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MVP International Alums Reunite

MVP International Alums Reunite

Small-college baseball players preparing for 2023
By David Driver, MVP Communications

 

WASHINGTON – It is not very often that a junior college baseball player gets to face Division I pitching.

And it’s not every day that former MVP International alums – who share a bond with an industry leader in overseas sports trips – get the chance to reunite as foes at the college level.

But that was the case this month for Chris Polymeropoulos, a catcher for the junior college program at Richard Bland in South Prince George, Virginia.
The Statesmen played two seven-inning games on Oct. 15 at Division I William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia.

“That was the first Division I team we played,” said Polymeropoulos, who is preparing for his second spring season at Richard Bland.

That allowed Polymeropoulos to connect with William & Mary pitcher Matt Howat, his former teammate, and batterymate at James Madison High in Vienna, Virginia.

“He didn’t throw in the games but I caught up with afterward. It was good to see him,” said the catcher/designated hitter. “Matt and I played pretty much my freshman to junior year together. I caught him my sophomore and junior year on varsity and we know each other well.”

Polymeropoulos had a solid day on offense against William & Mary, a member of the Colonial Athletic Association.

 

A pair of MVP International and James Madison High alums met earlier this month
in a scrimmage when Richard Bland played two baseball games at Division I William & Mary. Matt Howat (left)
is a pitcher for the Division I Tribe in Williamsburg, Va., while Chris Polymeropoulos (right) is a catcher
for Richard Bland, a junior college in Petersburg, Va.

 

“I had a great day at the plate,” he said. “In my first two at-bats, I had two singles and then a walk, a double down the right field line, and a groundout. So I had a pretty good day. As an offense, we put up 16 runs against them. But the outcomes of the games weren’t so good as we gave up 20-plus runs I think in both games. It was rough at the end of the day but I think it was good for our guys to see for our pitchers if you hang a breaking ball with two strikes at this level it might get fouled off. But when you are playing a Division I team that ball is driven into the gap for a double. I think it was good for the guys to learn and know where we need to get better in going forward.”

Other alums of MVP International trips now on the baseball rosters of non-Division I schools include Josh Gjormand and Carter Whitman of Lynchburg; Zach Perkins of Washington & Lee; Michael Vedder of Bridgewater; Xavier Herring of Mary Washington; Danny Leo of Francis Marion; Bobby Dingell of DeSales in Pennsylvania; and Jake Stiehl with Washington & Jefferson, also in The Keystone State.

Jason Dwyer of Eastern Mennonite University went with MVP on a baseball trip to Charleston, South Carolina. The Fairfax High graduate was a freshman outfielder for the EMU Royals in 2022.

Gjormand is the son of Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, the Founder & Visionary of MVP International and the long-time coach at Madison High.

Lynchburg, Washington & Lee, Bridgewater and EMU are all members of the Virginia-based Old Dominion Athletic Conference. Mary Washington is also in Virginia.

Dingell made his fifth trip with MVP International this past summer – to central Europe.

In the past, Dingell has been to Spain, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands and Belgium, as well as a trip with MVP to Charleston.

“Off the bat, Rome was probably the greatest trip,” Dingell said. “For all of the historic stuff like the Pantheon and the Colosseum and stuff like that. I loved Rome; that was the coolest place ever. There was one island with five cities (in Italy). That was probably the coolest place I have been to in my life. It was just isolated; people lived on that island off of the Mediterranean Sea. I can never imagine there were places out there like that.”

Whitman has also made five trips.

“Just getting to see different cultures and trying different foods and meet other teams, is a great experience,” Whitman said this summer.

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 and on his website. So his book “Hoop Dreams In Europe: Americans Basketball Players Building Careers Overseas.”

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