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Lowell
Park a Virtual Baseball "Mecca" Says ESPN
Cape
Cod Baseball League, Kettleers and Coach Mike Roberts Featured on
ESPN's Web Site
By
David Albright/ESPN; Photo of Lowell Park by Paul Andrews
The
real "field of dreams" shouldn't have been about a cornfield
in Iowa filled with baseball's past. The real "if you build
it, they will come" scenario should have been about the annual
two-month lovefest with baseball's future known as the Cape Cod
Baseball League.
From Chatham to Wareham on this famous stretch of land about an
hour south of
Boston, nothing is a better central-casting depiction of what baseball
should look like and sound like than the 10-team college summer
league that attracts the best players and caters to a fan base that
ranges from small children to the elderly.
Here at picturesque Elizabeth Lowell Park, home of the Cotuit Kettleers,
a Sunday afternoon in July looks like a scene right out of a Norman
Rockwell painting.
It's still three hours before game time, but the 60-year-old ballpark
that is surrounded on all sides by a forest of pine trees is already
abuzz with activity.
Kettleers assistant coach Adam Warchal, fresh from putting a new
coat of yellow paint on the right- and left-field foul poles, is
helping fellow assistant Jeremy Boles chalk the first- and third-base
lines. Later, they will rake and water the infield to complete their
duties as the de facto grounds crew.
As Cotuit manager Mike Roberts prepares to throw batting practice
to his collection of players that have come here from as close as
New Jersey and as far away as California, he rattles off everything
that helps set the Cape league apart from the rest of summer college
baseball offerings.
First, there are the people who open up their homes and house the
players from June to August. Then there are the year-round volunteers
who help run every part of the organization.
But it's the fans across the entire league that Roberts marvels
at the most.
How I spent my summer
Have you wondered how college athletes and coaches spend their summers?
Most use the break to catch up on classes or prepare for upcoming
seasons. ESPN.com, however, caught up with a few who are breaking
that mold this summer.
"It's a mini-Red Sox Nation," Roberts said. "And
people who don't understand Red Sox Nation can't understand the
Cape league. Why would thousands of people come out to watch college
baseball? They understand the game, they understand the league and
they understand the tradition.
"If the center fielder for the other team makes a diving catch,
our fans will clap for him. The only place in America that happens
is Omaha, Neb., that I know of. And there's no home team in Omaha,
so it's everybody wanting to see good baseball. It's the same thing
here. It's very special."
Roberts
isn't the only one who notices the quality of the eyes watching
the 200-plus college players who are fortunate enough to be invited
to the Cape each summer.
"It's a whole different environment up here," said Texas
outfielder Kyle Russell, a first-year Cape player. "I didn't
know the crowds were going to be so amazing -- especially for summer-league
ball. In the summer you usually have crowds of a hundred people
or so. Here you've got thousands cheering you on, then you've got
the wood bats, the pitching here is amazing and the competition
is outstanding.
"Playing baseball every single day with wooden bats and a lot
of competition, that's the real life of pro ball, and it's good
that we get the adjustment to think about that. Everyone talked
about how the competition was going to be unbelievable, but now
that I see it with my own eyes, I can finally agree with them. This
is the real deal."
One of the most talked-about aspects of the Cape league from the
players' perspective is that it's a wood-bat league. The crack of
the bat replaces the familiar aluminum ping that's heard throughout
college baseball in the spring.
That equipment change takes some getting used to for the hitters,
and on this evening the pitchers clearly had an edge as Falmouth
topped Cotuit 2-0 in front of an overflow crowd of 1,584 in a park
that's official seating capacity is listed as 600. Clemson's David
Kopp threw seven innings of one-hit ball to pick up the win for
the Commodores. On the other side, Riverside's James Simmons allowed
only four hits and one earned run in his 7.2 innings of work.
"The biggest adjustment is the wood bat and the competition,"
said South Carolina first baseman Justin Smoak, another player spending
his first summer on the Cape. "It's unbelievable. Every day
you'll see guys throwing upper 80s or 90 with good off-speed stuff.
It's great to get out here and play against guys like that, because
if you want to play at the next level, that's what you're going
to see."
And that's what the dozen or so MLB scouts who line the backstop
behind home plate are here to see, too. Their radar guns and stopwatches
chronicle every move, but it starts well before the first pitch.
Several scouts showed up a couple hours before the game to watch
batting and fielding practice, as well, and they scribbled notes
throughout the pregame workouts.
"You know that how you play here is going to be used to decide
how you're going to do in the draft and whether or not you're going
to have a future there," said Notre Dame catcher Sean Gaston,
who was the 2005 Cotuit MVP.
"If the center fielder for the other team makes a diving catch,
our fans will clap for him. The only place in America that happens
is Omaha, Neb., that I know of. And there's no home team in Omaha,
so it's everybody wanting to see good baseball. It's the same thing
here. It's very special."
-- Cotuit manager Mike Roberts"You either get used to it or
you're going to struggle the whole time."
Enough batters and pitchers adjust during the summer season or the
scouts wouldn't show up in the numbers they do.
"To me, the proof is in what transpires," Roberts said.
"How many of the guys get to the big leagues? That's what tells
me whether or not it's consistently the best [summer] league."
Based on the results, the Cape's reputation is well-deserved.
According to league statistician John Wylde, nearly 40 percent of
MLB players who attended a four-year school before advancing to
the majors made a summer stop on the Cape during their college careers.
The list of Cape league alumni who were on 2005 MLB rosters reads
like a who's who of professional baseball, with names that include:
Jeff Bagwell (Chatham '87-88), Kris Benson (Hyannis '94), Craig
Biggio (Yarmouth-Dennis '86), Sean Casey (Brewster '94), Darin Erstad
(Falmouth '93-94), Nomar Garciaparra (Orleans '93), Todd Helton
(Orleans '94), Mike Lowell (Chatham '94), Mark Teixeira (Orleans
'99), Jason Varitek (Hyannis '91-93), Billy Wagner (Brewster '92)
and Barry Zito (Wareham '97-98).
A quick look at this summer's Cape rosters reads like a who's who
of college baseball, including many players from every team that
advanced to last month's College World Series.
"The biggest thing about [this league] is the level of competition,"
Gaston said. "You know you're playing against the best guys
in the country day in and day out. This is absolutely the place
to play. If you ask anyone one place they want to play in the summer,
it's the Cape.
"This is the place you dream about playing."
David Albright is the senior coordinator for college sports at ESPN.com.
He can be reached at david.albright@espn3.com.
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