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2009
Cotuit Kettleers Game Recaps
... full
season stories
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“Mr.
Kettleer” celebrates 60 years of Cotuit baseball
story by Steve McCarthy
July 22, 2009
COTUIT - It doesn’t take long after one arrives at
Cotuit’s Lowell Park, or any other Cape Cod
Baseball League venue for that matter to hear a
story about the man they call “Mr. Kettleer”.
Family, Friends, and Kettleers alumni spent
Wednesday evening at Lowell Park celebrating Arnold
Mycock, the namesake of the Cape League Championship
trophy, for 60 years of service to the Cotuit
Kettleers baseball club. The Gala 2009 fundraiser
was attended by more than 100 people, each donating
$200 hundred dollars and bidding on silent auction
items.
The evening began with a reception and silent
auction of baseball and sports memorabilia. A five
course lobster/filet mignon dinner followed, as well
as speeches by Kettleers manager Mike Roberts,
General Manager Bruce Murphy, team President Paul
Logan, and Mycock’s nephew Ron.
“It makes me feel very, very good, very happy,”
Mycock said. “For all the speeches and everything,
and they’re flavored toward you. Any of your
efforts you make in the course of your life, if
they’re recognized, it’s pretty special.”
Even former Kettleers and Boston Red Sox star Lou
Merloni, and The Boston Globe’s award winning
sports writer Tony Massarotti dined under the tent
on the left side of the infield, anxious to talk
baseball with the man that has volunteered countless
hours to the betterment of what has become the elite
amateur summer baseball league in the world. The two
closed the evening with a Q & A session for the
audience on all topics related to baseball.
“Everybody knows the Cape League,” Merloni said.
“Not enough people know about Arnold Mycock.
Everything he’s done for this league is one of the
big reasons why this league is what it is. It’s a
great tribute for him and it’s an honor to see him
again.”
Merloni was recruited by Mycock to play for the
Kettleers in 1992 after playing in Bourne the
previous summer. He credits Mycock’s dedication to
developing the league to giving him an opportunity
to play professionally for nine seasons.
“He took a league, and pretty much did whatever it
took to get this thing going,” Merloni said. “So
everybody that participates in this league has to
look at Arnold, and kind of thank him for
everything, the opportunities that they’ve gotten
in life. This league gave me an opportunity to play
Major League Baseball, and it might as well have
been Arnold Mycock who gave me that chance.”
Roberts called Mr. Mycock the most humble man he has
ever met, and it was obvious in the emotion shown by
the guest of honor the genuine appreciation of each
person stopping by to greet him.
“They are like a family,” Mycock said. “The
group that came tonight is from the early days when
we started recruiting college players, and so
we’ve maintained friendships all these years.
It’s an emotional time for me.”
According to the Gala’s program, in six decades
spent at the serene home of the most successful Cape
League franchise, Mycock served as the General
Manager for 44 years. He was a founding member of
the Cotuit Athletic Association, and the team’s
main sponsor in its initial years. He was also a
member of the inaugural induction class of the Cape
Cod Baseball League Hall of Fame in 2001.
“He’s actually ‘Mr. Cape Cod Baseball
League’. He’s not just ‘Mr. Cotuit’,” 1975
Kettleers MVP Paul O’Neill said. “There’s so
many stories about him. I mean, 60 years doing
anything, especially not getting paid for it,
something that you absolutely love, what else can
you say about somebody?”
O’Neill was the league’s batting champion in
1975, and recalled how proud Mr. Mycock was to
present a Kettleer with the trophy. “I couldn’t
have asked it from a better guy,” O’Neill said.
The quality O’Neill said he admires most in Mr.
Mycock is his honesty. “What you see is what you
get,” O’Neill said. “He doesn’t put on any
façade or anything, and he’s willing to help
anybody out at any time.”
The Gala 2009 Committee that made the event a
success includes Rod Ames, Kerry Lawson, Paul Logan,
Kathy O’Melia, Liz Savoia, Ann Marie Tenaglia, and
Kelli Venuti.
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