. (Grace College Photo)

Determined moundsman Coil seeks consistent improvement

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

Nolan Coil grew up in Valparaiso, Ind., with his father and brother teaching him about baseball.
Now a right-handed pitcher with two years of eligibility left at Calvin College in Grand Rapids, Mich., Nolan leans on what he’s learned from father Wayne Coil (who coached him on the traveling Valpo Crusaders and Valparaiso American Legion Post 94 and is junior varsity coach at Valparaiso High School) and brother Alex Coil (who played at Valparaiso High School and is now doing play-by-play for the Triple-A Memphis Redbirds) plus other lessons along the way.
“I use my knowledge to make up for other aspects that may lack in my game,” says Nolan, who recently turned 20. “My dad and brother have been huge in teaching me.
“I’m very determined. I want to get better consistently.”
Valparaiso-born Coil also played Valpo Americans Baseball (experiencing three years of all-stars in the state tournament) as well as for the Valpo Crusaders (coached by his father and Eric Jones), Indiana Breakers (coached by Scott Ellrich) and Todd Evans-led Valparaiso High School program. Nolan is a 2021 VHS graduate.
In two seasons at Calvin, Coil has pitched in 23 contests (14 out of the bullpen) with two wins, 37 strikeouts and 18 walks in 51 innings.
In 2023, he made 13 mound appearances (10 in relief) and went 1-2 with 14 strikeouts and seven walks in 23 innings while dealing with a hamstring issue.
“I definitely prefer to be a starter, but I’m definitely willing to go out there whenever the coach tells me to go out there,” says Coil. “I’m versatile in that way.”
The 6-foot-3, 215-pounder launches his pitches from a three-quarter overhand arm slot.
“I definitely get extended,” says Coil, who employs a four-seam fastball, two-seam fastball, cutter, knuckle curveball and change-up.
By the end of the spring season, Coil was sitting at 84-87 mph with his four-seamer.
Thrown in the low 80s, his cutter looks like a fastball then has late-breaking movement.
Coil watched video of big leaguers including Phil Hughes and Dylan Cease and studied their grips and arm actions and came up with the knuckle curve which travels in the low 70s.
It’s a “circle” change that Coil throws.
“The four-seam and cutter are the best pitches,” says Coil.
The Kevin Van Duyn-coached Calvin Knights are part of the NCAA Division III Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association, which also counts Trine University in Angola, Ind., as a member.
At the D-III level, teams practice for about a month in the fall then do not work with coaches again on a daily basis until the spring season gets closer.
“We’ll all work out together,” says Coil. “We make sure we’re bigger, faster and stronger than we were in the fall.”
In the classroom, Coil is a Sport Management major and Spanish/Data Analytics minor.
Coil’s last summer with Post 94 was 2021. He played for the New York Collegiate Baseball League’s Rochester (N.Y.) Ridgemen in 2022 and is with the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League’s Royal Oak (Mich.) Leprechauns in 2023.
“It’s a good experience,” says Coil of the squad based in the Detroit suburbs. “In this league there aren’t a lot of Division III kids.
“It’s an opportunity to show that my talents are here to stay and deserve to be here.”
Wayne Coil and his wife and mother to Nolan and Alex — Traci Coil — are both Valparaiso Community Schools teachers. Wayne is band director at Benjamin Franklin Middle School. Traci Coil is at Heavlin Elementary.

Nolan Coil. (Calvin College Photo)
Nolan Coil. (Mike Penn Photo)
Nolan Coil. (Mike Penn Photo)
Nolan Coil at center. (Joe Territo Photo)
Nolan Coil. (Kyle Griffin Photo)
Nolan Coil. (Kyle Griffin Photo)