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Josh Gjormand Ready For The Next Trip

Josh Gjormand Ready For The Next Trip

University of Lynchburg standout prepares for MVP International excursion to Central Europe
By David Driver, MVP Communications

WASHINGTON – By his own count, Josh Gjormand has been on at least seven baseball trips with MVP International, a leader in overseas excursions for youth in several sports.

A baseball player at the University of Lynchburg in Virginia, Gjormand has been to Germany and Italy twice and once to Spain, the Dominican Republic and the Caribbean.

 

Photo courtesy of Lynchburg College athletics
James Madison High grad Josh Gjormand, a veteran of several MVP International trips, was the first baseman in 2022 for Division III Lynchburg College

 

“Baseball-wise, it is an incredible experience,” he says. “It is a different time of game over there, it is a different speed of the game, it is a different level of playing depending on where you are play. Sometimes I would be 16 years old going to Austria or Hungary and playing against 25 or 30-year old men. Once you get that, our 16-year-old skill level may be matched up with their 25-year-old skill level and we can compete since that is their high-level club teams.”

Now, the graduate of James Madison High in Vienna, Virginia is preparing for another MVP International trip – this one to Central Europe for baseball from July 14-23. There will be three MVP teams making the trip – 18U, 16U and 12U.

“I will be one of the older guys since I am in college,” said Gjormand, who will be a player-coach of sorts for the 18U team.

He will be able to impart his experience on the several trips he has already made with MVP International, which was founded by his father, Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, also his coach at Madison High.

“It just goes to show how advanced our game is over here and how we can spread that throughout the world with these trips,” Josh Gjormand said. “That is one of the things I like – going and interacting with the teams before, during and after the game. One of the teams we played in the Dominican, after the game we went and had a cookout. That was really cool for me, getting past the language barrier since I can speak a little bit of Spanish. There were some guys who could speak a little English and you can make it work.”

“That takes me into the cultural aspect of it. It is such a cool thing to see all of the different walks of life in the game of baseball,” he added. “Until I started doing these trips, I didn’t think twice about it. It has opened my mind to so many different people and so many different types of situations all over this world.”

Gjormand was about 4 or 5 when he began playing organized baseball.

“I have been playing as long as I can remember,” he said.

He was about 8 or 9 when he went to Italy with another organization.

“Once MVP started up, the first trip I went on was to Germany when I was 12 years old,” he said.

Other players on one of those trips to Germany were Kyle Novak, who has played four years at JMU; and Danny Hosley, a Langley High graduate and two-way player at Norfolk State in 2021.

Gjormand is coming off a solid spring season at Lynchburg, which advanced to the national tournament at the Division III level.

This past year as an infielder/pitcher he hit .347 with 20 RBI in 30 games for Lynchburg, which was 36-12 overall.

“It was a really sweet year. It was really cool for me; it meant more to this year since last season my season was cut short by surgery since halfway through the (2021) season I messed up my ankle pretty bad,” he noted. “We won our ODAC title last year and went to regionals and lost in the semifinals against some really good teams in 2021. It was unchartered territory for us.”

“I told myself I want to be on the active roster if we got to that point this year,” he added. “I didn’t want to leave anything on the table. It was a great year all-around, starting with two weeks in the fall when coaches could have organized practice and work with us. I think a lot could be said for the run we made. We ran into some pretty big injuries, which was unfortunate. We definitely had to navigate some choppy waters with those injuries. But we made that regional run again.”

Another ODAC team to make the national field in 2022 was Shenandoah of Winchester. Another top program in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC) is Randolph-Macon of Ashland.

“I knew our program was trying to build something,” he said of Lynchburg. “It was something I wanted to be part of.”

Gjormand’s brother, Trevor, will be a senior at James Madison High in the fall and plans to play baseball at ODAC member Eastern Mennonite in Harrisonburg, Virginia.

Their sister, Samantha, was a student manager at JMU in Harrisonburg and just finished her first season as the

Director of Baseball Operations & Executive Assistant to the Head Coach at Division I College of Charleston in South Carolina.

They have also been on MVP International trips.

“What I would say it took my game a level up,” Josh Gjormand said of those international trips. “I still talk to guys I became friends with on those trips when I was 13 or 14. It is life-long relationships you are building on top of that. Your game takes a step up because you have to go and adapt to baseball at different speeds of the game. You pick things up from players you are playing against. You can pick things up from Dominicans. Playing in the Dominican Republic was the coolest experience of my life. That is where my game took the biggest jump. It was the most fun way to play baseball. It is hard not to enjoy the trip.”

Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and Laurel and Baltimore in Maryland. He can be reached at @DaytonVaDriver and www.daytondavid.com. His book, “From Tidewater to The Shenandoah: Snapshots from Virginia’s rich baseball legacy,” written along with Lacy Lusk of Baseball America, is due out this summer.

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