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MVP Alum Murphy Gains Honor

MVP Alum Murphy Gains Honor

Former James Madison High pitcher will start in the Appalachian League All-Star game on Tuesday
By David Driver, MVP Communications

WASHINGTON – Ryan Murphy, a former travel baseball player with MVP, pitched in the Valley Baseball League in Virginia for Front Royal last year.

The right-hander from James Madison High in Vienna, Virginia considered a return to the VBL – but then had a change of heart after talking to JMU teammate Justin Showalter.

Showalter had played in the prospect Appalachian League in 2021 and highly suggested Murphy go there. “He was one of my biggest advocates,” Murphy said of Showalter.

That is what happened and the move paid off for Murphy, who was recently chosen to start on the mound for the West Division in the Appy League All-Star game in Burlington, North Carolina. Murphy has been pitching for Kingsport in Tennessee.

“I found out about two days ago, on Tuesday. My mom actually texted me first. She actually saw it on Twitter,” Murphy said Thursday of getting the nod to start the game.

In games through Wednesday, he was 2-1 with an ERA of 1.85 and led the league in WHIP at 0.95 and was second in ERA and batting against, at .204. He throws a fastball, slider, curve, and change.

 

Ryan Murphy, who played travel baseball with MVP in 2019, is a graduate of James Madison High in Vienna, Virginia.
Now at James Madison University, he was picked to start the All-Star game for the West on July 26 in the Appalachian League
All-Star game in Burlington, North Carolina.

 

“In the winter, I learned the slider and that has made a huge difference,” said Murphy. “Ever since I learned that, I have thrown so much better. Having two different breaking balls against lefties has made a huge difference when you are ahead in the count. I throw it mostly to righties, sometimes to lefties.”

He worked with Jimmy Jackson, the associate head coach/pitching, for JMU on the new pitch.

“It just gave him a pitch he could use more than the curve and change,” Jackson said. “We first called it a cutter but little by little it turned into a slider; he always had a pretty good curveball.”

Murphy stays at a hotel in Kingsport with a teammate.

“It has been awesome; it is about 10 minutes away from the field,” Murphy said. “They put us in a hotel and it is really nice. They give us meal money every day, and give us meals after the game and also pre-game meals. It is a great league, I think.”

The stadium in Kingsport pays homage to some of the former minor league players who went from there to the Major Leagues. That includes Jacob deGrom, an All-Star pitcher with the New York Mets.

Murphy’s coach in Kingsport is Mike Guinn, the veteran baseball coach at Pigeon Forge High in Tennessee. Jackson coached of one Guinn’s sons, Adam, in college at Siena.

Murphy played travel baseball in the fall of 2019 for Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, the Founder & Visionary for MVP International and the long-time coach at Madison High.

He has been teammates at Madison High and JMU with Kyle Novak, who led the CAA in RBI this past season and has gone on several MVP International trips. The Novak family is currently on the trip to central Europe with MVP International.

After graduating from Madison High in 2020, Murphy headed south the Harrisonburg, Virginia for his freshman season at JMU. “I really wasn’t highly recruited,” noted Murphy, a second-team all-district player in 2019 at Madison High.

This past May he was the co-pitcher of the week in the Colonial Athletic Association. Murphy was 4-2 with an ERA of 3.86 in 14 games with 11 starts for the Dukes this past season.

He is the son of William and Anne and has two brothers, Brendan and Connor.

JMU will move to the Sun Belt Conference for the 2023 season.

“I am really excited for it,” Murphy said. “It is going to be a big jump for baseball. But I think it will make us a lot better. Give us two or three years, and we will be right there.”

Two of Murphy’s teammates from this season were drafted by Major League teams earlier this month: center fielder Chase DeLauter went in the first round to Cleveland and infielder Nick Zona went in the 20th and last round to Seattle.

“It was so awesome, it was so awesome,” Murphy said. “It gives everybody at JMU hope, realizing with hard work it is possible.”

Jeff Zona, the father of Nick, is a long-time scout for the Washington Nationals. “That probably helped a little bit,” Murphy said. “I am happy for him.”

A stint in the Appy League will aid the career of Murphy, who may find himself a possible draft pick one day if he keeps improving at JMU.

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 month.

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