Mid-Atlantic Red Sox to Hold Try-Outs February 12th
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox showcase program will conduct tryouts Sunday, February 12th at Saint James School, 17641 College Road, St. James, MD. The tryout will begin at 5:00 pm and will last to approximately 9:00 pm. Players will be selected for our summer and fall showcase teams.
Over three hundred former Mid-Atlantic Red Sox players have had the opportunity to play college baseball. The tradition continues in 2012 beginning on February 12th at Saint James School.
=========================================================================================================
Matt Golczewski (2012, LHP; Patterson Mill, MD)
commits to University of Delaware!!!


=========================================================================================================
Danny Martinson (2012, RHP; Good Counsel, MD)commits to University of Richmond!!!

==========================================================================================================
Kevin Ross (2012, RHP; Good Counsel, MD)commits to Towson University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Chad Diehl (2012, LHP; Westminster, MD)
commits to Mount St. Mary's University!!!
==========================================================================================================
Joey Strain (2012, RHP; Huntingtown, MD)
commits to Winthrop University!!!
==========================================================================================================
Garrett Walther (2012, RHP; Calvert Hall, MD)
commits to Towson University!!!
==========================================================================================================
Hunter Absher (2012, RHP; Sussex Tech, DE)
commits to Virginia Commonwealth University!!!
==========================================================================================================
Western Maryland Newspaper Profiles Mid-Atlantic Red Sox
Local players help lead Red Sox into 17U World Series
By Tim Koelble - The Herald Mail
July 19, 2011
Baseball extends beyond the high school season for many youth players and coaches, and that includes those who are members of the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox. Headed by Clear Spring coach Mark Shives, who’s in his first year as head coach of the summer team, the Red Sox have had a successful summer and will conclude it beginning Wednesday at the IMPACT 17U World Series in Cary, N.C.
The Red Sox roster features several Tri-State youngsters, including Dylan and Logan Appel (Clear Spring), Ryan Butts (Williamsport), Andrew Yacyk (North Hagerstown), Jason Lombardozzi (Chambersburg) and Matt MacMahon (Mercersburg Academy). “It’s been fun coaching kids in which to start to prepare them for the college level,” said Shives. “Statistics aren’t the big thing. It’s more a showcase of baseball. It’s about being seen by scouts.” The Red Sox won a tournament in Pittsburgh earlier this summer and are coming off an 18U title at the Richmond (Va.) national championships. “Division I scouts are all over the place at these tournaments,” said Shives. “The players are seeing nothing but Division I-caliber pitching.”
The Red Sox began 13 years ago, formed by Allen Haines, who teaches physical education at Boonsboro Middle School and coached at one time with Gene Kerns at Hagerstown Community College. “Baseball has been a love and as a parent I had the fortune of sons playing college ball and this was something I did to give back to the game,” said Haines, who serves as the Red Sox’s general manager.
Shives said the area players are having good summers. “Logan and Andrew have been solid all summer,” he said. “Ryan has done a great job of catching and the relief pitchers like to pitch to him. Lombardozzi has played short and second base and has been great.” At the Richmond tournament, players used wooden bats and Butts connected on his first home run.
The Red Sox will also play a fall schedule and Haines said he would have a “‘prospects team” added in the fall, to be coached by former South Hagerstown assistant Danny Fowler.
=========================================================================================================
Craig Lopez (2012, SS; Mountain View, VA)
commits to Virginia Commonwealth University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Jamal Clarke (2012, OF; Archbishop Spalding, MD)
commits to St. John's University!!!
========================================================================================================
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox are 2011 D1 Draftable National Champions!
On Monday July 4th, the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox defeated the Richmond Braves 6-4 in the semi-finals and then outscored the #1 ranked Virginia Diamonds 8-4 in the championship game. The Red Sox played 8 games in 4 days in Richmond, Virginia to become champions. It was a team effort with many standout performances. Pictured above from left to right are Red Sox closer Danny Martinson, right-handed pitcher Kevin Mooney who tossed a no hitter in Saturday's 12-0 victory against the Virginia Bandits, and catcher Alex Murphy. Murphy, a 2013 graduate from Calvert Hall (MD), led the Red Sox offense going 14 for 22 (.636) with 6 homeruns in the four day tournament.
=========================================================================================================
Kevin Mooney (2012, RHP; North Harford, MD)
commits to University of Maryland!!!
=========================================================================================================
Red Sox Alumni Alex Frederick named Ripken League Player of the Week
Alex Frederick (Armstrong Atlantic) of the Baltimore Redbirds has been named the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League Player of the Week for the week of June 20 to June 26. Frederick collected nine hits amidst a nine-game hit streak. He doubled twice, homered and drove in five runs for the week. Frederick also walked five times during the week without striking out, and scored four runs. He also stole three bases in as many attempts. The slick-fielding shortstop finished the week 9 for 16 (.563) and propelled the Redbirds to a five-game winning streak from June 24 to June 26 -- a streak that included back-to-back doubleheader sweeps.
=========================================================================================================Branden Kline Named to Team USA's Collegiate Roster
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and University of Virginia sophomore right-handed pitcher Branden Kline has been added to the 2011 USA Collegiate National Team roster. The finalist for the Stopper of the Year Award is one of 22 non-draft-eligible college players on the team.
Kline and Team USA will play a wide-ranging schedule against various collegiate league teams on the East Coast and cap the summer schedule against Japan at Omaha's TD Ameritrade Park.
=========================================================================================================
Red Sox Start 2011 as Champions!
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox began the 2011 Summer Season with a bang. The Red Sox went 5-0 to dominate the field on their way to becoming the Pastime Tournament Champions at the University of Pittsburgh. Be sure to check out updates of the 2011 Summer Red Sox at www.midatlanticredsox.net
=========================================================================================================
Branden Kline pitches Virginia to Omaha!
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni Branden Kline (Frederick, MD) was the winning pitcher in Monday's NCAA Super Regional clinching game, sending the University of Virginia to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska.
Head Coach Brian O'Connor on the decision to put Branden Kline in: “I just went with my gut. Branden Kline has some really good stuff and heʼs not perfect sometimes. He has swing-and-miss kind of stuff that can get you out of a jam. I felt like in the eighth inning when I brought him in with a runner on second base, I thought that could be the ball game. When Branden and I met this morning and talked about what he needed to do for his team today, if I was going to go down I was going to go down with that guy. There is an unbelievable story about that kid and it really matters to him and he gave up a lot to wear that uniform and I have 100% faith in him.” 
A Sophomore, Kline has been tabbed as a finalist for the Stopper of the Year Award, presented by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association. Kline is one of five relief pitchers whittled down from 45 members of the midseason watch list. The award is presented to the top relief pitcher in NCAA Division I baseball.Joining Kline as a finalist are Kent State's Kyle McMillen, East Tennessee State's Bo Reeder, Texas' Corey Knebel and South Carolina's Matt Price.
Kline, registering a 4-1 record, earned third team All-America honors and has led No. 1 national seed Virginia to the College World Series. He has a 2.15 earned run average and 49 strikeouts over his 37.2 innings of work. He has allowed just seven earned runs, while holding opponents to a .202 batting average.
Kline's 17 saves rank No. 4 in the nation, one off the national lead. His 17 saves also rank No. 2 all-time at Virginia for a season, one away from tying Kevin Arico's program-best 18 saves set last season.
Update:
Kline gave the nation a sneak-peek at his ability pitching multiple innings in the CWS elimination game against South Carolina. Kline came on in the top of the eighth-inning and tossed one scoreless inning after another. Five innings, and a game-high 107 pitches later, Kline relinquished the ball to Cody Winiarski. In that period, he allowed only three hits, worked his way around four walks and two HBPs and struck out seven.
Kline, a 2009 sixth-round draft pick by the Red Sox, pitched the last two years out of the bullpen, saving a combined 21 games. This year he has posted a 55:22 K:BB ratio and a 1.88 ERA in 32 contests. For his efforts, Kline was rewarded with a spot on the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association’s All-American First-Team.
Kline has good size (6-3, 190) and is a former Louisville Slugger Maryland State Player of the Year. He throws in the low-to-mid 90s and complements his fastball with a curveball and a slider.
====================================================================================
Lombardozzi named Eastern League Player of the Week
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and Harrisburg Senators second baseman Steve Lombardozzi has been named the Eastern League Player of the Week for the period of June 6th-June 12th.
The 6'0", 170 lb. switch hitter batted .538 (14-for-26) with one double, one home run, eight runs scored, one RBI, three walks, two stolen bases and a .692 slugging percentage in seven games for the Washington Nationals Class AA afilliate last week. The 22-year old had multiple hits in five of the seven games he played in last week and he currently has a nine-game hitting streak during which he is hitting .500 with nine runs scored. Lombardozzi, who is a native of Fulton, Maryland, led all Eastern League players in hits (14), batting average (.538), runs scored (8) and OPS (1.292) last week. He also finished ranked among the weekly leaders in on-base percentage (.600-tied 1st), total bases (18-2nd), slugging percentage (.692-6th) and stolen bases (2-tied 6th).
For the season Lombardozzi is tied for first in the league in triples (6), tied for second in hits (75) and ranked seventh in batting average (.316). Steve, who entered the 2011 season rated by Baseball America as the 13th best prospect in the Washington organization, was selected by the Washington Nationals in the 19th round of the 2008 draft out of St. Petersburg Junior College (FL).
======================================================================================================
Kevin Doherty (2012, LHP; Good Counsel, MD)
commits to University of Virginia!!!
=========================================================================================================
Tyler Beckwith (2012, SS; Linganore, MD) commits to University of Richmond!!!
=========================================================================================================
Cody Acker (2012, OF; Blake, MD)
commits to Virginia Commonwealth University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Matt MacMahon (2012, 3B; Mercersburg Academy, PA)
commits to Eckerd College!!!
=========================================================================================================
JT Root (2012, RHP; North Hagerstown, MD)
commits to James Madison University!!!
=========================================================================================================E.T. Straw Family Stadium at Mount St. Mary's University
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox to Hold Try-Outs on July 5th
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox showcase program will conduct tryouts Tuesday, July 5th at Mount St. Mary's University's E.T. Straw Family Stadium in Emmitsburg, MD. The tryout will begin at 9:00 am and will last to approximately 12:00 noon. Players will be selected for our fall showcase and fall underclass teams.
In the last 12 years, over three hundred former Mid-Atlantic Red Sox players have had the opportunity to play college baseball, with thirty-five players moving on to professional baseball. The tradition continues in 2011 on July 5th at Mount St. Mary's University.
=========================================================================================================
Zach Stolipher (2011, 1B; Martinsburg HS, WV)
commits to Potomac State College!!!
=============================================================================
Landon Routzahn (2011, INF; Catoctin HS, MD)
commits to Towson University!!!
=============================================================================
Cody Harman (2011, C; Westminister HS, MD)
commits to Frederick Community College!!!
=============================================================================
Matt Murphy (2011, OF; Freedom HS, VA)
commits to University of Virginia at Wise!!!
=============================================================================
Jacob Lopez (2011, RHP; Mountain View HS, VA)
commits to Dundalk Community College!!!
=========================================================================================================
Alex Anwar (2011, OF; Linganore HS, MD)
commits to Salisbury University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Andrew Rickli (2011, C; Berkeley Springs HS, WV)
commits to Potomac State College!!!
=========================================================================================================
Jonah Pulford (2011, OF; Wilson HS, PA)
commits to Olivet Nazarene University!!!
=======================================================================================================
Carter Bidwick (2011, INF; Good Counsel, MD)
commits to Tufts University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Danny Breen (2011, OF; Northern HS, MD)
commits to Salisbury University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Richie Blosser (2011, RHP/OF; North Caroline HS, MD)
commits to Towson University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Tim Kelly (2012, RHP/OF; York, VA)
commits to Virginia Tech University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Hayden White (2012, RHP/INF; Steward School, VA)
commits to East Carolina University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Lombardozzi selected as AFL's Stenson winner
Nationals prospect rewarded for unselfishness, work, leadership
By Jonathan Mayo / MLB.com | 11/20/10 2:45 PM EST
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Steve Lombardozzi spent parts of six seasons in the big leagues, from 1985-1990. A smallish middle infielder who largely played second base, Lombardozzi wasn't one who wowed with natural skills or put up gaudy numbers. But ask any former teammate or big leaguer about him, and they'd all say he was the type you'd want on your team -- the kind of player who played the game the right way.
Fast-forward about 20 years, and it's time for Lombardozzi, the next generation. When it comes to the second Steve Lombardozzi, it's clear that the old "like father, like son" adage is extremely fitting. It's likely the reason why he was chosen as the Arizona Fall League's 2010 Dernell Stenson Sportsmanship Award winner.
"I think my family, growing up, influenced me," said Lombardozzi, a middle-infield prospect in the Nationals system. "My dad taught me how to go about my business and how to play the game right.
"My parents, they're the same kind of people. My dad has been a great influence on me. Also, our organization is great in the way they are about playing [in the system]."
Lombardozzi, whose Scottsdale Scorpions were playing in the championship game on Saturday, was one of six nominees for the Stenson Award. The other finalists were Zack Cox (Cardinals), Surprise Rafters; Koby Clemens (Astros), Peoria Javelinas; Kris Negron (Reds), Peoria Saguaros; Ryan Flaherty (Cubs), Mesa Solar Sox; and Cory Harrilchak (Braves), Phoenix Desert Dogs.
Created in 2004 in memory of the late Cincinnati Reds outfield prospect, who was killed during the 2003 Arizona Fall League season, the award has been given annually since '04 to the player who best exemplifies unselfishness, hard work and leadership. The six were chosen for those qualities -- the ones Stenson brought to the ballpark every day -- rather than their statistics or on-field performances. They are all, without exception, the types who have a hard-nosed attitude, players who do their jobs without complaint, who play the game the way it was meant to be played.
"It's quite an honor to be recognized," Lombardozzi said. "I try to go about my business in the right way. It meant a lot to be recognized for it, just to be nominated even. It's something really special."
Scottsdale manager Randy Knorr knew all about Lombardozzi coming in to the Fall League. Knorr skippered the Harrisburg Senators, the Nationals' Double-A affiliate where Lombardozzi played 27 games to end the regular season. A 19th-round pick out of St. Petersburg Junior College in 2008, Lombardozzi has moved slowly, but steadily up the Nationals' chain. Knorr couldn't wait for his Scorpions staff to see what his infielder brought to the table.
"He never stops working," Knorr said. "I know he was tired, and he still went after it. I told the coaching staff, 'Wait until you see Steve play.' ... I didn't tell them why. Two days later, they said, 'This guy is pretty special.'
"It's the way he goes about it, his work ethic. He grinds everything out, he has great at-bats. He plays hard, he takes the next bag. He's a smart ballplayer."
It's not like Lombardozzi is all hard work and no production, either. In his two stops in 2010, he hit .294 with a .371 on-base percentage and 24 steals. That came a year after hitting .296 with a .375 OBP in his first full season. This fall, he's maintained the same pace, with a .293 average and .385 OBP in 21 games. Getting to Double-A and then playing here, Lombardozzi is on the cusp of knocking on the door and having all that hard work pay off.
"He's talented, but he doesn't have great, great talent," Knorr said. "But he plays the game well, he does everyhing perfectly. I think he recognizes that for him to play in the big leagues, he can't get away with a lot of stuff that other guys can. He's found a way to do it and he'll be in the big leagues."
It's the kind of story Knorr hopes is spread to help restore some of the qualities he feels have been absent from the game in recent years. When people see Lombardozzi's name attached to the Stenson Award, Knorr is hoping to sends a strong message to other young players.
"It's special and hopefully it lets a lot of other guys know that's the way you play the game," Knorr said. "It's something we try to produce in our organization. Hopefully, other guys see it. I'd like the game to get back to the way it used to be, when you run the ball out all the time and you take the next bag. It's just a better, cleaner game when you do it that way."
Click HERE to view an MLB.com video of Steve receiving the Stenson Award.
Click HERE to see the video of Steve's game-winning hit in the AFL Championship Game.
=========================================================================================================

Woolcock a Highlander
Martinsburg senior signs letter-of-intent with Radford
November 17, 2010 - By Ben Gibson/For The Journal
Martinsburg High School pitcher-third baseman Zach Woolcock has signed a nation letter-of-intent to join the Radford Highlanders' baseball team next fall.
Woolcock, an all-Potomac Valley Conference standout, is taking the next step in his playing career at the Division I level with a Radford team that went 29-26 last year, 15-11 in the Big South Conference.
"I've got the chance to play third base next season. I know I'll have to compete for the position, though, but I'm looking forward to it," Woolcock said.
A number of Division I programs were interested in the Martinsburg senior, including Virginia Tech, West Virginia University, Maryland, George Mason, Costal Carolina, Virginia and Marshall. A number of factors came into play for Woolcock.
The potential playing time in his first year was one of the deciding factors, as well as coach Joe Raccula's approach to baseball.
"Talking with the players there, they talked about how it was a relaxed but focused atmosphere," Woolcock said.
"You have to work hard and at the end of the day, you come out with the win."
Raccula was equally impressed with Woolcock and his performance of the baseball diamond.
"Two years ago, we found Zach when he was a rising junior. At that time, he became an immediate 'must-get' for us," Raccuia said in a statement. "He has professional tools for a third baseman. He profiles to be an athletic player for us that can both run and hit for power. He will also get a look on the mound with velocity in the upper-80s and a plus slider."
Woolcock started as a freshman at Martinsburg before he worked his way to almost playing baseball year round, including his time with his summer league team, the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox.
"I have to thank them, they gave me the chance to be seen by a lot of college coaches and get letters from them," Woolcock said. "I have to thank all the coaches and players I've played with."
Woolcock has his plans made for the next level, but he is still focused on his final year with the Martinsburg Bulldogs.
"I'm really focused on this being my senior year, and I have to be really thankful for all the coaches and players around me that have gotten me to where I am now," Woolcock said.
Woolcock posted a .404 batting average, while knocking in 30 runs and seven home runs in his junior year. He plans on doing more as a senior.
"I have all the motivation I need, and going back to the state tournament, winning as many games as we can," Woolcock said. "We have a good team, and I think winning a state title is something we're capable of."
While he may have plenty of baseball ahead of him at the college level, he tries to stay humble and play within his team without worrying about personal goals.
"You can't really have those on a team. It doesn't matter if you have to go 0 for 4 with all sacrifice flies or 4 for 4 with all home runs, you have to do what's best for the whole team and not just yourself," Woolcock said.
He might only have one year left at Martinsburg with coach John Lowery Jr, but it looks like Radford and Woolcock have a lot to look forward to in the next four years.
=========================================================================================================
Brian Martin (2011, RHP/INF; Winter's Mill, MD)
commits to Shepherd University!!!
================================================================================
Jason Cholish (2011, 1B/C; Wyoming Seminary, PA)
commits to La Salle University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Cody Bumbaugh (2011, C; Waynesboro, PA)
commits to Shepherd University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Zach Sterling (2011, LHP; JM Bennett, MD)
commits to Universityof Richmond!!!
=========================================================================================================
Scott Nickerson (2011, RHP; Broadneck, MD)
commits to Mount St. Mary's University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Tyler Skidmore (2011, SS/3B; North Stafford, VA)
commits to Mount St. Mary's University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Dakota Fears (2011, C; Huntingtown, MD)
commits to Pitt Community College!!!
========================================================================================
Adam Parks (2011, RHP; St. Michael's, MD)
commits to Liberty University!!!
========================================================================================
Shaun Shaklee (2011, RHP; Garfield, VA)
commits to Virginia Commonwealth University!!!
========================================================================================
Garrett Sanders (2011, SS; Chambersburg, PA)
commits to Virginia Military Institute!!!
========================================================================================
Zane Bard (2011, 2B; Chambersburg, PA)
commits to Mount St. Mary's University!!!
========================================================================================
Red Sox Alumni Selected to Collegiate All-Star Game 
Charlotte rising senior Bryan Hamilton (Woodstock, Md. / Mount Saint Joseph HS) was one of 14 pitchers named to the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League All-Star roster for the 2010 Mid-Atlantic Classic.
Hamilton led the league with five saves and has a 0.00 ERA with no earned runs allowed in 17 innings pitched. He led his team, the Bethesda Big Train with 26 strikeouts, and had only allowed six hits for an opponents batting average against of just .107 this summer.
This past year for Charlotte, he led team in strikeouts per nine innings (11.49) and strikeout-to-walk ratio (8:1 for 40 strikeouts against five walks) and had the lowest walks per nine innings (1.44). He tied his career-high of six strikeouts to earn his second save of the year with 2.1 scoreless innings at home against Saint Louis on May 14. Hamilton finished the season 4-0, with two saves in 24 appearances. All four wins and both saves came in conference games. Finished with an 0.84 ERA (two earned runs in 21.1 A-10 innings pitched) in 12 conference appearances. For his career he leads all active 49ers with nine saves and is tied for the lead among active players with 16 wins entering his final season. He also made the Dean's List for the fall and spring semesters in 2009-10.
=======================================================================================
Lombardozzi thrilled to get AFL invite
by Byron Kerr, MASN Sports, August 31st, 2010
Harrisburg Senators second baseman Stephen Lombardozzi has picked up where he left off with Potomac, hitting above .300 in 19 games so far at the Double-A level.
This week, the talented young infielder got word he has been selected by the franchise to participate in the prestigious Arizona Fall League representing the Nationals.
"I found out a couple of days ago. I was really pumped," says Lombardozzi.
"I think it will be a great experience for me to go out there. I have never been out there and I have heard it is beautiful.
"You get to play against the best of the best and that is what I want. It will be a learning experience but it will be great to face all the best competition."
Lombardozzi was also pleased to hear that teammates like Michael Burgess were also invited and that his manager at Harrisburg, Randy Knorr, will also be the skipper in Arizona.
"That will be a lot of fun. I like Randy a lot. It has been fun playing for him the last couple of weeks. I am looking forward to playing with the other guys in our organization."
He says Harrisburg welcomed him with open arms and the team hasn't missed a beat since his arrival three weeks ago.
"The team has been awesome. The team has been really welcoming when I first got here. I have bonded really good. And the chemistry with the team was great. It has been nothing but fun sonce I got here."
So has there been any changes to his approach since his arrival in Double-A? His slugging percentage has jumped over 100 points since his first half in Potomac and he has 10 extra base hits in his first 19 games. He says he has emphasized getting the most out of each at bat, even if it doesn't result in a base hit.
"Nothing different. Really just kind of staying with my same approach," says Lombardozzi.
"I have been feeling good. I am seeing the ball really well. That is one of the big things for me. I look at every at bat, whether it is a quality at bat or not. I don't look at the outcome if it was a hit or not, just making sure I grind out the A-B' or make sure I hit the ball hard every time.
"My game plan stays the same. I learned in the Carolina League to adjust because it was a good pitching league. I have learned a lot this year with going up to the plate with a plan."
He has stayed in touch with the P-Nats, especially with the exploits of his good friend and former Potomac house mate Tyler Moore, who is closing in on Carolina League player of the year honors.
"It is awesome to watch. He has got a great work ethic. He was busting his butt at the beginning of the season. He was doing better than it showed in the stats because he was hitting the ball right at guys. It has been fun to see how his second half has gone."
Lombardozzi since this 45 day hot streak for Moore is not a flash in the pan, he feels Moore is going to be a big success in the organization because of the way he goes about his business each game.
"I got to play with him in Hagerstown. I have seen him play for a couple of years here. I really like him as a teammate and as a player. He has a great work ethic."
Lombardozzi knows a little bit about attention to detail and being meticulous with every part of his prepation each day, something that his manager at Potomac, Gary Cathcart, had noticed from the beginning.
He says this detail in his work comes from his parents, Jill and Steve. "My Dad was pretty much my coach growing up and really taught me about how to go about my business the right way."
And is there a player in the majors that he admires on the field? He says it is the Yankees Derek Jeter.
He knows that may sound like a stock answer, saying "I like him for the way he plays the game. I like to emulate him because it is not about him. He goes out there to do whatever it takes for the team. That's what I love about him and I try to do the same."
========================================================================================
AJ Lardo (2011, OF; Loyola Blakefield, MD)
commits to University of Maryland!!!
======================================================================================
Andrew Clow (2011, C; CM Wright, MD)
commits to Mount St. Mary's University!!!
========================================================================================
Brendan Butler (2011, INF/OF; John Carroll HS, MD)
commits to Towson University!!!
=========================================================================================
Ryan Redinger (2011, RHP; Mountain Ridge High School, MD)
commits to West Virginia University!!!
========================================================================================
Marco Cardone (2011, RHP; Smithsburg High School, MD)
commits to George Washington University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Kyle Weston (2011, INF; Spotswood High School, VA)
commits to University of North Carolina Asheville!!!


=========================================================================================================
RJ Smith (2011, RHP / INF; Catoctin High School, MD)
commits to West Virginia University!!!
=========================================================================================================
Zach Woolcock (2011, INF/RHP; Martinsburg, WV) commits to Radford!!!
======================================================================================
JJ White (2011, C/1B; Stone Bridge, VA) commits to Penn State!!!
======================================================================================
Christian Binford (2011, RHP; Mercersburg Academy, PA) commits to UVA!!!
=========================================================================================================
Kyle McKelvey (2011, RHP; St. Michael's) commits to Coastal Carolina!!!
=========================================================================================================
Jonathan Cobo (2011, LHP; CM Wright) commits to UMBC!!!
=========================================================================================================
By Ted Silary
Daily News Sports Writer
1 - 28 - 2010, JOE GIACCHINO sensed something was going on.
After all, he was heading to Maryland last Sunday morning much earlier than usual, his entire family was making the trip and everyone was wearing nice clothes.
The baseball-playing Malvern Prep senior had been told the guest speakers at the last of three midwinter sessions held by the Southern Maryland Baseball Camp would be the parents of former Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim righthander Nick Adenhart, who was killed in an auto accident last April, barely into his major league career.
So, with everyone gathered in the gymnasium of the Annapolis Area Christian School, in Severn - with most in the bleachers and others, Joe included, just standing around the gym's outer edges - Duane Gigeous, Adenhart's stepfather, began his presentation.
"He was talking about adversity, and overcoming it," Giacchino said 2 days ago, before watching the Friars' basketball victory over Germantown Academy. "And then he got into the story of a kid who couldn't catch a flyball anymore, and went to the doctor, and got diagnosed with a brain tumor . . .
"But even though his dreams were once shattered, those dreams came back. He overcame it. Everything worked out for him, and he signed with Delaware. That's when my heart dropped. Up until then, I still wasn't sure what was going on . . . I knew it was me when he said 'Delaware.' My heart was pounding. I couldn't even grasp it . . .
"So, Mr. Gigeous calls me up to the front, and we shake hands, and he asks his wife, Nick Adenhart's mom [Janet], to come over and present me with the Nick Adenhart Courage Award. When I saw her, that was when I lost it. I started crying. I'd seen pictures of Nick, of course. Her face. She looked exactly like him. She gave me the award and everybody - players, parents, scouts - gave me great applause. It was overwhelming . . .
"For these people, who just lost their son not long ago, to come all the way to Maryland [from suburban Chicago] and give an award to someone they don't even know. For them to do such a thing, it's so unbelievable. They're incredible."
Ditto for Joe Giacchino (juh-keeno), a West Chester resident who's projected to start in rightfield this coming spring.
Thanks to gracious teammate Sean Walsh, who has agreed to switch jerseys, Giacchino will wear Adenhart's No. 34. Also, stitched into the outside portion of his Malvern-themed, blue-and-white spikes will be - in Angels' red, of course - the name "Nick Adenhart.''
"There can be no greater honor than wearing his number, and putting his name on my spikes," Giacchino said.
Except that he'd been groomed in the very same baseball camp, which is run by Angels scout Jerry Wargo, the man who nominated him for the award, Giacchino did not know much about Adenhart until his death, at the hands of a drunken driver, made national news.
He delved deeper as time passed, however, and found himself fascinated by the fact that Adenhart, a product of Williamsport High, outside Hagerstown, Md., had made the majors despite blowing out his arm - ligament-replacement surgery was required - in the final game of his high school career.
"Now that's a hero," Giacchino said.
Giacchino's own battle with adversity dates back to the fall of 2008. He knew something was wrong, and the problem turned out to be a double-edged sword.
"It was hard to even wake up," he said. "It came to a point where I was barely strong enough to get out of bed. Took me about 20 minutes. I forced myself to go to school, and sit in my classes, but there was nothing harder than keeping my head up."
You know how kids are, though. Especially the driven ones with dreams of earning a college scholarship. Giacchino attended a baseball showcase sponsored by Villanova.
"I could not catch a flyball,'' he said. "I can't even describe what I was seeing. Almost like knuckleballs were coming at me. The balls were appearing, disappearing, appearing in different places. I was so aggravated. I knew I blew it with Villanova.
"I finally had to tell my parents that something was up. I couldn't figure it out. They took me to get blood work. The diagnosis came back: Lyme disease. OK, that's not good. But at least there's an answer. Vision problems can be associated with Lyme disease.
"So then we go to an ophthalmologist. As he's moving his fingers across my field of vision, he notices a 'jumping' in my right eye. He says, 'There's no way Lyme disease would cause that. Clearly something else is wrong.' "
An MRI showed the brain tumor.
Good thing: It turned out to be benign. Bad thing: It was located in an especially sensitive area. After conducting what amounted to a scouting mission, Joe's parents, Larry and Lynn, decided to entrust his care to Dr. Leslie Sutton, at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. After listening to input from Joe.
"They felt I was mature enough to have my own opinion," he said.
This was what he heard, early on, from Dr. Sutton: Surgery could leave him with Bell's palsy. Or with limited use of his hands. Or with impairments of hearing and/or vision. Or, even in a somewhat positive scenario, unable to ever again play sports.
"To hear those things was actually comforting," Giacchino said.
Comforting?!
"Dr. Sutton was so realistic," he said. "That's what I loved about him. The prior hospitals were too optimistic. They made things seem too good to be true."
The surgery, which left a 6-inch, north-south scar on the back, right side of Giacchino's head, was performed Nov. 3, 2008, just days after his parents made sure he attended the Phillies' celebration parade. The ordeal lasted roughly 6 hours, although the original projection had called for twice that, minimum.
"Take away the pain and suffering, everything went great," Giacchino said.
About the pain . . .
"It was unbearable. Crazy," he noted. "They were unable to prescribe pain medication because it could have kept them from picking up on things they needed to know. Dr. Sutton's a firm believer in that."
During his recovery period, Giacchino was inspired by the warmth he received from the Malvern community. Visiting well-wishers were numerous and what kept him going was the thought that he could resume playing baseball and realize his dream of earning a scholarship.
Honestly, though, he was kind of a shell of his diamond self when the '09 season began and wound up playing sparingly as a backup leftfielder.
Then came the summer. The chance to forge ahead. To show his speed (6.59 for 60 yards) and batwork and at least draw interest that would serve him well heading into the 2010 season.
The picture got even rosier. Delaware spotted him and offered a scholarship. Perfect! Joe accepted. His father owns car dealerships in that state and his older brother, Dan, who attended Archmere Academy, is a 2008 Delaware grad. Another brother, Brian, a freshman, is a three-sport athlete at Malvern.
A member of the National Honor Society, Joe intends to pursue business or journalism.
"This has definitely been an eye-opening experience," he said. "It went from being a heartbreaker, to thinking my dreams of playing college baseball were shot, to getting a scholarship and winning an award and getting to meet Nick Adenhart's parents . . . I got to hang out with them afterward. Definitely cool.
"The pain and suffering was worth it. It made me the person I've become today. I see the world differently. A regular day isn't so regular anymore. I have a better outlook. I see great things in stuff that I wouldn't have paid much attention to before."
Soon, in the No. 34 jersey and special spikes, in his final season at Malvern Prep, Joe Giacchino will begin honoring Nick Adenhart's memory.
"This has all been a blessing," he said.
=========================================================================================================

Red Sox Alumni Bill Rice signs with the Philadelphia Phillies
Washington Township (NJ) outfielder Bill Rice has signed a professional contract with the Philadelphia Phillies. Rice played for the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox in the Fall of 2005 and 2006. After starting 14 games as a freshman at the University of Maryland, he transferred to Gloucester Community College (NJ). Rice then transferred to the University of South Carolina Aiken (SC).
A junior this past season, Rice finished his lone season in a Pacer uniform with a team-high 15 home runs. He concluded his season in the top 11 in the Peach Belt Conference in 11 different categories.
Rice ended the regular season hitting a team second-best .374 (77-for-206). He was tops among all Pacers during the year with 68 RBIs and 58 runs scored. He was also the team leader in total bases with 145.
The Sewell, N.J. native, who was named the Peach Belt Conference Player of the Week on Feb. 22, 2010, broke the school record for most home runs in a single game with three in a win over Georgia Southwestern. He was 5-for-5 with seven RBIs and four runs scored overall in the game.
"I had heard a couple of rumors that Phillies and a few other teams were interested in me, but only in coming out and watching me," Rice said. "I have had that the last two or three years, people watching me play, but that doesn't really mean anything. Even when he called I had no idea their interest was any higher than it was before."
One scout's opinion on Rice's ability is that he is a, "good hitter who can play all three outfield positions, and has good feel at the plate. He puts the ball in play and hits it where it's pitched. He is a hard worker who legs out every grounder and gives 100 percent effort on every ball hit to the outfield."
Rice has been assigned to Clearwater of the Rookie Gulf Coast League.
=========================================================================================================

Red Sox Alumni Lombardozzi making push for Double-A
By Byron Kerr, MASN Sports, August 3, 2010
Potomac Nationals infielder Stephen Lombardozzi continues to be one of the top hitters in the Carolina League, and that is gaining attention around the organization.
Lighting it up at the plate, Lombardozzi is batting .299 in 103 games this season with 66 runs, 28 doubles, 20 stolen bases and 38 RBI. He has hit .341 in his last 10 games.
At a recent game in Woodbridge, Lombardozzi made a classic play to get an out from his second base position. With no one on and Kinston trying to rally, Lombardozzi dove and grabbed a hot shot up the middle, picked it off the dirt and jumped in mid air to throw in one motion to first base and easily nail the runner.
"It was a fun. I work on that every day. So in the game if I get a ball like that I get a chance to do it."
"It looks harder than it actually is. Right when I catch it I just try to get up straight in the air and turn so I can throw it."
Lombardozzi has also done well and getting on base and hitting the ball hard.
"I am just trying to stay with my routine. I get my soft toss in during pregame. I am getting prepared every day, going up there with a plan and an approach and staying with that plan has been the biggest thing."
Stephen has also noticed how the P-Nats have started to make some noise in the win column since the start of the second half of the season.
"I think right at the end of the first half we started to play better. We definitely picked it up a notch. We have a lot more confidence now. We are doing the little things well too."
With his outstanding play again this season, the 21-year old Lombardozzi is a top candidate to get an invite to the Arizona Fall League this off season.
To get that call, Lombardozzi must be on the Double-A roster by August 17. With all his success, the odds are in his favor he will get the promotion to Harrisburg in the next week or so.
**Update** - Steve was promoted to Class AA Harrisburg on August 9th.
August 19th Update
by Byron Kerr, MASN Sports
Harrisburg Senators second baseman Steve Lombardozzi is off to an outstanding start following his promotion to Double-A last week. Lombardozzi is hitting .346 with two doubles in his first seven games for Harrisburg, after hitting .293 with 71 runs and 38 RBI for Potomac.
His manager at Potomac, Gary Cathcart, says Lombardozzi is pretty special, "he is probably as focused a minor league player that I have seen at any level in all my years of coaching.
"He is 21. The thing I would say about Stevie is, everything matters to him. Every pitch matters. Everything matters. He is the one guy that every single night I knew he was ready for every pitch on defense, and every pitch at home plate when he was swinging the bat.
"It is a credit to his ability to focus, the way he stays in his routine. The way he plays every day. I think he is going to play for a long time."
Cathcart says Lombardozzi was a quiet leader for the P-Nats and will do the same for the Senators. He wouldn't say it was a long time coming for the promotion, but he knew he would eventually get called up.
"It is the minor leagues. It happens. You know you are going to lose your best players eventually, that is what we are here for. As for the team, oh that is a big loss, big loss. I was kidding last night, we are going to see how the body reacts without the I.V. in it. He was the I.V. He was the constant supplier of everything we needed: top of the order, defensively, running the bases."
=========================================================================================================

Mid-Atlantic Red Sox Alumni Justin Moore
Named to New York Penn League All-Star Game
By Steve Melewski, MASN Sports, August 12, 2010
Aberdeen IronBirds starting pitcher Justin Moore has been added to the American League roster for the All-Star Game. Moore is one of five IronBirds playing in the game, the most Aberdeen has sent to that contest.
Moore was selected by the Orioles in the 26th round of the 2007 draft out of Chancellor High School in Fredericksburg, VA. The right-hander is 3-1, 3.31 in seven starts. The highlight of Moore's season came on July 2nd against Hudson Valley when Moore pitched six no-hit innings, before reaching his pitch count and exiting the game.
Moore will join teammates Trent Mummey, Kipp Schutz, Adam Gaylord and Tim Adleman in Staten Island, NY for the All-Star Game. The exhibition will take place on Tuesday August 17th at Richmond County Ballpark in Staten Island, NY. First pitch is scheduled for 7:00 PM.
=========================================================================================================
8 Red Sox Alumni Selected in 2010 MLB Draft
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox program has now had 25 players selected in the MLB First-Year Player Draft, including 16 in the last three years. The Red Sox have also had 5 players sign as undrafted free agents. The program’s rich 11-year tradition has produced over 200 collegiate baseball players from the Mid-Atlantic area.
Cody Wheeler - Arizona Diamondbacks, 5th Round
Coastal Carolina junior LHP Cody Wheeler was selected by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 5th round, 151st overall. With this selection, Cody becomes the highest drafted Red Sox alumni ever, passing Ryan Woolley ('09 6th Round).
Wheeler is 12-0 with a 3.59 earned-run average in 17 appearances for the Chanticleers in 2010. He was named to the All-Myrtle Beach Regional Tournament team after pitching a complete game shutout in a win over Stony Brook and earning the win by throwing the final three innings of the College of Charleston win. Wheeler leads the Big South with 111 strikeouts and a .247 opponent's batting average in 107.2 innings pitched.
Click Here to see the MLB Scouting Video for Cody Wheeler.
Brandon Glazer - Kansas City Royals, 24th Round
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and Clear Spring High School (MD) Shortstop Brandon Glazer was selected in the 24th round of the Major League Baseball draft by the Kansas City Royals.
“When I was young, I was pretty good playing baseball and it was a little dream of mine of playing Major League Baseball,” said Glazer. “When I got into high school, it became a goal to get drafted.”
Brandon was one of the leading players in Washington County the past two years. He was at or near the top of several offensive categories this season and led his Clear Spring team to a state final appearance.
“I’ll be talking with my parents, and then we’ll talk with Mr. Farr to proceed from there,” said Glazer. “College, to get a degree, is very important.” Draft picks have until Aug. 16 to sign.

Jake Brown - Oakland Athletics, 26th Round
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and Georgia Southern University left-handed pitcher Jake Brown was selected on the second day of the Major League Baseball draft. Brown was picked in round 26 (pick #785) by the Oakland Athletics.
Brown, who took over the number one starting pitcher role for Georgia Southern this season, collected a 7-6 record in 17 appearances, 14 starts. Owning a 4.32 ERA, the Forest Hill, MD, native threw three complete games and held his opponents to a mere .270 batting average. In 102 innings logged, Brown issued only 19 walks while striking out 79.
After going 4-0 overall in the month of March, Brown was named the Southern Conference Pitcher of the Month. With three league wins, Brown threw two complete games in the six appearances during the month.
In two seasons as an Eagle, Brown tallied a 13-9 record with a 4.41 ERA. Brown threw 190 innings pitched, recording 143 strikeouts and four complete games. He went 6-3 in 2009 and helped lead Georgia Southern to the 2009 Southern Conference Tournament Championship.
“I’m extremely excited and ready to get started,” said Brown. “All I wanted was an opportunity and I’m excited Oakland has given me the opportunity. I’m excited to get my professional career started.”

Josh Edgin - New York Mets, 30th Round
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and Francis Marion University senior southpaw Josh Edgin was chosen by the New York Mets in the 30th round of Major League Baseball's 2010 First-Year Player Draft.
Edgin was the seventh selection in the 30th round (No. 902).
Following his junior campaign, Edgin was drafted by the Braves in the 50th round of the 2009 draft, but chose to return to Francis Marion for his senior season.
Edgin, a native of Three Springs, PA, was 6-4 this past season with a 4.07 earned run average.
The 6 foot 2 inch, 225-pound left-hander made 13 starts with two complete games and 65 strikeouts in 84 innings, all team highs.
In 2009, he posted a 4-2 mark with a 4.04 ERA and 57 strikeouts in 69 innings.
Chuck Ghysels - Cincinnati Reds, 36th Round
Chuck Ghysels, a 5'10" Sophomore RHP from Springboro, Ohio was drafted in the 36th round by the Cincinnati Reds. Chuck played his freshman season at the University of Dayton (OH) before transferring to a two-year school, Lincoln Trail College (IL).
At Lincoln Trail, Ghysels was dominant posting a 9-1 record, 1.37 ERA, and 117 strikeouts in just 79 innings pitched. The University of Maryland commit was reportedly hitting 92-95 on the radar gun this spring.
"It's a hometown thing. That's pretty exciting," Ghysels said. "I guess we'll see where we go from here."
"I'd be part of Coach Bakich's first recruiting class. Whenever you're part of a first recruiting class, it's a big thing," Ghysels said. "That's a statement group."
"It's the ACC. You're not getting better than that."
Austin Knight - Baltimore Orioles, 37th Round
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox and Palm Beach State College SS Austin Knight was selected by the Baltimore Orioles in the 37th round. Austin, from Boys Latin High School (MD), will now face the tough decision to sign with his hometown Orioles or honor his commitment to the University of South Florida.
Ryan Woolley - Texas Rangers, 39th Round
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and University of Alabama Birmingham RHP Ryan Woolley was selected in the 39th round by the Texas Rangers.
Woolley, a red-shirt junior from Forest Park High School (VA), went 3-4 with a 7.03 ERA in his first season pitching for the Blazers. Woolley sat out last season after transferring from the University of Georgia. He was a sixth-round pick of the Atlanta Braves a year ago, but opted to return to school.
Click Here to read an amazing story about Ryan's journey in baseball and in life.
Drew Permison - Toronto Blue Jays, 42nd Round
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and Towson University Junior RHP Drew Permison (Oakland Mills H.S./Columbia, Md.) was selected by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 42nd round of the Major League Baseball First Year Player Draft.
A three-year performer for the Tigers, Permison excelled as a starter and reliever for the Tigers. In his career, he made 60 appearances and started 16 times. He pitched one complete game and compiled an impressive 13-6 record. In 155.2 innings of work, he compiled a 5.20 E.R.A. In his career, he walked 81 batters and had 142 strikeouts. He also posted four career saves.
As a freshman, he was named to the Colonial Athletic Association's All-Rookie team and was chosen for the LOUISVILLE SLUGGER All-Freshman team. He helped the Tigers finish the season as the CAA runners-up with a 30-28 record. In 21 appearances, Permison posted a 6-0 record with one save and a 5.62 E.R.A. In 2009, he became a starting pitcher for the Tigers and compiled a 3-2 record with a 6.24 E.R.A.
In 2010, he emerged as one of the top relief pitchers in the CAA. He made 26 appearances and recorded a 4-4 mark with three saves. He ranked among the CAA leaders with a 3.35 E.R.A. In 45.2 innings, he issued 32 walks and struck out 47 batters. In early April, he led the Tigers to an impressive three-game sweep over Georgia State by earning a relief win in each game. He pitched four scoreless innings in the sweep and allowed only two hits.
Permison, who ranks seventh on Towson's all-time list with 60 career appearances, has the third-highest winning percentage (.684) in the history of the program. With 13 wins, he is ranked ninth on Towson's all-time list while his 142 career strikeouts rank him seventh.
========================================================================================================
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox Travel to North Carolina
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox will be traveling to Chapel Hill and Cary, NC for the Dynamic Baseball Tournament on October 2nd and 3rd.
The Red Sox will play 4 games on the weekend. On Saturday, the Red Sox will face off against Purpose Driven at 9:30am at East Chapel Hill High School. Then the Red Sox will move over to the USA Baseball Training Complex (pictured above) to take on the Diamond Devils at 1:30pm.
The four field complex has hosted some of the best amateur players in the country including an NCAA Regional, NCAA Super Regional, and International competition from the USA Summer Collegiate Team.
On Sunday, the Red Sox will play against the Canes South at 10:00am at the University of North Carolina's Boshamer Stadium (pictured below). Then the Red Sox will finish the weekend action at East Chapel Hill High School to against NBCA Golden Spikes at 3:30pm.
========================================================================================================
Veteran's Memorial Stadium at James Madison University (left) and Eastern Mennonite University (right)
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox set to open season in Virginia
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox and Underclass Red Sox teams will be be in action August 13th and 14th in Harrisonburg, Virginia. The tournament is hosted at three sites: James Madison University, Bridgewater College, and Eastern Mennonite University. The Underclass Red Sox will open the fall season on Friday, August 13th at 8:30am at Eastern Mennonite University. The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox will begin play at 11:30am on Friday, August 13th at Bridgewater College. Follow the updates to game schedules for both teams using the links to the schedules.
=======================================================================================
3 Red Sox selected to the PG National showcase!!!
April 14, 2010 - 3 of the top 2011 players in the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox program have been selected to compete at the presitigious Perfect Game National Showcase at Tropicana Field in Tampa, FL on June 18, 19, 20th. AJ Lardo, Will Bouey, and KJ Hockaday (pictured below) are all ranked in the top 500 baseball players in the nation and all rank as 3 of the top players in the state of MD by Perfect Game. " It's an honor to have our guys represented in an event like this." said Summer Head Coach Dan Gitzen, "It shows you that Maryland is a hot-bed for baseball talent and that we should have a pretty strong program this year when you have 3 players like Will, AJ and KJ. It's a great honor for the kids but also a huge recruiting tool. While KJ and Will have already committed (University of Maryland), this could give them an early jump on a chance to show the pro-guys what they have, and for AJ it's really going to be special for him to get to showcase his abilities to TONS of high level college coaches as well as pro scouts."
=========================================================================================================
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox to Add Summer Program in 2010
Thanks to the players and coaches who have participated in the program during the last eleven years, the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox team has established itself as one of the elite showcase teams on the East Coast. The program takes great pride in providing opportunities, and assisting young men in fulfilling their academic and athletic goals of becoming student-athletes on the collegiate level. All 265 former Mid-Atlantic Red Sox players have continued their careers playing collegiate or professional baseball.
To build on the tremendous success of past Mid-Atlantic Red Sox teams, give more opportunity for exposure, and to establish the Red Sox as an elite showcase program on the national level it was clear that the Red Sox needed to add opportunities in the summer as well as in the fall. With this in mind, the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox are excited to announce the merger with the Mid-Atlantic Mets. The Mets summer showcase organization will be adopted by the Red Sox and now go under one name – The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox.
Allen Haines will continue to serve as General Manager and will oversee both summer and fall teams. The fall showcase team will be managed by Eric Haines, while the summer team will be run by Dan Gitzen. Plans are being made to add an underclassmen fall showcase team and teams that will compete in the World Wood Bat Championships in Florida. Be looking for more information as those plans get finalized.
======================================================================
Fernandez Signs with George Mason University


Blaise Fernandez enjoyed a breakout year as a junior, helping Tulpehocken advance to the PIAA Class AA quarterfinals. The 2009 Berks County Player of the Year led the Trojans with a .425 average, six home runs, 29 RBIs and 30 runs scored. The 6-1, 175-pound right-hander also was 9-1 with one save, an 0.90 ERA and 93 strikeouts in 69 innings. He struck out 14 in a five-hitter to pitch Tulpehocken past Kennedy Kenrick for its first state playoff win and its school-record 19th win of the season. Fernandez said he chose George Mason, a private school in Fairfax, Va., because he is leaning toward a major in pre-law.
Glazer picks Charleston
CLEAR SPRING — Give Clear Spring baseball star Brandon Glazer credit for being honest. When asked why he chose to sign to play at Division I College of Charleston in South Carolina, one of the first reasons he gave had nothing to do with baseball.
“I heard the female-to-male ratio is 3:1 and that opened my eyes,” Glazer said.
Glazer’s play on the diamond opened the Cougars’ eyes — and that’s saying something. The College of Charleston won Southern Conference championships in four straight years from 2004-07.
“I like the baseball complex and the coaching staff,” Glazer said. “They have a pretty young coaching staff and they connected with me.”
The numbers Glazer produced in his junior season last spring would open anyone’s eyes. He hit .508 with 11 doubles, two home runs, 23 RBIs, 22 runs scored, 15 walks and 14 steals, all while playing solid defensively at shortstop.
Oh, Glazer can pitch, too — in his Blazers career, he’s 5-1 with five saves and a 1.30 ERA.
“When he was in Little League, you could tell he was a natural athlete,” Clear Spring coach Mark Shives said. “He has a tenacious work ethic. To get to the next level, good athletes have to do the work, and he’s the last guy to leave practice every night.”
“When I first got (to Clear Spring), the first thing Mark worked on with me was my footwork,” Glazer said. “Then we worked on my arm slot and mechanics and went from there.”
Glazer expects to compete for time at shortstop, and also has been told he may be used as a closer by the Cougars.
One thing’s for sure: The College of Charleston is getting a top-notch competitor.
“I’m pretty determined,” Glazer said. “I don’t like losing.”
CAMP HILL SCHOOL DISTRICT RECOGNIZES OUTSTANDING SENIOR ATHLETE "L.K." LAWRENCE KESLAR THOMPSON, V, AS HE OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES PLANS TO CONTINUE BASEBALL CAREER AT NCAA DIVISION I WEST VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY
(Camp Hill, PA) – Today during a Ceremonial Signing, the Camp Hill School District proudly announced the intentions of "L.K." Lawrence Keslar Thompson, V, to join NCAA Division I West Virginia University Mountaineers baseball program with a scholarship award. Thompson, one of Camp Hill's exceptional baseball players who helped capture two consecutive PIAA Class "A" State baseball titles, will advance his career in the Big East Conference come the Fall of 2010.
High School Principal Scott Shelley commended Thompson and said, “L.K. is a gifted athlete, excellent student and one of the State's premier baseball players and left-handed batters who has had major success and extraordinary accomplishments for years in organized baseball programs and beyond.” He added, “from capturing two impressive State titles, being selected to play with various prestigious Showcase Teams, and having interest from over 40 colleges, L.K. has been a true leader among our student athletes and had a significant impact on Camp Hill’s fine tradition of high achieving athletics, sportsmanship, academics and citizenship.”
"L.K." will take his remarkable talent as a Short Stop in addition to his abilities as 1st and 3rd Baseman and Outfielder to the Mountaineers. He moves on as a 4-Year Starter, with the 2010 Camp Hill Season still ahead for this senior. He was a key leader on the accomplished State Finalist team for the past two years as well as part of the District III and Mid-Penn Capital Division Championship teams. "L.K." was also invited and participated in the elite Mariners Cup in Seattle, Washington and was selected to be a member of the Baltimore Orioles Scout Team that traveled to Jupitor, Florida to participate in the elite WWBA (World Wood Bat Association) Tournament. He has played organized baseball since 5 years of age and AAU Baseball since age 10, where he led the Capitals team in hitting 2 of 3 years with over .500 average and in Slugging Percentage and Total RBIs (runs batted in). He was selected to play in the elite Pennsylvania Keystone State Games (2007 and 2008) and led the team in OBP (on base percentage), Slugging Percentage and Walks. The Team captured a Silver Medal in 2008 and Bronze Medal in 2007. He was starting Short Stop for the 2008 AAU Keystone Nationals team. As Team leader in OBP, Walks, Batting Average and Slugging Percentage, they were ranked 2nd in the Elite Championship Tournament Baseball (ECTB) Northeast Region. He has received evaluations from the Seattle Mariners, Milwaukee Brewers, Kansas City Royals, Colorado Rockies and Baltimore Orioles.
Well respected in the State, long-time Head High School Baseball Coach Brad Shover remarked about "LK's" special abilities and determination starting at a young age. "Since witnessing him play for the first time in 8th Grade and watching him work so vigorously and passionately with his dad outside of practice, I knew "LK" would truly be a special baseball player due to his incredible talent, work ethic, dedication and drive. Without a doubt, "LK" is one of top players I have ever coached and I know he'll have a wonderful future ahead, " said Coach Shover. "The Mountaineers are extremely fortunate to have him on their team," he added.
Cody Wheeler Makes USA National Collegiate Team Roster
CARY, N.C. – Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni and Coastal Carolina University left-handed pitcher Cody Wheeler (Spotsylvania, Va./Spotsylvania) has made the 22-man roster for the 2009 USA Baseball National Collegiate Team.
Wheeler was one of 10 pitchers and one of only two left-handed pitchers to make the team. Wheeler was 10-1 with a 3.83 earned-run average in 15 starts this season for the Chanticleers. The Big South Pitcher of the Year has struck out a team and conference high 98 batters in 91.2 innings pitched this year. Wheeler pitched a complete-game no-hitter in a 4-0 win over Hawai’i March 26 and was named National Pitcher of the Week. He also had seven-inning, one-hit performances in wins over Stony Brook and VMI. Wheeler was 7-0 in Big South games and has 63 strikeouts in 57 innings pitched in conference matchups. He was named the Big South Pitcher of the Week three times this season. The Chanticleer opponents hit just .222 off Wheeler. He was named a Louisville Slugger Third Team All-American and was an All-Atlantic Region First Team member.
Wheeler, expected to be a top draft choice in 2010 following his junior season at Coastal Carolina, left the Bourne Braves of the Cape Cod League to put on the red, white, and blue of Team USA.
The National Team has begun its summer schedule with Wheeler posting a 2-0 record as a starter. His wins came against Team Canada and the All-Star team from the New England Collegiate Baseball League. Following its domestic exhibition schedule, the U.S. will travel to Japan to compete in the 37th Annual
Japan vs. USA Collegiate Championships before closing out its summer in Canada at the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipeline World Baseball Challenge in Prince George, British Columbia. Team USA has won 34 straight games dating back to last year.
Brandon King Signs with Washington Nationals
Brandon King will be pitching this week but it won’t be in Legion baseball.
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumnus signed a contract with the Washington Nationals and was assigned to Melbourne, Fla., the Nationals’ Rookie League team in the Gulf Coast League.
“I’m excited ... I’m stoked,” said King. “Words can’t describe how I feel right now. Just the thought of being known as a professional baseball player, to put on a pro jersey.”
King will join his new teammates on Tuesday, take a physical and begin to stretch his arm out and get ready to make his first professional appearance. He has lofty goals set and hopes to be sent to Vermont or Hagerstown following the Rookie League short season.
Financial terms of the contract were not disclosed by the Nationals at the signing, but it is believed King received a $250,000 signing bonus along with a generous financial agreement pertaining to college.
King was drafted in the 27th round of the 2009 Major League Baseball draft, but the signing bonus indicates the Nationals have a high regard for the 6-foot-4, 230-pound right-hander. That was enough to get King to forego the start of his college education.
“If (Brandon) walks away from the game he can go to any four-year college and the Nationals will provide complete aid for eight semesters,” said Tim King, Brandon’s father.
King was the West Virginia Player of the Year. King led Martinsburg to the Class AAA state championship while hitting .454 with huge power numbers. He had 15 home runs and 12 doubles among his 54 hits and drove in 55 runs. On the mound, he went 8-2 with a 1.53 earned run average and 72 strikeouts in 55 innings.
Red Sox Alumni Nate Starner living the Minor League Baseball Dream
Mid-Atlantic Red Sox alumni Nate Starner is in his third full minor-league season with the Toronto Blue Jays organization. Nate’s journey has featured steady advancement through the minor-league ranks, from rookie ball to AA in three years, and the southpaw from Aspers, PA hopes to continue meeting his goal of advancing one level per season.
While traveling on this wonderful journey, one can be assured that every one of Nate’s pitches thrown to this point has been laced with the maturity he possessed as a member Red Sox along with a genuine appreciation to be living the dream that so many baseball players cannot achieve.
After his collegiate career ended with Shippensburg University (PA) in 2006, he began his pro career with 41 strikeouts in 24.2 innings of rookie ball that warranted a promotion to the New York-Penn League. He made three quick appearances that season before getting shut down – compiling 125 strikeouts on the year between Shippensburg, Pulaski and Auburn.
In 2007, Starner spent the entire season with the single-A affiliate of the Blue Jays – the Lansing Lugnuts. Starner led the entire Blue Jays minor league system in strikeouts with 143 through 140 innings and posted a 12-9 record with a 4.43 ERA. Starner started in 28 games for a Lugnut squad that advanced to the playoffs and was a teammate with young outfielder Travis Snider, one of Toronto’s top prospects.
After eight starts at Lansing in 2008 in which Starner struck out 45 in 43 innings with a miniscule 1.67 ERA, a promotion placed Nate in Florida with the Dunedin Blue Jays. He concluded his sophomore minor-league campaign out of the bullpen with stellar numbers: 59 innings, 55 strikeouts, a 4-0 record and a 1.11 WHIP ratio. Overall, Starner struck out 100 batters in 102.1 innings of work to complement an outstanding 1.76 ERA.
This year, the journey through the ranks put Starner with the New Hampshire Fisher Cats, where thus far he has appeared in 12 games and thrown 19.1 innings. Starner is a member of the bullpen with the Double-A Eastern League affiliate and returned to the Keystone State last week during a four-game series in Harrisburg against the Senators.
“You don’t have to wake up early, and you get to play baseball every day,” Starner said. Thus, a boy’s dream still has the chance of becoming a man’s reality.
5 Red Sox Alumni selected in the 2009 MLB
Draft
The Mid-Atlantic Red Sox program has now had 17 players selected in the MLB First-Year Player Draft, including 8 in the last two years. The Red Sox have also had 3 players sign as undrafted free agents. The program’s rich 10-year tradition has produced over 200 collegiate baseball players from the Mid-Atlantic area.
Ryan Woolley – Atlanta Braves, 6th Round
UAB baseball player Ryan Woolley was selected Wednesday by the Atlanta Braves in the sixth round of the Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft.
A right-handed pitcher from Montclair, Va., Woolley was taken with the 178th overall pick.
Despite not pitching in 2009, Woolley becomes the highest draft pick in the history of the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox baseball program. Branden Kline was also selected in the sixth round but was taken 20 spots lower with the 198th overall pick by the Boston Red Sox.
Woolley sat out the 2009 season due to NCAA transfer rules after joining the Blazers from the University of Georgia, where he appeared in 22 games over his freshman and sophomore seasons. He has not appeared in a game at UAB.
Woolley has two years of college eligibility remaining and now has the option to sign with the Braves or to return to school at UAB. In addition to his baseball ability, he also succeeded in the classroom, posting a 4.0 GPA in the fall semester and a 3.57 mark in the spring.

Branden Kline – Boston Red Sox, 6th Round
In the sixth round of the 2009 First-Year Player Draft with the 198th pick overall, the Red Sox selected high school pitcher Branden Kline out of Governor Thomas Johnson High School in Frederick, Maryland.
The 6’3”, 185-pound right-hander, who is committed to play at Virginia, sits in the low 90’s with his fastball, and touched 95 mph during the spring. In 41 innings his senior season, Kline allowed just three runs and 16 hits, striking out 79 batters and going 6-1.
Even though Kline has been drafted, as expected, he has indicated that it will take a hefty signing bonus to lure him away from the University of Virginia.
Kline and the Red Sox have until Aug. 15 to work out a contract, should Kline consider forgoing college and launching his professional career. If he doesn't sign by that date, his name will be thrown back into the pool of prospects, and he is eligible to be re-drafted or signed as a free agent following his junior year of college.
"In my heart, I hope he goes to college," Linda Kline said. "But it's his decision; whatever he decides."
Brandon King – Washington Nationals, 27th
Round
On Monday, Brandon King hadn’t given much thought to being picked in the Major League Baseball amateur draft that began Tuesday.
The Washington Nationals gave the new Martinsburg High School graduate just a little extra to think about after they selected him to start the 27th round on Wednesday. King, a pitcher and third baseman in high school, was drafted as a pitcher.
A day after selecting Stephen Strasburg with the No. 1 pick and Drew Storen with the 10th pick, the Nationals continued to draft pitchers and added King to the list.
Whether he signs remains a question. King was the 802nd player drafted and was the 14th of 16 pitchers taken by Washington in the first two days.
King tossed a one-hitter as Martinsburg defeated Logan 8-1 in the West Virginia Class AAA state semifinals. Martinsburg went on to win the state title.
He ended the prep season with a .454 batting average and led the state with his 15 home runs and 55 RBIs. He also walked 18 times and scored a staggering 53 runs in 37 games.
King and the University of Tennessee recently agreed on a release from a previous scholarship and he is in the process of working through other scholarship offers.
Josh Conway – Atlanta Braves, 42nd Round
Recent Smithsburg graduate Josh Conway was drafted by the Atlanta Braves Thursday. The Coastal Carolina University commit was selected in the 42nd
Round, 1258th overall.
Conway was a two-sport star at Smithsburg. He excelled as a wide receiver and defensive back on the football team.
On the baseball field, he went 4-0, had an ERA of 1.00, and had 52 strikeouts in 35 innings pitched. At the plate, he batted .500 with 5 homeruns, 19 RBIs, 29 runs, and 16 steals.
“I’m happy and excited just to be drafted,” said the Smithsburg graduate. “There are so many guys that get drafted you just have to be excited to be a part of it.”
Conway, a 6-foot-1, 170-pound pitcher/outfielder, was selected by the Braves as an outfielder. He had recently visited Turner Field, home of the Braves, for a workout in front of Atlanta scouts.
Now, Conway must decide by Aug. 15 whether he’ll accept the Braves’ offer, but history has shown that players drafted in later rounds who are graduating from high school, like Conway’s situation, usually end up heading to college. Conway said if there is not signature on a contract’s dotted line, he would begin a summer semester class at Coastal Carolina on July 11.
Josh Edgin – Atlanta Braves, 50th Round
Francis Marion University junior left-handed pitcher Josh Edgin was selected by the Atlanta Braves in the 50th round of Major League Baseball's 2009 First-Year Player Draft.
Edgin was selected as the seventh pick in the 50th round (No. 1498 overall). Edgin, a native of Three Springs, Pa., posted a 4-2 record this past season with a 4.04 earned run average. He appeared in 16 games, making 11 starts, and struck out 57 batters in 69 innings. Opponents batted .234 against him.
His two best starts may have been the final two of the season. He allowed only three hits and one run in seven innings while fanning nine in the Peach Belt Conference Tournament championship game, leading FMU to the title and earning a spot on the All-Tournament Team. Four days later, he tossed a two-hit shutout (5-0 FMU win) against nationally ranked Tusculum College in the opening round of the NCAA Division II Southeast Regional.
Edgin has the option of signing with the Braves or returning to Francis Marion for his senior year.
Edgin is the 8th Red Sox player to be drafted in the past 2 years.
Pitching Decision Awaits for Thomas Johnson Ace
Thomas Johnson H.S. Senior Potential MLB Draft Pick
Thomas Johnson High School senior Branden Kline is a potential high draft pick in next month’s Major League Baseball draft. He has accepted a scholarship to play for Virginia, but now faces the choice of skipping college and signing a contract worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.
By Josh Barr
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, May 11, 2009
The first time Branden Kline took the mound for Thomas Johnson this spring, the scene was typical for an early-season high school baseball game: a relatively sparse crowd made up of mostly classmates, friends and relatives.
A month later, those crowds are larger, and now include about two dozen mostly middle-aged men, toting notebooks, video cameras and radar guns. They scrutinize Kline's every move, from how he throws in the bullpen and swings in the on-deck circle, to the release point of his 90 mph fastball, to how fast he gets himself down to first base on a hit.
All of a sudden, a 17-year-old who was barely on the map for some major league scouts has become a hot commodity as the start of the first-year player draft approaches on June 9. Scouts are flocking to Frederick to witness his last few pitching appearances, often bringing their bosses and sometimes their bosses' bosses to get a second or third evaluation before Kline's season ends.
"We didn't think he would be this kind of kid," one scout said on the condition of anonymity because area scouts generally are not authorized to discuss prospects. "He's the flavor of the week. Heck, he's the flavor of the month."
Kline has shot up the charts to the point that some scouts project him being selected in the first five rounds, with an accompanying signing bonus well into six figures if he chooses to turn professional and skip college. He already has accepted a scholarship to play for the University of Virginia, but the opportunity to immediately begin the pursuit of a major league dream can be enticing.
"When I was young, I always wanted to play some type of professional sport," said Kline, who has a 6-1 record and has allowed just three earned runs and 16 hits with 79 strikeouts in 41 innings, though he was scratched from today's scheduled start because of a slightly strained elbow, according to Coach Jim Foit.
"As I got older and older, I noticed how good the kids were coming out of high school. But now [being included in that group is] a high possibility. It feels pretty cool knowing you could get drafted coming out of high school, but there is a lot of pressure with people asking me what I'm going to do.
"It's actually something I have had to sit down and talk to my parents about. It's getting real serious, thinking about the pros and cons of going to the pros against going to college first."
Not that Kline's situation is unprecedented. Danny Hultzen, last season's All-Met Player of the Year, went from totally unknown to potential first-round draft pick. With concerns that he was unlikely to sign a pro contract, Hultzen slipped to the 10th round, where he was picked by the Arizona Diamondbacks before turning down their contract offers to follow through on his scholarship to play for Virginia.
While Kline has indicated to scouts that he also wants to go to college, some teams likely still will pursue him because of his talent. His parents, Linda Kline and Gary Bowens, also would like to see their son attend Virginia.
"For me, growing up, I didn't have a chance to go to a university," Linda Kline said. "I would like for him to go to college and get a good education. Plus, he'll get more experience with baseball on a higher level. It wouldn't be going from high school to the minor leagues. That would be nerve-wracking. I never thought his playing ball would get this far."
The decision to possibly put off college is one Kline never anticipated having to make, even after his senior season started. That's not to say he wasn't a good player, because Kline often played against older competition and has spent the past two falls playing on a well-known travel team, the Mid-Atlantic Red Sox, which draws players from all over the East Coast and has sent 40 players to NCAA Division I programs the past two years, according to General Manager Allen Haines. But in the 10 years of the Red Sox, Kline could be the highest draft pick.
"I saw his potential, but I never thought he could do this," said Haines, noting that Kline threw in the low- to mid-80s when he invited Kline to join the Red Sox. "I saw a projectable kid with potential."
That's the same thing pro scouts see now. Although Haines set up Kline with a pitching coach for offseason workouts -- Clear Spring Coach Mark Shives, who played at Florida International -- scouts still consider Kline a raw talent, not a polished pitcher. They like his arm strength and velocity. While Kline is 6 feet 3 and 185 pounds, he is still growing. With proper nutrition and a dedicated weightlifting regimen, scouts envision him adding another 25 pounds, perhaps adding even more velocity to a fastball often in the low 90s that requires his catcher to wear two batting gloves for padding under his catcher's mitt.
It was after Kline hit 95 in a game at Hedgesville, W.Va., that things took off. A few scouts had started to trickle in to see Kline, but word of his performance against Hedgesville quickly made it through the tight-knit scouting community. For his next start against Tuscarora, about 25 scouts and a potential agent were on hand. Ditto his following start last week against North Carroll.
"In the fall I knew pro scouts would come out and look at our team, but I never thought I would be one of the guys they would be looking at to draft high," Kline said. "I got a couple questionnaires in the fall, but I didn't think anything about it. I figured they just wanted to know my info."
Now they want to know more. They will watch an inning or two from behind the plate, then move to a spot down the foul lines to get a different vantage point. From any angle, they've seen the emergence of a pitcher.
"Anybody can walk to the field now and see it. A year ago it was Virginia that had a pretty keen eye," Shives said. "There is still more in that arm. His breaking stuff is still maturing. He's learning how to pitch. That's what is so attractive. He is still raw on the mound. All of this stuff is new to him."