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Mudcats Donate Baseball Equipment to East Wake High School

October 17, 2019

 

ZEBULON, N.C. – The Carolina Mudcats, the Class-A Advanced affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers, today donated over 50 game ready cleats and baseball equipment to the baseball program at East Wake High School in Wendell, NC. The equipment and donated cleats were worn or used by several Mudcats players throughout the club’s 2019 Carolina League season.

The Mudcats, represented by mascot Muddy the Mudcat and Director of Marketing and Community Relations Sam Barry, presented the East Wake Warriors players and coach Tony Piercy with the cleats and equipment donation to the local Title I baseball program today.

“Local schools and students in our community mean so much to our organization” said Barry. “To be able to provide these kids with such an amazing donation from our players just goes to show what we have always known, we are more than just a sports team.”

Pitcher Noah Zavolas, the 2019 Carolina League Pitcher of the Year, championed the donation effort by collecting the cleats, and other game used equipment, from his Mudcats’ teammates this past season. Zavolas was also the recipient of the Mudcats’ Ed Hales Award last season. The Ed Hales Award is awarded annually to the Mudcats player(s) who best exemplifies unselfish spirit, dedication and commitment to the community.

The Mudcats will celebrate 30 years of baseball in North Carolina when they begin the 2020 season by hosting the Winston-Salem Dash on Thursday, April 9 at Five County Stadium in Zebulon, NC. Ticket information is available by visiting the Five County Stadium front office in Zebulon, by calling (919) 269-CATS (2287) and by visiting carolinamudcats.com.

The Carolina Mudcats are the proud Carolina League, Class-A Advanced affiliate of the Milwaukee Brewers. First established in 1991, the two-time Southern League Champion Mudcats are entering their 30th consecutive season of baseball at Five County Stadium in Zebulon, N.C. The Mudcats are owned and operated by the Milwaukee Brewers.

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This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Carolina League, Carolina Mudcats, Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Family Relief/Resources, Milwaukee Brewers, North Carolina, Youth Sports { }

Blue Wahoos Make Global Impact With Equipment Donations

October 1, 2019

 

Standing in front of a mud-brick house, we exchanged pleasantries as best we could in our broken Spanish, our families were well and we were glad to be there, before getting down to business and posing the same question as always.

What do you need?

It’s a near-foolish question, given that the community we stood in was one of the poorest in Nicaragua, way up north in the Somoto region where the only thing more profound than the natural beauty is the depth of the poverty. Where a dollar-a-day makes you wealthy. Where the floors are dirt and the houses are too. Long past where the power lines stopped reaching. Where the farmers aren’t paid money for their labor, instead they’re allowed to take home some of the rice and beans they grow for their families.

There was a murmur among the crowd, a collection of the local farming families, most Honduran refugees who had banded together to try to grow food together, before a woman stepped forward. Her son, no older than six, clung to her legs.

“Socks.”

I had to double check with our translator to make sure I’d understood correctly. We had visited the village to try to find out why their well was spitting out nothing but mud, leaving them without water to drink or to grow crops, and to diagnose the illness that was rapidly killing the chickens that provided one of the only sources of protein in their diets. Socks seemed like a rather nominal ask, all things considered.

“Tell them what you did,” she said, pushing her son in front of her while casting the I’m-not-angry-I’m-disappointed look that only mothers own.

“I’m sorry,” the boy said, his head down. “I put rocks in all the socks you brought last time and made them into baseballs.”

I couldn’t help but smile. Despite the overwhelming poverty he was growing up in–Nicaragua is the second poorest country in the western hemisphere and nearly half of its citizens live on less than a dollar a day–the kid just wanted to play ball.

The good thing, the non-profit I was traveling with, Helping Kids Round First, would be able to help the village fix their well and would provide medicine to keep the chicken flock healthy. While a minimal contribution, I’d be able to help the boy upgrade from the rolled-up sock baseballs he was playing with thanks to the Pensacola Blue Wahoos.

At the end of the 2019 season, a thrilling first year as a Minnesota Twins affiliate, the team came together for one final community service project.

As the Blue Wahoos players packed up their belongings to head home for the off-season, they filled box after box with equipment–bats, balls, cleats, gloves, catcher’s gear, tennis shoes, and, yes, socks–to be donated.

From there, their equipment was packed into suitcases and lugged through a series of connecting flights before barely escaping scrupulous customs agents in the Managua airport who wondered why I had two dozen pairs of brand name cleats in my luggage. Then it was loaded into a truck and driven down dirt roads across Nicaragua to be given out to children in one of the poorest regions of the world.

While the athletic socks the team had donated, the same royal blue knee-highs the Wahoos wear on the field, would be comically large on the boy, the stack of Southern League baseballs I had stuffed into my suitcase would at least save the pair on his feet from being rolled up and turned into a ball.

—

Helping Kids Round First’s work in Nicaragua started accidentally over 30 years ago. The non-profit’s founder, Craig Severtson, had traveled to the country in the midst of its civil war, a decades-long, brutal conflict between the government and the people that left over 50,000 dead. In an act of peaceful opposition to the fighting, Craig joined local families in their fields, picking crops and doing basic handiwork, helping families get through day-by-day while husbands and fathers fought in the conflict.

Friendly chatter in the fields turned to talk of baseball despite the sound of gunfire in the distance. After hearing that Craig was a ballplayer, the local farmers quickly scheduled a game between the American volunteers and local Nicaraguans.

When word got out that there would be a ballgame, a ceasefire was called. The men were called off the battle field and onto the baseball field. The same soldiers they were fighting against, armed with rifles, circled the field to provide protection.

For nine innings, the war stopped.

The community had just one ragged ball and one chipped wood bat. Every time a foul ball was hit, the game paused until the baseball could be tracked down and returned to the field. The fielders on both teams shared gloves, leaving them at their defensive position at the end of each inning. Livestock roamed freely in the outfield.

When he returned to the United States, Craig vowed he would return to the village with new baseball equipment. If the game was powerful enough to pause a war, the least he could do was bring them new bats and balls and gloves.

So he did. Carrying a single suitcase filled with gear, he returned to the community. The response was so strong, the people so grateful, that he did it again at the next community over. And again. And again. And again. Soon, he needed to bring friends along to help carry all the suitcases of baseball equipment.

Three decades later, the non-profit now brings over 20,000 pounds of baseball equipment annually to Nicaragua.

While providing baseball gear is a worthwhile project, the game has more importantly provided a foot-in-the-door for more significant aid. On each return trip, Craig made a habit of asking the same question, “What do you need?”, while handing out baseballs and gloves. The answers have always varied.

In the oppressively hot and arid northern regions of Nicaragua, extended drought had made it nearly impossible to grow enough food to survive. Kids can’t play ball if they’re starving. Helping Kids Round First began digging wells, providing water tanks and solar panels to power irrigation, bringing fertilizer and chickens, and now helps feed thousands daily.

In the eastern autonomous regions of the country, rough jungle roads make healthcare almost completely inaccessible, leaving rural families with five-plus hour treks to the nearest hospital with functioning equipment. Kids can’t play ball if they’re sick. Helping Kids Round First now ships two containers of medical equipment for every shipment of baseball equipment, bringing hospital necessities like X-Ray machines, fetal heart monitors, and electric hospital beds to clinics across the country.

The projects have become numerous. Scholarships for students who otherwise couldn’t afford to go to college. Health fairs in rural communities where women have never had access to a female doctor before. Daycares that provide quality education and allow single mothers to hold steady employment. Nursing homes that provide safe quarters to homeless elderly. Softball equipment to give young girls the same access to sports that boys enjoy. Each community’s needs have been different and each solution started with the simple act of bringing a ball and a bat to a kid who previously didn’t have one.

—

The equipment donated by the Blue Wahoos will end up in communities across Nicaragua, but the majority of the first shipment, what I carried in a pair of stuffed duffel bags, found a home at a small baseball academy in the city of Rivas, nestled alongside Lake Nicaragua in the southern stretches of the country.

Prior to the war, Nicaragua had seemed destined to join the Dominican Republic and Cuba as one of the baseball greats in Latin America. Dennis “El Presidente” Martinez had become the country’s first big leaguer in 1976 and quickly established himself as a bona fide ace. Tony Chevez reached the majors a year later as one of the league’s top pitching prospects. Albert Williams and Porfi Altimirano became bullpen mainstays for the Twins and Phillies, respectively. David Green, a prospect so lauded that he was compared to Willie Mays and dubbed “the next Roberto Clemente, left scouts from every big league team scrambling to book flights to Nicaragua to look for the next superstar.

The war stopped all that. The country quickly became too dangerous, the political situation too tenuous for Major League teams to have a presence, and the scouts fled the country as quickly as they’d come.

It wasn’t until the late 1990s that enough peace prevailed for teams to return to Nicaragua. The country produced a pair of stars, Marvin Benard of the Giants and Vicente Padilla of the Phillies, as the 2000s approached, but the war had left the country so ravaged that growth both financially and in the game was dreadfully slow.

Finally, in the 2010s, Nicaragua finally seemed ready to truly establish itself as a baseball powerhouse. Everth Cabrera electrified as an All-Star shortstop for the Padres. Erasmo Ramirez settled in as a stalwart in the Mariners and Rays rotations. J.C. Ramirez became one of the Angels top relievers. Cheslor Cuthbert won a World Series with the Royals. In the minors, Kevin Gadea (Rays), Roniel Raudes (Red Sox), and Jonathan Loaisiga (Yankees) shot up top prospects lists with the game’s best teams. Reporters went as far as to declare that a “Golden Era for Nicaraguan Baseball” had begun.

Unfortunately, history repeats itself. In the ’70s and ’80s, the good guys had beat the bad guys in the war. Over time, though, the good guys became the bad guys and simmering political tension recently turned again to all-out war, turning the golden age dark almost overnight. As the fighting took over the streets, the economy crashed and scouts again pulled out of the country. Even El Presidente himself shut down his baseball academy, one he’d run for almost two decades after his Major League career ended.

That left Johnny Alvarez, a former collegiate ballplayer turned coach, trying to almost-singlehandedly keep the professional side of baseball alive in his country. A former assistant coach at Martinez’s academy, he continued training young prospects, establishing a makeshift academy in his hometown after El Presidente’s ceased operations. Helping Kids Round First has remained its sole financier and provider of baseball equipment.

While Alvarez is poor, the young players he trains often come from even humbler backgrounds. In 2016, the first prospect from his academy signed professionally when Nixson Munoz, a left-handed pitcher, inked a contract with the Boston Red Sox.

At the time, we took Nixson to dinner to celebrate. As we all ate, I noticed Nixson had barely touched his food. It wasn’t until Johnny’s wife leaned over and patiently demonstrated how to cut his meat with a knife and fork that he began to eat. The young man had come from a family so poor he was unsure how to use silverware correctly in a restaurant.

Following dinner, we had proceeded to the parking lot to unload the baseball equipment we’d brought for Johnny’s academy. As we carried duffel bags across the parking lot, Nixson stopped me.

“Are there any gloves in the bags?”

“Of course,” I answered. “Do you need a new one?”

“Not a new one,” He responded. “Any one. I don’t have a glove.”

The kid was so talented he’d been signed by the Boston Red Sox but didn’t even own a baseball glove.

Thanks to the donations from Pensacola players, more kids like Nixson will gain access to the game. The same cleats that raced around the bases at Blue Wahoos Stadium will continue running across dusty fields in Central America. The same gloves that caught fly balls and snagged grounders in front of the Hoosville faithful will soon become the first glove a child owns in Nicaragua. The same Southern League baseballs that were hit in the batting cages underneath the stands in Pensacola will be hit by bats and tree brances and replace rolled-up socks on playing fields a thousand miles away.

Through the generosity of the Blue Wahoos players, the 2019 season will be one that continues to live on for years to come.

Daniel Venn is the Media and Public Relations Manager for the Pensacola Blue Wahoos and a board member for the 501(c)(3) non-profit Helping Kids Round First. His novel Beyond Baseball:Rounding First details his work in Nicaragua helping to spread the game of baseball globablly.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Family Relief/Resources, Florida, Minnesota Twins, Pensacola Blue Wahoos, Southern League, Youth Sports { }

OKC Dodgers and Oklahoma City Parks and Recreation Announce Formation of OKC Dodgers Rookie League

February 14, 2018

OKLAHOMA CITY – The Oklahoma City Dodgers and Oklahoma City Parks and Recreation have joined forces to create the OKC Dodgers Rookie League in order to help bolster youth baseball participation in the community as well as foster an environment that emphasizes leadership, teamwork and sportsmanship, the organizations announced today.

Last year, Oklahoma City Parks and Recreation was forced to cancel its baseball league due to low participation. The OKC Dodgers have stepped in to provide Dodgers-branded jerseys and hats for all players, in addition to other resources, thereby reducing participation costs and making the game more accessible.

“It was heartbreaking to learn Parks and Rec could not host a league last spring, and over the last few months we realized this was an opportunity for our organization to pitch in for our community,” said OKC Dodgers President/General Manager Michael Byrnes. “The game of baseball had an impressionable effect on so many of us at a young age. The Rookie League will provide further opportunities for our community’s youth to be active and to learn skills such as teamwork and leadership.”

The OKC Dodgers Rookie League will consist of four baseball divisions to accommodate boys and girls in multiple skill levels and age groups. A goal of six to eight teams will compete in each division: 4U T-Ball, 6U T-Ball, 8U Coach Pitch and 10U Kid Pitch. Registration is now open and the deadline to sign up is March 19. Those interested in having their children participate in the OKC Dodgers Rookie League can visit okc.gov/parksignup and use the event code 13205. Registration is also available by calling (405) 297-3882. The cost is $55 per child and is necessary for operation expenses, such as umpires and field maintenance.

The OKC Dodgers Rookie League will also host a registration event at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark on March 10, with further details to be announced in the future.

Practices will be held once per week starting the week of March 26. Game play starts April 7 and runs through May 26. The season schedule consists of eight games played at either Wheeler Park (1120 S. Western Ave.) or Stars and Stripes Park (3701 Lake Hefner Dr.).

“What better place than here in Oklahoma City – the very heart of America – to develop a partnership that will make it possible to preserve and protect and breathe new life into the all-American pastime of baseball,” said Oklahoma City Parks and Recreation Director Douglas Kupper. “We truly love having the Dodgers organization here and we greatly appreciate the OKC Dodgers’ support of our efforts to bring baseball to our youth.”

The OKC Dodgers Rookie League is currently in need of coaches and volunteers. To volunteer, or for more information, please call (405) 297-1489 or email christopher.lucas@okc.gov.

MISSION STATEMENT OF THE OKC DODGERS ROOKIE LEAGUE

The OKC Dodgers Rookie League is committed to enriching the lives of our youth and fostering a love of the game. The league provides a developmental, fun and safe environment for the enjoyment of the game of baseball. The OKC Dodgers Rookie League intends to help youth to set and work towards common goals, and to build the citizens of tomorrow though character, leadership ability and confidence.

Additionally, the OKC Dodgers Rookie League emphasizes four core values through P.L.A.Y.

Participation

Leadership

Accessibility

Youth Education

To learn more about the OKC Dodgers Rookie League, contact Grant Hansen with Oklahoma City Parks and Recreation by calling (405) 297-1591 or by emailing grant.hansen@okc.gov. The OKC Dodgers can be reached at (405) 218-1000 and more information is available at okcdodgers.com/rookieleague.

Tagged as : Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Los Angeles Dodgers, Oklahoma, Oklahoma City Dodgers, Pacific Coast League, Youth Sports { }

Jays Donate Equipment To Youth In Nicaragua

December 4, 2017

The Blue Jays were in a hurry following their Florida State League North Division Championship victory over the Tampa Yankees in early September. Hurricane Irma was bearing down on Florida, forcing the FSL to cancel it’s championship series and cram the final two games of the North Division championship into a doubleheader, and most of the team was set to be shuttled to the airport as soon as they got their bags packed following Dunedin’s title win.

Despite their tight schedule and the emotions piling up in the room, the euphoria from having just won a championship, the anxiety from the impending hurricane, and the sadness always found at the end of a long season bidding farewell to teammates and friends, the 2017 Dunedin Blue Jays team united for one final community service project before they parted ways.

The team pulled a large cardboard box into the clubhouse and began filling it with their equipment. When it overflowed with cleats, bats, hats, batting gloves, and other gear, they grabbed a second box to hold even more equipment to be donated to youth baseball players in need.

This past week, the Blue Jays equipment was transported to Nicaragua and distributed to youth baseball players and teams.

Despite baseball being the national sport of the Central American country, civil war, natural disasters, and poverty have created conditions that make it difficult for young ballplayers to access the basic equipment needed to play the game at a high level. Only fourteen Nicaraguans have ever played in the Major Leagues and just three appeared in an MLB game during the 2017 season. With three quarters of the country living on less than $2 per day, sports equipment is simply too expensive for most families.

Partnering with the non-profit Helping Kids Round First and the St. Petersburg College baseball team, the Blue Jays helped make it possible for children in the impoverished Somotillo and Somoto regions of northern Nicaragua and young athletes in the city of Rivas to play the game of baseball. Players ranging in ages from 5 to 16 were provided with gloves, bats, hats, batting gloves, baseballs, cleats, and catching gear, many receiving those items for the first time in their lives.

In northern Nicaragua, the equipment was delivered in small communities of subsistence farmers where highly competitive youth baseball leagues are played on livestock grazing land between villages. Too excited to even wait for the pastures to be cleared of animals to play, bullpen sessions broke out next to bean fields outside of the farmers’ houses.

When volunteers arrived in Rivas, the team chosen to receive equipment was in the middle of a sandlot game with two dirt-blackened baseballs and a single hand-made wooden bat. Players on both sides shared fielding gloves. Within minutes of receiving their new equipment, the ballplayers had returned to the field, too anxious to try out their new gloves and bats to be herded together for a photo.

For many players, Dunedin is a step on the path to a Major League career. Thanks to the generosity of the 2017 Blue Jays players, Dunedin has helped young baseball players in Nicaragua take the first step towards a career in baseball that otherwise would not have been possible.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Dunedin Blue Jays, Equipment Donations, Florida, Florida State League, Toronto Blue Jays, Youth Sports { }

PawSox and Jordan’s Furniture Donate Record Amount of Equipment to the Boys & Girls Club of Pawtucket

September 13, 2017

For the fourth year in a row, the PawSox teamed up with Jordan’s furniture and collected new/used baseball equipment during the 2017 season to benefit aspiring young baseball players at the Boys & Girls Club of Pawtucket.

At every home game, fans were invited to donate equipment in red barrels that were located directly inside the Main Gate at McCoy Stadium. This season the barrels filled up quicker than ever, and the PawSox were able to donate more equipment than they ever have to the Boys & Girls Club of Pawtucket.

“This equipment changes lives,” said Jim Hoyt, CEO of the Boys & Girls Club of Pawtucket. “We’d once again like to thank the Pawtucket Red Sox and Jordan’s Furniture for their generosity.”

“Dropping the equipment off to the Boys & Girls Club at the end of each season is something that we look forward to every year,” said PawSox Director of Communications & Community Relations, Joe Bradlee. “We’re able to see first-hand the impact we are making on so many young athletes in the area.”

The PawSox would like to thank our fans who came out to the ballpark this season and made a difference for our local youth.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

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Tagged as : Boston Red Sox, Boys and Girls Clubs, Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, International League, Pawtucket Red Sox, Promoting Health/Fitness, Rhode Island { }

Donation Drive for Hurricane Harvey Cleanup Efforts at Dell Diamond Sunday

September 7, 2017

ROUND ROCK, Texas – Wish For Our Heroes will be at Dell Diamond for the 9th annual Reckless Kelly’s Celebrity Softball Jam this Sunday collecting donations to aid in Hurricane Harvey cleanup efforts.

The non-profit said the biggest need is for cleaning supplies, garbage bags, rakes, tarps, tools and gift cards to home improvement stores. Additionally, they will collect new and gently used sports equipment and musical instruments to take to those in the affected areas that lost their gear or instruments in the storm and its aftermath.

All proceeds from the Celebrity Softball Jam are going straight to help with Hurricane Harvey relief efforts through Rebuild Texas. There will be a silent auction on the concourse featuring an autographed Josh Beckett jersey, a Willie Robertson autographed baseball and more. Proceeds from the auction will also go to Rebuild Texas.

The Jam features a celebrity softball game followed by a two-stage concert featuring over 30 acts. An all-star roster will take the field for an antic-filled celebrity softball game. Former Longhorns Ricky Williams, Cat Osterman, Quan Cosby, Kasey Studdard, Brooks Kieschnick and Greg Swindell will join MLB All-Stars Josh Beckett and Norm Charlton and more in the dugouts at Dell Diamond.

The packed musical lineup features Jack Ingram, American Aquarium, Randy Rogers, Roger Creager, Wade Bowen, Kevin Fowler, Cody Canada & the Departed, Midnight River Choir, Suzy Bogguss, Jamie Lin Wilson, John Evans, Charlie Robison, Rosie Flores, Jessie Dayton, Jason Eady, Mike and the Moonpies, Shinyribs, Bart Crow, Courtney Patton and more.

Since its inception, the Jam has raised over $350,000 through the Reckless Kelly Charitable Youth Foundation for area youth leagues, including the funding of a $150,000 renovation of Mabson Field in East Austin, TX.

Tickets for the 9th Annual RKCSJ are on sale now for just $25 and can be purchased online at RKCSJ.org. Tickets will go up to $30 on the day of the event.

For more information and to purchase tickets, visit RKCSJ.org. For up to the minute event info, like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.

Tagged as : Charity Auctions/Raffles, Disaster Relief, Equipment Donations, Fundraising Opportunities, Pacific Coast League, Round Rock Express, Supporting the Community, Texas, Texas Rangers { }

BlueClaws Collecting Baseball Gloves Over Last Homestand

August 27, 2017

The BlueClaws will be collecting new and used baseball gloves for Baseball Miracles at their remaining home games.

—

BlueClaws pitching coach Brian Sweeney is embarking on an off-season journey to Argentina with Baseball Miracles, an organization that helps expand baseball and softball to boys and girls with economic and environmental disadvantages throughout the world.

As part of the trip, Baseball Miracles is collecting baseball and softball gloves as part of their 1 Glove initiative. The goal if this initiative is to get one glove donated from each Little League in the country and these gloves will be given out to help grow baseball across the world.

The BlueClaws will be collecting gloves, both new and used at their home games through the rest of the regular season, which ends on September 4th. These gloves will then be donated to Baseball Miracles and their 1 Glove initiative. Donations will be collected at the New Jersey Natural Gas Information Booth on the concourse behind home plate.

For tickets to any remaining BlueClaws home game, call 732-901-7000 option 2 or click here.

– BlueClaws –

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Jersey Shore BlueClaws, New Jersey, Philadelphia Phillies, South Atlantic League, Youth Sports { }

SeaWolves To Host ‘Good Deeds Day’ on July 1

June 27, 2017

The Erie SeaWolves, Double-A Affiliate of the Detroit Tigers, have teamed up with Erie Federal Credit Union to host the fourth annual Good Deeds Day on Saturday, July 1 at UPMC Park.

Good Deeds Day is a drive to collect items needed by multiple non-profit organizations in the Erie region. Fans who donate an item at the game on July 1 will receive a complimentary Upper Box seat ticket to the SeaWolves’ Fan Appreciation Night on Saturday, August 26 against the Akron RubberDucks (Cleveland Indians).

“We would like to thank our partners at Erie Federal Credit Union for supporting this community initiative,” SeaWolves President Greg Coleman said. “We encourage SeaWolves fans to support one or more Erie-area organizations by bringing needed items to the ballpark on July 1.”

Items can be donated at the stadium from 6:00-7:00 p.m. prior to the SeaWolves’ game against the Altoona Curve. Stadium gates open to the general public at 6 p.m. Game time is 7:05 p.m. The following is a list of participating organizations and their current list of needed items:

Project Support Our Troops

Needs items include canned fruit (full size cans; no plastic containers), peanuts, peanut butter, trail mix, beef jerky, waterless hand sanitizer, snack cracker packs, foot powder, Silly String, Pringles, tooth paste, crossword puzzles, tooth brushes, rat traps, cookies, lip balm, gum, air freshener, eye drops, cards or letters of support, hard candy, shower scrubbies, non-aerosol bug repellant, On-the-Go drink mix, small Kleenex packs, Wet Wipes (travel size), tea bags, lotion, hand-held games, sun­flower seeds, instant cocoa packets, Q-Tips, Cracker Jack, deodorant, shampoo and conditioner. NO ramen noodles or travel-size personal hygiene items please.

United Service Corps

Various school supplies including pencils, glue sticks, markers, crayons and notebooks.

KaleidAScope, Inc.

Copy paper, paper towels, tissues, manila folders, large kitchen garbage bags, rolls of stamps, post-it notes, tablets of paper, snacks for groups, paper plates, plastic cups, hand sanitizer and disinfecting wipes.

The JFK Center

Arts and craft supplies including paper, crayons, colored pencils, glue, paint and paint brushes. Assorted toiletries including toothpaste and tissues. The JFK Center is also currently seeking volunteers and will have information available at its table.

Perseus House

Toiletries and paper products including tissues, toilet paper, paper plates, cups, and paper towels. Perseus House is also currently seeking volunteers and will have information available at its table.

Erie Youth Hockey

Hockey tape, hockey sticks, ice skates, hockey pucks, hockey pants, chest protectors and helmets.

Erie City Mission

Diapers (Sizes 2, 3, 4 & 5), baby wipes, baby food and formula, boxed food (cereal, breakfast bars, macaroni & cheese, spaghetti), canned food (fruit, vegetables, soup, broth, chicken, tuna), feminine hygiene products (pads, tampons, shaving cream), toilet paper, paper towels, mulch for gardens, various vegetable and fruit seeds for gardens.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Baby Supplies Drives, Detroit Tigers, Eastern League, Equipment Donations, Erie SeaWolves, Food Drives, Pennsylvania, Supporting the Community, Ticket Donations { }

Redbirds, MLB Make Donation to Memphis Public Schools

February 18, 2017

(Roger Cotton/Memphis Redbirds)

PHOTO GALLERY

MEMPHIS, Tennessee – The Memphis Redbirds Community Fund, in conjunction with Major League Baseball, has made a donation to Pitch In For Baseball to benefit Memphis Public Schools as part of MLB’s biennial RBI (Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities) Institute held this week in Memphis.

The donation will provide $25,000 worth of baseball and softball equipment to help 460 students get on the field, benefitting 24 baseball and softball teams at 16 schools in the Memphis area.

“We are very proud to be able to make this donation to Memphis Public Schools through the Redbirds Community Fund,” Redbirds President and General Manager Craig Unger said. “One of our main missions is to help better our community, and the Redbirds Community Fund is one of the leading vehicles for how we can use our position to do so. We look forward to being able to do more to benefit our community and the Mid-South as a whole.”

The week culminated today with a free PLAY BALL event at AutoZone Park, where area children were able to play on the field and have fun learning skills and celebrating the love of the game. Event participants also received a PLAY BALL t-shirt and a bat and ball set to continue the play at home.

The RBI Institute covers topics such as league operations, players’ health on and off the field (i.e., Pitch Smart, anti-bullying and drug-free lifestyles), educational programs, best practices, coaches training, league finances, equipment procurement and more.

The Redbirds have hosted an RBI site since 1998, where boys and girls ages 6 through 16 join with children from their own community to form teams which travel throughout the city to play each other. Memphis RBI began with six locations and has grown to serve 12 communities and over 1,000 participants.

The mission of the Memphis RBI program is to increase participation and interest in baseball and softball among underserved youth through instructional and competitive play, while encouraging youth to achieve academically, demonstrate good sportsmanship, and contribute positively to the community.

Pitch In For Baseball provides new and gently-used baseball and softball equipment to boys and girls in the United States and around the world who want to play ball but lack the equipment to do so. PIFB reduces barriers to play and promotes youth development by providing equipment directly to leagues, schools and organizations around the world to start, continue, and/or expand their programs. Over the past 10 years, PIFB has donated more than $5 million worth of equipment to 500,000 under-resourced kids in nearly every state and 80 different countries.

For more information on Pitch In For Baseball, visit www.pifb.org.

Schools Receiving Equipment

American Way Middle School (Baseball)

American Way Middle School (Softball)

Bellevue Middle School (Baseball)

Colonial Middle School (Baseball)

Colonial Middle School (Softball)

Grandview Heights Middle School (Baseball)

Hamilton Middle School (Baseball)

Hamilton Middle School (Softball)

Havenview Middle School (Baseball)

Havenview Middle School (Softball)

Hickory Ridge Middle School (Baseball)

Hickory Ridge Middle School (Softball)

Highland Oaks Middle School (Baseball)

Kate Bond Middle School (Softball)

Kingsbury Middle School (Softball)

Kirby Middle School (Baseball)

Memphis Grizzlies Preparatory Charter School (Baseball)

Memphis Scholars Raleigh-Egypt Middle School (Baseball)

Memphis Scholars Raleigh-Egypt Middle School (Softball)

Oakhaven Middle School (Baseball)

Oakhaven Middle School (Softball)

Raleigh-Egypt High School (Softball)

Raleigh-Egypt Middle/High School (Baseball)

Riverview Middle School (Baseball)

About the Redbirds Community Fund

The Redbirds Community Fund benefits area youth organizations by offering outreach programs, providing baseball instruction, giving opportunities for children to attend professional baseball games and to interact with professional players and personnel, providing and refurbishing area facilities for youth activities, and providing financial support to many worthy area Section 501(c)(3) organizations that effectively and efficiently serve the needs of children in the community.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Anti-bullying, Children's Health and Development, Education/Teacher Support, Equipment Donations, Memphis Redbirds, Pacific Coast League, Reviving Baseball in Inner Cities (RBI), St Louis Cardinals, Tennessee, Youth Sports { }

JetHawks Foundation to Host Inaugural Hot Stove Banquet

November 4, 2016

Lancaster, CA – The Lancaster JetHawks, High-A Affiliate of the Colorado Rockies, are pleased to announce their first ever Hot Stove Banquet, benefitting the Lancaster JetHawks Baseball Foundation. The Banquet will be held on Thursday, January 26th at the University of Antelope Valley Grand Ballroom, starting with a cocktail reception and silent auction from 5:00-6:30, followed by a program and dinner at 6:30. The program will be baseball themed, featuring a baseball guest speaker who will be announced in the coming weeks.

Proceeds from the Banquet and the Silent Auction will benefit the newly formed JetHawks Baseball League, which in partnership with the Antelope Valley Boys & Girls Clubs will provide over 100 local youth with the opportunity to play baseball on a team right here at The Hangar. The youth will be outfitted with jerseys, gloves, hats and helmets, play their games on the same field as the JetHawks, all at no cost to themselves or their families.

Tickets for the Hot Stove Banquet will be $50 for an individual or $350 for a table of 8. Table sponsorships and individual tickets for the Banquet are available by calling the JetHawks offices at 661-726-5400 or Click to Reserve Your Spot Today.

The Lancaster JetHawks start their 2017 season at home on April 6th against the Visalia Rawhide. Group tickets and ticket packages are available now at jethawks.com or by stopping by the JetHawks offices, located at 45116 Valley Central Way in Lancaster.

Download a Hot Stove Order Form Here

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : California, California League, Charitable Foundations, Charity Auctions/Raffles, Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Fundraising Opportunities, Houston Astros, Lancaster JetHawks, Youth Sports { }

Baysox Host Equipment Collection

July 7, 2016

BOWIE, Md. – The Bowie Baysox announce today that the Oriole Advocates will collect new and used sports equipment at Prince George’s Stadium Saturday, August 27, as the Baysox take on the Binghamton Mets at 6:35 p.m. The organization collects the equipment for its Cardboard To Leather program, which provides equipment to underprivileged children in developing countries.

The Cardboard To Leather program accepts donations of all baseball and softball equipment: bats, balls, gloves, uniforms, bags and spikes. Baseball gloves, duffle bags and useable helmets are the hardest items for Cardboard to Leather to acquire.

If fans are unable to make it to the game, they can bring donations to the Baysox office during regular business hours, Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Since the program’s inception, more than 50 tons of baseball equipment have been sent to children in developing countries.

The 2016 Bowie Baysox season is presented by Money One Federal Credit Union. The Baysox 2016 season is underway. Don’t miss a minute of the action as the Baysox defend their 2015 Eastern League Championship. Single game tickets are now on sale at www.baysox.com.

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

Tagged as : Baltimore Orioles, Bowie Baysox, Children's Health and Development, Eastern League, Equipment Donations, Maryland, Youth Sports { }

San Jose Giants Release 2014 Community Report

December 4, 2014

Report showcases organization’s impact in the South Bay

San-Jose-GiantsThe San Jose Giants released today their 2014 Community Report. The report is a complete detail of the organization’s community involvement and contributions. From expanding the team’s extensive fundraising efforts to a record number of mascot appearances and the organization’s rise from twenty-fifth in Minor League Baseball’s social media rankings to second overall, the San Jose Giants presence was felt well beyond the Municipal Stadium gates this year.

“I want to personally thank all of our fans and partners for your loyalty and passion for the San Jose Giants and our place in the community,” said Daniel Orum, San Jose Giants President and CEO. “Through the organization’s extensive work with youth sports groups, schools and regional non-profit organizations, the team has introduced baseball to millions of homes in Northern California and this year alone raised over $480,000 for charitable causes.”

The 2014 Community Report showcases the variety of charitable efforts the San Jose Giants are involved with both inside and beyond the Municipal Stadium gates. Highlights of the report include over 150 appearances made by San Jose Giants personnel, unique, community-centered evening’s at Municipal Stadium, events in partnership with the Giants Community Fund to help under served youth and in-kind donations to more than 750 local and national organizations.

For more information on the San Jose Giants and how to get your organization involved next season, call (408) 297-1435 or visit sjgiants.com.

Read 2014 San Jose Giants Community Report

This article originally appeared on the official website of the San Jose Giants. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : ALS Association, American Diabetes Association, Baseball Camps/Instruction, Boy Scouts of America, Boys and Girls Clubs, California, California League, Cancer Awareness, Community Benefit Report, Donations, Education/Teacher Support, Equipment Donations, Family Relief/Resources, Fundraising Opportunities, Military & Veterans, Public Recognition/Celebrations/Events, Reading Programs, Relay For Life, San Francisco Giants, San Jose Giants, Supporting the Community, Ticket Donations, Volunteering, Women's Health { }

Sea Dogs to Host Equipment Drive June 6-8

May 30, 2014

Donate New or Used Baseball/ Softball Equipment to Baseball Miracles

PortlandSeaDogs_2014-05-30

 

Portland-Sea-DogsThe Portland Sea Dogs, in conjunction with Baseball Miracles, are pleased to announce a Baseball/Softball Equipment Drive at Hadlock Field from June 6th – 8th when the Sea Dogs host the Bowie Baysox. Fans are encouraged to bring new or old baseball equipment to the ballpark to be donated to children who are faced with economical or environmental disadvantages.

The Sea Dogs will accept all types of baseball and softball equipment including gloves, bats, catcher’s gear, bases, baseballs, softballs, wiffle balls and bats, which will be all donated to Baseball Miracles.

Baseball-MiraclesA non-profit organization, Baseball Miracles is a team of baseball and softball instructors, founded by Hall of Fame scout John Tumminia, who have joined together to teach boys and girls with economic and environmental disadvantages throughout the world. Sea Dogs’ pitcher Mike McCarthy is the driving force behind bringing this initiative to Hadlock Field.

“I believe baseball is about more than just playing a game. It is indicative of life in many ways and is a fundamental part of development for youth in communities around the world,” said McCarthy. “Baseball Miracles is a great opportunity for anyone who has benefited from the game of baseball to give back. From the casual weekend fan to the die-hard memorabilia collector, we are all able to help underprivileged youth around the world benefit from the life lessons that baseball has to offer.”

The Portland Sea Dogs return home on Tuesday, June 3rd and open up a six game homestand through Sunday, June 8th. The equipment drive will begin before the Sea Dogs game against the Bowie Baysox (Orioles affiliate) Friday at 7 p.m. and will run until the end of the game Sunday.

Any equipment fans bring for the drive should be brought into the ballpark and dropped off at the Baseball Miracles box at Guest Services in the concourse at Hadlock Field. For more information on the drive, please visit www.seadogs.com or www.baseballmiracles.org.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Portland Sea Dogs. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boston Red Sox, Children's Health and Development, Eastern League, Equipment Donations, Family Relief/Resources, Maine, Portland Sea Dogs, Youth Sports { }

Keys to Collect Baseball Gear for Baseball Miracles

May 1, 2014

Donation Drive to Take Place on May 11

Frederick-KeysThe Frederick Keys will be holding a baseball equipment donation drive on Sunday, May 11, prior to the team’s 2 p.m. game against the Winston-Salem Dash. Fans are encouraged to bring new or old gloves, baseballs, softballs, whiffle balls and bats, which will be donated to Baseball Miracles.

A non-profit organization, Baseball Miracles provides boys and girls with economic and environmental disadvantages the chance to play baseball. Founded by John Tumminia, the group also provides professional instruction to children learning how to play baseball.

Baseball-MiraclesEvery fan who donates a piece of equipment will receive one free ticket to the May 11 game. Meanwhile, all donations will support the organization’s upcoming trip to Kenya, which will take place from November 4-5.

Among those going on the trip, will be the Keys Director of Marketing, Bridget McCabe. In addition to her work with the team, Bridget serves as the Softball Coordinator for Baseball Miracles. To learn more about Baseball Miracles, visit baseballmiracles.org.

Frederick’s next homestand begins on Thursday, May 8 when the Winston-Salem Dash make their first trip to Harry Grove Stadium in 2014. For ticket information, please call 301-815-9939 or visit frederickkeys.com.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Frederick Keys. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Baltimore Orioles, Carolina League, Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Frederick Keys, Maryland, Ticket Donations, Youth Sports { }

Safe Kids Upstate Night is Wednesday, May 7th

April 29, 2014

First 300 kids through the gate will receive a bike helmet

GreenvilleDrive_2014-04-29

 

Greenville-DriveThe Drive will host Safe Kids Upstate Night on Wednesday, May 7th at Fluor Field. Safe Kids Upstate is an organization whose mission is to prevent accidental childhood injury, a leading killer of children 14 and under.

Led by the Children’s Hospital of Greenville Health System, Safe Kids Upstate and its Safety Patrol members will be celebrated at Fluor Field. Prior to the game members of Safety Patrol from across the Upstate will participate in a “Parade of Champions” around the Fluor Field warning track.

Safe Kids Upstate will also be providing complimentary bike helmets to the first 300 children through the gates at the ballpark. Each child receiving a helmet will be properly fitted for one their size.

First pitch for Wednesday is at 7:05 PM, with gates to Fluor Field opening at 6:00. To purchase tickets visit the Main Street box office, call (864) 240-4528, or log onto GreenvilleDrive.com.

This article originally appeared on the official website of the Greenville Drive. Click here to view the original story.

Tagged as : Boston Red Sox, Children's Health and Development, Equipment Donations, Greenville Drive, Public Recognition/Celebrations/Events, South Atlantic League, South Carolina { }

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Minor League Baseball clubs have been actively involved in their communities for many years. For the first time, their activities and contributions will be chronicled on this site.

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