Tag Archives: Top Tier

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)

Crown Point alum Bosse earns CCAC Pitcher of the Week honor with St. Ambrose U.

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

Jacob Bosse was honored as Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference Baseball Pitcher of the Week on April 23.

The junior left-hander at NAIA member St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Iowa, threw an eight-inning complete game with a career high-tying 12 strikeouts and four walks in a 14-1 win against Judson University. He had a shutout going until the seventh inning.

In eight mound outings (all starts) for the 2024 Fighting Bees, Bosse is 2-1 with a 6.00 earned run average, 53 strikeouts and 36 walks in 36 innings. Opponents are hitting .218 against him.

In his first season at St. Ambrose in 2023, he pitched 11 times (six as a starter) and was 1-0 with a 3.82 ERA, 53 strikeouts and 38 walks in 30 2/3 innings.

SAU head coach Tony Huntley and pitching coach Hunter Keim could decide to send Bosse to the bump Sunday, April 28 against visiting Calumet College of St. Joseph (the school in Whiting, Ind., has players familiar to Bosse including Jorge Santos) or save him for next week’s CCAC Tournament in Joliet, Ill.

Pitching wasn’t always the thing for Bosse.

Growing up in Crown Point, Ind.,and playing Little League and Cal Ripken/Babe Ruth ball and travel ball with Top Tier, he was an outfielder.

At Crown Point High School, he only stepped on the mound once in awhile.

“I’d go in if we needed a guy,” says Bosse. “I had no real feel for how to be a pitcher.”

He went up the ladder for the Bulldogs, playing on the frosh team as a freshman, junior varsity squad as a sophomore and varsity as a junior. He could be found in left field or center field.

Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Famer Steve Strayer leads the CPHS program.

“He’s probably one of the best coaches I’ll ever have,” says Bosse of Strayer. “He’s a great guy. He really gave me confidence. 

“He helped me become a better baseball player and a better person.”

While working out for a 2020 senior season that wound up canceled because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Bosse began to get serious about pitching.

After graduation, the left-hander stuck with it.

As fits his personality, he threw himself the task of getting better at the craft.

“I’m a very fierce competitor,” says Bosse, 22. “I care a lot about what and how I’m doing. If goes beyond the game for me. I’m planning my days out around what I’m going to do to get better. 

“My competitiveness and hunger to do better every day are my best qualities.”

Delivering from a high three-quarter arm slot, the 5-foot-11, 170-pound Bosse mixes a four-seam fastball, “circle” change-up, 12-to-6 curveball and a slider.

He has topped out at 92 mph and sits at 87 to 91 mph with his fastball. His change travels at 75 to 78, curve at 70 to 74 and slider at 76 to 79.

“I try to get more arm-side sink (with the change-up),” says Bosse. “I try to get a lot of fade to it to miss more barrels. It plays really well off my fastball.

“I do get a lot of natural run. When I pull it down, I get more back spin than side spin. I try to create a rise effect with it.”

Bosse attended a Prep Baseball Report showcase through Top Tier and was drawn to South Suburban College, a National Junior College Athletic Association member in South Holland, Ill. It was where he became a pitcher-only.

Toeing the slab for the Steve Ruzich-coached Bulldogs, Bosse pitched in 37 games (29 as a reliever) in 2021 and 2022 and went 5-3 with 5.72 ERA, 96 strikeouts and 70 walks in 74 innings.

Pitching for the NWI Rippers in a Babe Ruth district game in the summer of 2021, Bosse struck out a record 20 batters. He faced 24 batters and gave up one hit in 6 2/3 innings. Of 106 pitches, 69 were strikes.

“I do consider myself to be a pretty high-strikeout pitcher,” says Bosse. “I do take into account how many pitches I’m using. If I can strike out a guy as fast as I can, I try to do that and really challenge him.”

Through Twitter (now X), Bosse was recruited to St. Ambrose by assistant coach Joe Vaccaro.

“I came out here for a visit, loved it and decided it was the place for me,” says Bosse. “It is a really nice place.”

In the summer of 2022, Bosse played for the Crown Point-based Lake County CornDogs of the Northern League. In 2023, he was with the Northwoods League’s Rochester (Minn.) Honkers. This summer he’s due to play for the NWL’s Fond du Lac (Wis.) Dock Spiders.

A Sport Management major, Bosse expects to finish his undergraduate degree in the fall then begin masters classes. He says he plans to play 2025 might come back in 2026 as a graduate student. The pandemic plus his time in junior college has added to his eligibility clock.

Bosse’s favorite MLB team is the Los Angeles Dodgers. A recreational basketball player growing up, his favorite athlete is former Chicago Bulls point guard Derrick Rose.

“I got to see him play a couple of times when I was a kid,” says Bosse. “That’s how I grew to love Chicago.”

Jacob is the oldest of Brad and Diana Bosse’s two children. Allyson Bosse is studying Business at Indiana University South Bend.

Jacob Bosse. (St. Ambrose University Photo)
Jacob Bosse. (St. Ambrose University Photo)
Jacob Bosse. (St. Ambrose University Photo)
Jacob Bosse. (Lake County CornDogs Photo)
Jacob Bosse. (Lake County CornDogs Photo)
Jacob Bosse. (South Suburban College Photo)

Jacob Bosse.
Jacob Bosse with sister Allyson, father Brad and mother Diana.

JKR Baseball Bullpen Tournaments Hoosier Home Run Derby Oct. 15 at Grand Park

BY STEVE KRAH

http://www.IndianaRBI.com

A dozen of the state’s best prep power hitters will swing for the fences in a bracket-style tournament this month at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind.

The JKR Baseball Bullpen Tournaments Hoosier Home Run Derby — brainchild of Indiana University senior Sport Marketing & Management major Jayce Riegling — is scheduled for 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 15 on Field 9 or 10.

The 12 that have accepted invitations are (with high school, travel ball affiliation and college commit status): 

* First baseman/outfielder Eli Bennett (Indianapolis Cathedral Class of 2025/Canes Midwest National/Indiana U. commit)

* Shortstop/second baseman Bryce Brabender (Mooresville Class of 2024/Canes Indiana/Lincoln Trail commit)

* First baseman/left-handed pitcher Davian Carrera (Boone Grove Class of 2025/Five Star Great Lakes/Indiana U. commit)

* Catcher/infielder Hogan Denny (Mooresville Class of 2024/Canes Midwest National/Indiana U. commit)

* Shortstop/third baseman Huston Dunn (Fishers Class of 2025/Indiana Bulls/Uncommitted)

* Outfielder Jayce Lee (South Bend St. Joseph Class of 2024/Indiana Bulls/Notre Dame commit)

* Catcher/infielder Thomas Lynch (Evansville Memorial Class of 2024/Indiana Bulls/Purdue commit)

* First baseman/right-handed pitcher Zach McLean (Columbus North Class of 2024/Indiana Bulls/Uncommitted)

* Outfielder Micah Rienstra-Kiracofe (Indianapolis North Central Class of 2024/Canes Midwest National/Kent State commit)

* Catcher/outfielder Reed Robinson (New Prairie Class of 2026/Top Tier/Uncommitted)

* Catcher/first baseman D.J. Scheumann (Mt. Vernon-Fortville Class of 2024/Indiana Bulls/Ball State commit)

* Infielder Isaac VanderWoude (Illiana Christian Class of 2024/Indiana Bulls/Virginia commit)

In the single-elimination tourney, each player received 3.5 minutes per round with 1 timeout per batter per round. 

The pitcher may throw the next pitch right away and there is a moneyball (2 points) for the final 45 seconds.

The field was chosen based on available metrics, stats and talks with experts — including those from Prep Baseball Report Indiana — who have scouted these players. 

Riegling says the format allows for little down time — in other words more action with swinging more often — which is more fan-friendly and helps the event stay on-time.

He estimates that the Derby will wrap by 6 p.m.

Riegling played football, basketball and baseball at Lakeland High School in LaGrange, Ind.

As LHS seniors (Class of 2020), Riegling and Braden Yoder organized the Northeast Indiana Conference Home Run Derby in the fall of 2019 benefitting cancer awareness.

Riegling went to IU with the goal of becoming a sports agent and has been involved in many events and internships. He launched The JKR Podcast in March 2021 and has rolled out 350-plus episodes so far, featuring conversations with some of the top baseball players and personalities not only in Indiana but the nation.

“It’s the relationships that I have with these guys,” says Riegling, who regularly shares texts with the Derby invitees. “If I was a high school ballplayer right now, especially one of the top guys in the state, I’d love to go out and compete against some of the other best power hitters.”

JKR BASEBALL 

BULLPEN TOURNAMENTS

HOOSIER HOME RUN DERBY

Brackets

(Single-Elimination)

First Round

Reed Robinson vs. Eli Bennett

Micah Rienstra-Kiracofe vs. D.J. Scheumann

Zach McLean vs. Thomas Lynch

Hogan Denny vs. Huston Dunn

Second Round

Robinson/Bennett winner vs. Jayce Lee

Rienstra-Kiracofe winner vs. Bryce Brabender

McLean/Lynch winner vs. Davian Carrera

Denny/Dunn winner vs. Isaac VanderWoude

Semifinals

4 Bracket winners

Championship

2 Bracket winners

Sponsors: Bullpen Tournaments, CSE, Hit Hero, Krato Bat Weight, NRK, Old Fort Baseball Co., 443 Decals.

Chicago-born lefty Djuraskovic takes circuitous baseball route

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

Cal Djuraskovic has had short daily commutes.
And one very long one.
Born in Chicago and raised on the city’s southeast side, Cal attended nearby Bishop Noll Institute in Hammond, Ind. — the alma mater of his mother.
Before he could drive, Cal got to school by boarding the South Shore Line at the Hegewisch station. The train trip took a little over 30 minutes each way.
A few years later, Djuraskovic (pronounced Jur-Oss-Coe-Vich) found himself studying and playing baseball at Davenport University in Grand Rapids, Mich.
Not wishing to sign a long-term lease during the uncertainty of COVID-19 pandemic, Cal drove back and forth to school everyday. That’s a roundtrip of about 330 miles or five hours of windshield time.
“I did not want to get stuck,” says Djuraskovic. “I gave pitching lessons after practice to make up the money for gas.”
And that’s when gas could be had for about $2 a gallon.
A left-handed pitcher, Djuraskovic took a circuitous route to Davenport and wound up close to home as a professional ballplayer.
After a stint with the independent American Association’s Gary (Ind.) SouthShore RailCats, he finished the 2021 season with the Windy City ThunderBolts and is back with that indy Frontier League club in the Chicago suburb of Crestwood, Ill., in 2022.
“My whole life I wanted to be a pro ball player,” says Djuraskovic, 26. “By college I knew I can make it happen.”
Cal played outfield and had a little mound time at Bishop Noll before to his senior season, but it was that spring of 2014 that he blossomed as a pitcher. He threw a perfect game, a no-hitter and was named first-team all-Greater South Shore Conference.
His head coach for his first three seasons with the BNI Warriors was Paul Wirtz.
“He didn’t mess around,” says Djuraskovic of Wirtz. “It was a good thing. If you want to get better you have to take this game seriously.
“If you want to be a Warrior, you’ve got to act like one.”
He played travel ball with the Michigan Jets and competed against teams like Michigan Jets like the Indiana Bulls and Top Tier.
The southpaw of Serbian descent’s first college experience was at NCAA Division II Tiffin (Ohio) University. Deciding that wasn’t the right fit for him, he transferred to D-I Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant. Going from the D-II to a D-I, he was required to sit out a season as a “grayshirt” for 2016 and retained all his eligibility.
It was at CMU while building strength in the weight room that he broke knee cartilage that led to micro-fracture surgery. Then his scholarship was cut.
Cal landed on his feet with the D-II DU Panthers.
“By the grace of God I had Davenport,” says Djuraskovic, who played four years for head coach Kevin Tidey (Eric Lawrence was the pitching coach at the end of his DU days) and earned his degree in Sport Management with a minor in Business.
Used primarily out of the bullpen, Cal went 6-4 with a 4.04 earned run average at Davenport. It was in 2021 that he enjoyed his best season. He made 25 mound appearances and produced a 2.62 ERA with eight saves. In 44 2/3 innings, he struck out 61 and walked 16 and was named first-team all-Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.
He spent three summers in the Northwoods League — two stints in Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., and one in Traverse City, Mich.
Along the way, Cal picked up a pitching mentor. It was during his time in the National Team Identification Series at USA Baseball headquarters in Cary, N.C., that he met Jim Hall.
Djuraskovic later went to his Hall’s house in Lockport, Ill., and he still occasionally gets pointers from him. Hall stays in-touch with Cal’s family.
“This man has definitely changed my life for the better,” says Djuraskovic of Hall, who is a member of the American Baseball Coaches Association and Illinois High School Baseball Coaches Association halls of fame.
Cal’s mother is Allison Saberniak. Her father is Albert Saberniak, who turned Cal into a South Side baseball rooter.
“I’m a diehard White Sox fan,” says Djuraskovic. “I get that from my grandfather. We went to a couple of playoff games in ’05 (the year the White Sox won the World Series). We watch Cubs games to see them lose.
“But don’t get me wrong. If the Cubs gave me a contract I’d sign it in a heartbeat.”
Cal pitched in three games with Gary (one as a starter) and five with Windy City (all in relief) in 2021, going a combined 0-2 with two saves, a 1.59 ERA, 11 strikeouts and eight walks in 11 1/3 innings.
As a middle to late reliever for the ’22 ThunderBolts, Djuraskovic has no decisions and a 1.80 ERA in five games. He has eight strikeouts and three walks in five innings.
At 6-foot-4 and 217 pounds — he has trimmed down from 240 — Djuraskovic uses a three-quarter arm slot to deliver a four-seam fastball, slider, splitter and two-seam fastball.
His four-seamer has been clocked at 97 mph and sits at 92 to 94 mph.
Cal’s slider breaks “a little late and sharp.”
In his second full season of throwing it consistently, Djuraskovic learned his splitter from teammates and began doing as former splitter-throwing White Sox pitcher Jose Contreras by using a softball to stretch out the distance between his index and middle fingers.
“It has a mind of its own,” says Djuraskovic of the pitch that serves as a change-up. “Sometimes it gets a little knuckeballish. Sometimes it dives. The best I can do is try to spot it up.”
Lefty Cal’s two-seamer runs in on left-handed hitters.
Windy City, which is managed by Brian Smith, plays at Ozinga Field.
Djuraskovic has also enjoyed some Frontier League trips. He especially liked visits to the Florence (Ky.) Y’alls and Evansville (Ind.) Otters.
“I like the (Florence) area and they have a really nice ballpark,” says Djuraskovic. (Evansville’s Bosse Field) is so historic. You can feel the presence of greatness.”

Cal Djuraskovic (Windy City ThunderBolts Photo)
Cal Djuraskovic (Davenport University Photo)
Cal Djuraskovic (Windy City ThunderBolts Photo)

Cal Djuraskovic (left) embraces with catcher Manny Garcia after Djuraskovic “shut the door” June 15 to close out the game for the victorious Windy City ThunderBolts. (Windy City ThunderBolts Photo)

Valpo U.’s Tucker took it to another level in 2022

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

Nolan Tucker enjoyed a breakout collegiate baseball season at the plate in 2022.
The lefty-swinging Valparaiso (Ind.) University second baseman hit a team-best .365 (46-of-126) with one home run, one triple, 14 doubles 17 runs batted in and 21 runs scored for the NCAA Division I Beacons.
Tucker pinch hit for head coach Brian Schmack’s club in a March 15 game at Notre Dame became an everyday starter March 18 at Murray State. He was at the top of the batting order the last few games of the season.
He went 4-of-5 in the first game of a March 25 doubleheader vs. St. Bonaventure, 4-of-5 April 30 at Southern Illinois April 30, 4-of-4 May 20 at Evansville and was named to the Missouri Valley Conference first team. He was the first Valpo player since 2018 and second since the school joined the MVC to do that.
“This was years in the making,” says Tucker, 21. “I finally had a chance to showcase it.”
Prior to this spring, Tucker had only played in 20 college games. He made 16 appearances in 2020 before that season was shortened because of the COVID-19 pandemic. He was also the president of his dormitory — Brandt Hall.
After playing four games in 2021, he suffered a season-ending injury. He did earn Valparaiso University Presidential Academic Honors and the MVC Commissioner’s Academic Excellence Award and was on the MVC Honor Roll.
While he rehabilitated, Tucker took a deep dive into what he could do to boost his batting.
“I wanted to figure this hitting thing out and take it to next level,” says Tucker. “I was looking at videos and comparing myself to big leaguers.”
Tucker saw hitting coach Trey Hannam on social media, liked his profile and reached out to him and was soon making the 180-mile trek from Cedar Lake, Ind., to work with him in Milan, Ill.
Current Valpo assistants Kory Winter and Mitchell Boe and former assistant Casey Fletcher also played a part in Tucker’s transformation.
A 2019 graduate of Hanover Central High School in Cedar Lake, where he played for Wildcats head coach Ryan Bridges, Tucker was ranked among Indiana’s best shortstops and was four-year letterwinner and three-time all-conference selection.
With strong shortstops on the squad (including Benton Central High School graduate Alex Thurston), Tucker made the switch to second base at Valpo to get on the field and has come to love the position.
Tucker began wrestling early in elementary school. In high school, his head coaches were Mike Drosias as a freshman and Joshua Rowinski. There were to conference titles and a sectional championship.
He was in the 132-pound class as a sophomore in 2016-17 when he went 35-5 and qualified for the semistate then decided to focus on baseball and getting bigger and stronger and did not wrestle as a junior or senior.
“It’s a tough sport,” says Tucker of wrestling. “It’s physically and mentally demanding.
“The lessons I’ve learned from that sport I’ll carry with me forever.”
Tucker was born in Munster, Ind., and grew up in Cedar Lake. He played town ball and then went into travel baseball. He played for the St. John All-Stars, Playmakers, Chiefs, Top Tier, National Pitching Association and then the Dave Sutkowski-coached Morris Chiefs for his 17U summer.
“He’s made huge impact on me,” says Tucker of Sutkowski. “He’s taught me a lot about the game, but more about life like being punctual, responsible and a leader.
“He was always there to reassure you and make you confident.
“It’s about the man you become.”
Tucker is scheduled to join the Prospect League’s Lafayette (Ind.) Aviators — managed by Chris Willsey — next Tuesday, May 7. He did not play in 2021 while rehabbing. He was with the Josh Galvan-coached Tropics of gthe College Summer League at Grand Park in Westfield, Ind., in 2020. He also got to play for the Jorge Hernandez-managed Independence in the College Summer Baseball Invitational in Bryan/College Station, Texas, where he met fellow Region native and CSBI Unity manager LaTroy Hawkins.
Nolan had never met the 21-year major leaguer and Indiana High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Famer but got connected through cousin and former Kouts (Ind.) Middle/High School and Morris Chiefs coach Jim Tucker.
In 2019, Nolan Tucker played for the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League’s St. Clair Green Giants in Windsor, Ont.
Tucker is a Business Management major. He is one year away from getting his undergraduate degree and has three more years of playing eligibility.
“I’ll definitely go two more,” says Tucker. “I’m on the bubble about the third year.”
Nolan is the oldest of Keith and Julie Tucker’s two children. Keith Tucker works for Team Industrial Services and Julie for Liveops. Daughter Kylin (18) is a 2022 Hanover Central graduate bound for Ball State University.

Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)

Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)

Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)

Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Nolan Tucker (Valparaiso University Photo)
Northwest Indiana natives LaTroy Hawkins and Nolan Tucker meet in Texas in 2020.