Now college standouts, best friends since high school were part of memorable event in the Dominican Republic
By David Driver, MVP Communications
The trip to the Dominican Republic in 2018 took on added meaning for Xavier Herring, who just finished his junior season with the baseball team at Mary Washington University in Fredericksburg, Virginia.
Herring was part of a talented squad with MVP International – a leader in overseas sports travel – that included several current Division I players and other Division III standouts like Herring.
But that excursion to the baseball hotbed of the Dominican also had a strong family component for Herring.
“Me being a quarter Dominican – my late grandfather was born there – and my mom being fluent in Spanish and a Spanish teacher in high school at Fairfax, I definitely wanted to go and see things there,” Herring noted. “My grandfather, he loved baseball. He was very knowledgeable about baseball.”
Herring’s mother (Brunilda), with Dominican roots, was born in South Carolina but grew up in the Washington Heights neighborhood on the upper west side of Manhattan in New York City.
It was the first trip to the Dominican for Herring, a standout player at Fairfax High in Virginia. He was able to meet the half-brothers of his mother while on the trip four years ago.
“Outside of baseball, and that was a very fun part of the trip, but after one of the games we went to this (community) center and some of the younger kids from around there came and we brought a lot of equipment that weren’t using anymore,” Herring recalled. “We gave out bags and bags of stuff to the kids – gloves, bats, hats. They were definitely grateful for that. A lot of times they are using equipment that is still falling apart. It was nice to give back to them.”
Another member of that MVP International trip was Dylan Wilkinson, who has been good friends with Herring for several years. They went to elementary, middle and high school together.
“Honestly, the biggest thing was how passionate they were about baseball,” Wilkinson said of playing against Dominican teams. “They are just enjoying themselves; one game there was music playing the entire time. It makes the environment so much fun. I loved it.”
Wilkinson, an infielder/outfielder, hit .280 this past season for the Division I Lancers of Longwood in Farmville, Virginia.
He also went with an MVP International team to Germany and his father was one of the coaches. Both of his parents made the trip to the Dominican Republic.
“That was definitely an experience,” he notes of the trip to Europe. “It was cool to see a different environment; there is not as big of a baseball culture in Germany.”
The teams were put together by veteran James Madison High coach Mark “Pudge,” Gjormand, the Founder and Visionary for MVP International and a member of the National High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
“A lot of us had played summer ball together for seasons leading up to that,” Herring recalled. “He asked us if we wanted to go on a trip to the DR and we were all down for it.”
Other members of that MVP travel team to the Dominican now at the Division I level: Madison High graduate Kyle Novak (JMU), who led the CAA in RBI this past season; Flint Hill product O’Kelly McWilliams IV (Wofford) and McLean (Va.) High graduate Teddy Merritt (High Point).
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 (Francis Marion), who was at Frederick Community College in Maryland.
Herring hit .329 this past year at Division III Mary Washington as an infielder/outfielder. He made a family trip once to Germany with his father, Ronald, whose work took him there. His mother will be the dean of students next academic year at Fairfax High.
He will play this summer for the Chili Dogs, led by coach Gjormand, in the Northern Virginia College League while Wilkinson plans to suit up for the Gaithersburg (Md.) Giants in the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League.
Wilkinson’s brother, Brady, played baseball at Eastern Mennonite University in Virginia and another brother, Eric, will join the EMU program this fall.
His father, Bill, is a teacher at Gaithersburg High School in Maryland and played baseball at Prince George’s Community College in Largo, Maryland. His mother, Sue, is an insurance agent while his grandfather played football at Ohio Wesleyan.
On that Dominican trip, Herring recalls the chance to go cliff diving and visit a cigar factory.
“If you have the opportunity to go, you should go,” added Wilkinson, who is studying sociology. “It was really an amazing experience. We were on vacation but it was important baseball trip at the same time.”
“I enjoyed that trip a lot,” Herring, a psychology major, notes. “If you are able to make a trip, you should do it.”
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.