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A Swinging Summer

A Swinging Summer

Kyle Novak played in Vermont then made another MVP International trip to Europe
By David Driver, MVP Communications

Harrisonburg, Virginia – Kyle Novak is a seasoned, college veteran getting ready for his fifth baseball season here at JMU in the Shenandoah Valley.

But the professional hitter learned some new tricks along the way this summer – which saw him go from a wooden-bat league in New England to central Europe on another trip with MVP International.

“Honestly, the big thing with me was to have fun with it. I am in my fifth year of college; I am just learning to have fun with it,” he said in a recent telephone interview. “Honestly, it makes you play better when you have fun. When you look at guys in Major League Baseball, the guys that are having the most fun are some of the best players.”

“You can’t freak out about one at-bat, especially if you are playing overseas,” Novak, who grew up in Northern Virginia, said after a workout at JMU. “When you are on vacation and playing in Prague on vacation, you have to have fun with it and get to know the other players. It might be a cliché, but it has really helped.”

A right-handed hitter, Novak led the Colonial Athletic Association in RBI last season at 49 with the Dukes of JMU – who are now members of the Sun Belt Conference.

He faced some tough pitchers in the New England Collegiate Baseball League while playing for the Upper Valley Nighthawks in Vermont.

“I was the only JMU kid up there,” said Novak, who also played in the league in 2021 while hitting .258 that year. “This summer was a little different than last summer. I think this summer the pitchers dominated the league. Every game, you were facing 90-plus (MPH) from Power Five pitchers.”

He was able to play a road game against the Newport (RI) Gulls in Rhode Island, at historic Cardines Field where Babe Ruth once played in an exhibition game.

Novak also played in the NECBL this summer against pitcher/outfielder Jake Cone, who transferred to JMU this fall after playing at William & Mary. Cone went to South County High in Northern Virginia and has played against Novak for several years.

“It is cool to have him on my team,” Novak said of Cone, who played this past summer for the Vermont Mountaineers

Other recent products of the NECBL include Alan Roden, a college standout from Creighton who was taken in the third round of the July draft by the Toronto Blue Jays.

After playing in Vermont, Novak joined the MVP International baseball trip to central Europe in July.

“We started off in Vienna and played a game there, and we played a doubleheader in Slovakia, which was really cool,” Novak said. “Then we went to Munich, Germany and then a game in Prague. So, we played in four different countries in nine days, which was really cool.”

Novak has made several trips with MVP International baseball and that includes excursions to Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic.

The James Madison High graduate took on a leadership role with the trip to Europe this summer.

“Guys would definitely come up to me and I would help them out a lot,” Novak said. “I definitely took that on, since I was older than most of the guys, I took on a little bit of a player-coaching role.”

Novak has stayed in touch this summer with two of his former JMU teammates who were drafted in July: outfielder Chase DeLauter, who was taken in the first round by Cleveland; and infielder Nick Zona, who went in the 20th and final round to Seattle.

Zona got a hit in his first pro game in the Arizona League while DeLauter, who injured his leg in April, is not slated to make his minor league debut in 2022, according to sources. Zona is the son of Jeff Zona, a long-time scout for the Washington Nationals who is based in suburban Richmond.

Novak also keeps in touch with catcher Kyle Hayes, a former player at James Madison High and at JMU who is now in the minors with the Royals. “I am still pretty good friends with him,” Novak said.

Novak will do an internship this fall as a Sports Management and Recreation major with a practicum of 90 hours. He will graduate this winter and then take nine classes in the spring in order to be eligible to play for JMU in 2023.

The first baseman played at Madison High under veteran coach Pudge Gjormand, the Visionary and Founder of MVP International.

Gjormand recalls a conversation with Novak before a game this summer in Slovakia.

“Coach, this place is so beautiful, it is hard to believe a few hundred miles that way is a war is going on,” said Novak, according to his Gjormand, as the lefty slugger motioned in the general direction of Ukraine.

The moment wasn’t lost on Gjormand. “For him to say that, man, he is growing up,” said Gjormand.

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 available on Amazon and on his website.

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