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Memorable MVP Moment For Merritt

Memorable MVP Moment For Merritt

High Point pitcher went to the Dominican Republic while at McLean High
By David Driver, MVP Communications

WASHINGTON – Teddy Merritt pitched at McLean High in Northern Virginia so he was very familiar with the program at nearby James Madison High in Vienna. And Merritt also learned about MVP International, a leader in overseas youth travel sports that was started by Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, the long-time coach at Madison High. Merritt, an all-district player at McLean High, was told of a trip to the Dominican Republic in 2018.

“Pudge had asked me about it and I had heard from other people who had been on the same trip and they said it was awesome, they had a great time and they highly recommended it,” recalls Merritt, who just finished his sophomore season at Division I High Point in North Carolina. “So, I talked to my people and it was like, ‘Why not? Let’s go.’ It was a great time and a very humbling experience for sure.”

“Just realizing that these people we were playing against didn’t have as many materials as we had,” added Merritt, a 2020 graduate of McLean High. “Stuff like that really put things in perspective for what we have over here.”

The only other time Merritt had been out of the United States was on a trip to Rome as a young boy. On the trip to the Dominican, he joined his parents, Mark and Jayne, and his sisters, Kaitlyn and Kayla.

After one of the games, the USA MVP team and the Dominican squad had a cookout.

“That was awesome. That was my favorite memory, for sure,” recalls Merritt, who is studying Business Administration at High Point. “Half of them knew English and all I had was my Spanish 101 knowledge from high school. But it was awesome. We played them earlier in the day and then we went to the beach and had a cookout.”

A two-day player, Merritt was hit by a pitch in his only at-bat on the Dominican trip but he saw plenty of time on the mound.
“In the five games we had, I got to pitch two or three times. Some of the guys we were playing were over the age of 30,” he recalls.

Other members of that MVP travel team to the Dominican are now at the Division I level – Madison High graduate Kyle Novak (JMU), who led the CAA in RBI this past season; and Flint Hill product O’Kelly McWilliams IV (Wofford). This summer, Novak is with a team in Vermont in a wood-bat league.

Other current college players on the trip were Madison High’s Josh Gjormand (Lynchburg); Madison’s Zack Perkins (Washington & Lee); Madison’s Chris Polymeropoulos (Richard Bland); and Westfield High’s Danny Leo, who had been at Frederick Community College in Maryland.

This past season, 6-foot-6 right-hander Merritt pitched a season-high 6.1 innings against Northeastern in April and fanned a season-best nine batters at Gardner-Webb.

Photo courtesy High Point University
Teddy Merritt, a product of McLean High in Virginia and alum of MVP International, rears back to pitch for High Point.

 

He pitched in late February at North Carolina State, ranked among the top teams in the country this season.
High Point was 23-33 overall and 14-10 in the Big South Conference. One of Merritt’s teammates at High Point is Cam Irvine, an infielder from Penn Laird, Virginia, and the son of former Red Sox pitcher Daryl Irvine. The coach at High Point is Joey Hammond, who was drafted by the Baltimore Orioles, played 11 years in the minors with the Orioles and Phillies, and reached the Triple-A level.

Merritt, a rising junior at High Point, would strongly encourage players to make a trip with MVP International if they have the option.

“I would tell them it is definitely worth it,” he says, “even if it just once. It definitely put things in perspective for me. Just realizing that these people we were playing against didn’t have as many materials as we had. Stuff like that really put things in perspective for what we have over here.”

Editor’s note: David Driver works in Communications with MVP International and is the former sports editor of papers in Harrisonburg and Arlington in Virginia and in Laurel and Baltimore in Maryland. His book “From Tidewater To The Shenandoah; Snapshots of Virginia’s Rich Baseball Legacy,” written along with Lacy Lusk, will be published this summer. Driver can be reached at @DaytonVaDriver and www.daytondavid.com

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