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Life Lessons On MVP Baseball Trips

Life Lessons On MVP Baseball Trips

Central European tour this summer fostered “changed perspectives” for some players

VIENNA, Virginia – Veteran coach Mark “Pudge” Gjormand and Kyle Novak, an infielder with four years of college experience at JMU, have been on countless overseas baseball trips together.

Their families have known each other for years and Novak began taking lessons more than a decade ago under Gjormand, the Founder & Visionary for MVP International.

So it was poignant for Gjormand as the two shared a moment to themselves before a game in Slovakia earlier this summer.

“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.

 

Kyle Novak played in a wood bat league in Vermont this summer then joined the MVP team for its trip last month to central Europe.
Photo courtesy of JMU

 

The moment wasn’t lost on Gjormand, who also coached Novak at James Madison High here in Vienna. “For him to say that, man, he is growing up,” said Gjormand.

That was just one of the memories for the MVP International tour that lasted 10 days with stops in Austria, Slovakia, Germany and the Czech Republic.

It was the first overseas baseball trip for MVP – a leader in overseas sports travel for youth – since 2019. Gjormand took a team to Hawaii last year.

“The fact we hadn’t done it for a couple of years … it was taken away, not for one year but for two years,” said Gjormand, who has made at least 15 MVP trips. “In running a business, that is very hard. I am very proud of the fact we have been able to keep it going. The good news is if you have a great product people will want to be a part of it. It was great to get back out there and see families. The surveys are coming back and people had a wonderful time and 10s and 9s are flying everywhere on the survey.”

 

Josh Gjormand has gone on several trips with MVP International and plays at Division III Lynchburg.
Photo courtesy University of Lynchburg

 

Besides Novak, other college players who have been on several of the MVP journeys that made the trek to Europe were Mitchell Vedder of Bridgewater College and Josh Gjormand, the son of Pudge Gjormand, who hit .347 this past spring for Lynchburg. Both Bridgewater and Lynchburg are Division III members of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference.

“I had not been to Salzburg in Austria but I had been to Prague and I had been to Vienna,” first baseman Josh Gjormand said after playing in a Northern Virginia Collegiate League game for the Chili Dogs about 72 hours after arriving back from Europe.

“I had not been to the Eagle’s Nest,” he added of Hitler’s former Nazi compound in Germany. “I got to experience things I didn’t get to before.”

On the field, he had about 25 plate appearances and drew several walks. “When I did get my at-bats in the five games, I made the most of my opportunities,” he said.

The younger Gjormand was also able to be a leader after previous trips when he was one of the younger players.

He was able to connect this summer with first-time trip player Garrett Dougherty, a recent graduate of Wakefield High in Arlington, Virginia.

“It was one of those really cool experiences for me,” Josh Gjormand said of Dougherty, who hopes to play club baseball at Michigan State. “I kind of got to take him under my wing; we became pretty close over that trip. I got to see it first-hand – it definitely changed his perspective, not just baseball but his life going into college. He definitely grew up a lot during that trip.”

Vedder, a right-handed pitcher, just finished his freshman season at Bridgewater, near Harrisonburg.

“It was a little bit more competitive than years in the past,” Vedder said of the 2022 tour against club teams. “We still went 5-0 and had a great team.”

“I had two outings,” he added. “We got to play in Slovakia, and that was a really different experience – different food. I pitched in the final day in Prague on July 21. That was probably the best team we faced. It was a really great experience.”

He said he has now pitched in “seven or eight” different countries on MVP International trips. Among the sites he saw on this tour was the town square in Prague, salt mines in Austria, castles and ambassador residences.

“I had never been to Prague,” said Vedder, who was joined on the trip by his parents and sister. “It was really well run.”

Among other MVP staff that made the trip: Rich Stiehl, the Director of Operations and IT; Tara Novak, the Operations and Flight Manager; and Dana Dougherty, the Travel Logistics Manager.

Another one of the players was Jake Stiehl, a graduate of South Lakes High who is headed to play at Washington & Jefferson in Pennsylvania.

Among other coaches on the trip was Dave Pleasants, a long-time baseball coach in Fairfax County, Virginia. He played at JMU and was on the 1983 College World Series team – the first from Virginia to reach that event.

“I have so much respect for him,” coach Gjormand said of Pleasants, who made his first MVP trip. “He had an outstanding time.”

So did others on the tour. “It was just wonderful to get back overseas. It was probably the most comfortable I have felt being in Europe,” coach Gjormand said. “People are so wonderful, as it should be. You are respectful to them and they are respectful to you.”

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.

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