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Jason McMahon – MVP Feature Story

Jason McMahon – MVP Feature Story

McMahon Re-Connects With Baseball Roots
With a career in the flyfishing industry, Northern Virginia product aids MVP International sports tours
By David Driver, MVP Communications

Jason McMahon was born in Okinawa, Japan to military parents and has traveled throughout North America as a Flying Fishing Technical Advisor for The Orvis Company.

But he also played and coached baseball in Northern Virginia so it certainly makes sense that he would be involved in MVP International, a leader in sports travel and international tours for youth in various sports.

McMahon grew up in Vienna, Virginia, and for George C. Marshall High School baseball and football for Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, the founder of MVP International and the long-time baseball coach at James Madison High.

“In 2006 I started coaching at McLean High and I was there until 2013,” recalls McMahon, who was a redshirt for one season with George Mason University baseball. “So I coached against Pudge; I was able to reconnect there. Things slowed down for me; I was a stay-at-home dad and coaching high school baseball. The time I was off from baseball I was working in the flyfishing industry with Orvis. I did a lot of retail and guiding and stuff like that.

“I was interested in getting back in the workforce with something that was fun. How can I help? How can I get involved? So I began with MVP in 2019, right at the end of the sales cycle in the summer,” he adds. “About a week later I went to Puerto Rico with a bunch of graduating high school seniors. My first trip was touring Puerto Rico and we played some baseball games there and took a five-night cruise. It was awesome.”

McMahon, for the past few years, has been providing support to customers as needed to make their travel arrangements as stress free as possible.

“I just want to have a presence with MVP International and be able to handle anything,” he notes. “It takes the right person and the right approach to customer service. You want to go above and beyond to provide the best support. That is the kind of direction we want to take the company.”

McMahon notes those on MVP International tours have different wants and needs.

“Some people come with clipboards with notes and questions and want to be informed,” he says. “Dealing with travel like that is fun. You are allowed to be a calming voice and give them the assurances that it is going to be a great trip and let them sit back and relax and enjoy the experience. There is a lot of prep work that has to be done.”

Traveling is nothing new for McMahon.

Once his family moved from Japan to Northern Virginia, he enjoyed picnics on the Potomac River and was introduced to fishing as one of his uncles was an avid participant. Our family would always go to the Potomac River and fish. I would say that my dad had a major influence on my fishing.”

“My dad so I had an interest in it so he bought me a rod,” McMahon recalls.

He found time to fish while also playing baseball at Marshall High in Falls Church, Virginia.

After college, he and his future wife headed to Roanoke, Virginia and he began working for The Orvis Company.

They moved to Ocean City, Maryland for the summer in 2003 and married in the fall. McMahon began working at Pintail Point Outfitters in Cambridge, Maryland, where he taught fly fishing and worked in retail sales.

The couple moved to Virginia a few months later and he continued working in retail with the Orvis Company stores Tysons Corner and Arlington.

Along the way, he has made fishing trips to such locales as Yellowstone National Park, Hawaii, Oregon, Idaho, upstate New York, and Arizona.

His wife is a graduate of George Mason University, has a BS in math and masters in Educational Assessment and is the vice president of an educational company.  They live in Vienna and their two children are now going to the same schools McMahon attended growing up.

Now he is taking his experiences to aid MVP International.

“I really want to be an advocate for the customer and give them the best experience you can. It is just not during the trip but before the trip and after that trip that is important,” he says.

 

Editor’s note: David Driver is the former sports editor of papers in Arlington and Harrisonburg in Virginia and Baltimore and Laurel in Maryland.

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