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Hanafin Part of MVP International Softball Success

Hanafin Part of MVP International Softball Success

The former Baylor and Maryland star eyes fourth overseas trip in 2023

VIENNA, Virginia – Bree Hanafin knew she wanted to stay involved in softball but she also discovered with a full-time job it would be difficult to do that as a high school coach.

 

Hanafin has coached youth softball in Northern Virginia for several years, and with MVP International.

 

“I realized very quickly that starting a full-time job and coaching was way too much for me,” said Hanafin, a former softball standout at in college at Baylor and Maryland.

So Hanafin, a varsity assistant in 2013 at George Marshall High in Falls Church, Virginia, expanded on her private coaching lessons and began Arlington Softball + about two years later. And after that she began to team up with MVP International, a leader in overseas youth travel for various sports.

Hanafin grew up in Arlington, Virginia and played in high school at Yorktown. While coaching at nearby Marshall in Falls Church, so was introduced to the rivalry with James Madison High in Vienna.

Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, the long-time and successful baseball coach at Madison, is the Founder & Visionary of MVP International. “I realized how close the Vienna sports community was,” said Hanafin, a second-team all-ACC and all-region player at Maryland.

Hanafin knew Tom Kyllo, then the softball coach at Marshall.

“Tom knew Pudge really well,” Hanafin noted. “Tom had reached out to me and said we are taking this overseas trip with MVP. We wanted it to feel like an All-Star team; I reached to my network of players who would make a good group for this trip.”

Hanafin ended up as the lead coach and took an MVP International team to Italy in 2018 and that worked nicely with her work with Arlington Softball +.

 

Bree Hanafin, who played college softball at Baylor and Maryland, has led three MVP International softball trips out of the USA.

 

“It was a really good time to start it. It was when softball started to grow in this area,” said Hanafin, who lives in Loudoun County, Virginia. “I knew the sport was growing and it needed coaches. I wanted to help players improve on their skills.”

Another MVP trip was to Australia in 2019 and then to Puerto Rico two years later.

Among the college players who have gone on MVP International trips include Kiaris Alvarado Rojas, a sophomore this past season for Division I Georgetown and a former star at Bishop O’Connell High in Arlington; and Ella Meyer, a sophomore pitcher this past season at Division III Gettysburg in Pennsylvania.

Assistant coaches on trip with Hanafin have included Becky Anderson, who played in high school at Westfield and Division I George Mason University, both in Fairfax County, Virginia; and Kristin Kelleher, who starred at Bishop Ireton in Alexandria, Virginia and Division I Charleston Southern in South Carolina.

While in high school, Hanafin played for ASA Hall of Famer Tommy Orndorff with the Shamrocks from 2007-09. That travel team was fifth in the nation two straight years

“The softball community in Northern Virginia is super small but it is starting to grow,” she said. “I have seen it change so much.”

And that puts her an ideal position to spearhead another overseas trip, possibly in 2023.

Editor’s note:  David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Harrisonburg and Arlington in Virginia and for papers in Laurel and Baltimore in Maryland. He can be reached at @DaytonVaDriver and www.daytondavid.com and his book on basketball “Hoop Dreams In Europe” and one on baseball, written with co-author Lacy Lusk, “From Tidewater To The Shenandoah: Snapshots From Virginia’s Rich Baseball Legacy,” were pblished this year and are available on Amazon.

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