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Novak Loved His MVP Trips

Novak Loved His MVP Trips

Slugger for James Madison University went to Germany, Italy, Puerto Rico and Dominican Republic
By David Driver

College Park, Maryland – Kyle Novak, a solid hitter for four years at James Madison University, was able to develop as a baseball player through strong high school and American Legion programs in Northern Virginia.

JMU first baseman Kyle Novak made several trips with MVP International, including ones to Germany, Italy and Puerto Rico

 

But the first baseman for the Dukes got a bonus that he also recommends to others – a chance to represent the United States overseas.

While in high school, Novak had the chance to suit up for MVP International for one trip each to Germany and Italy, two excursions to Puerto Rico and one to the Dominican Republic.

“I tell everyone of my friends, those trips were the most fun trips I have had in my life,” said Novak, after a recent JMU game at nationally-ranked Maryland. “It is something want I want to do when I enter the real world – I want to travel the world.”

Those four trips were life-changing in a way, seeing different cultures and people,” he added. “Being out there and playing baseball was a plus. You get to talk to the other players after the game. You try to learn the language a little bit before you go – those trips were so much fun.”

Novak even passed up a chance to play in an American Legion tournament one summer in order to go with MVP to Puerto Rico.

He made sure to tell his American Legion coach early in the season that team advanced Novak would have to miss out on the MVP trip.

“It was definitely worth it to go to Puerto Rico,” he said. “Nothing could beat it.”

He began taking lessons when he was 10 under MVP Visionary & Founder Mark ‘Pudge’ Gjormand, who was recently inducted into the National High School Baseball Coaches Association Hall of Fame.

And eventually, Novak, whose family moved to Oakton, Virginia, played for Gjormand at James Madison High in nearby Vienna. Novak’s father, Ryan, has become good friends with Gjormand.

“I grew up watching Madison High baseball games since I was 12 years old,” Kyle Novak said of Gjormand. “He is like my second dad; he has been helping me out with baseball for 12-plus years. I went to Madison High and that was the best decision I ever made.”

One of the Madison High products that Novak remembers watching as a young boy was Andy McGuire, who was drafted out of high school by the Rockies in 2013 but opted to play at the University of Texas.

McGuire signed with the Blue Jays five later after going in the 28th round of the draft. He reached the Single-A level with Toronto and played independent ball in 2021 with Kane County in Illinois.

“When he was a sophomore, I was probably 13. When you are that young, every guy in high school looks like they are men,” Novak said.

That time with MVP and Madison, the alma mater of four Major Leaguers, helped Novak develop into a solid Division I hitter.

In April of this season, Novak reached base for the 35th game in a row to set a JMU record. The Dukes have sent 12 players to the Major Leagues, including outfielder Billy Sample, who played in 826 games from 1978-86. That is the most of any JMU player to reach The Show.

Novak hit .303 as a freshman in 2019, .317 as a sophomore, and .315 last year as a junior at the Harrisonburg school.

This season he batted .292 and had a team-high 49 RBI while starting all 53 games for the Dukes.

“He is a professional hitter,” said Marlin Ikenberry, the JMU head coach. “He has been a workhorse all year and has been consistent for us all year.”

Novak is one of several Madison High graduates who has played for Ikenberry during his coaching stints at VMI and JMU.

Another Madison High grad with JMU this year was Ryan Murphy, a sophomore pitcher.

Kyle Hayes, another Madison High alum, played in college at JMU and is now a catcher in the Kansas City minor league system.

Infielder James Triantos was drafted in the second round by the Cubs last year out of Madison High and is now at Single-A Myrtle Beach.

“I think he coaches his guys hard and prepares them,” Ikenberry said of Gjormand. “Baseball is a hard game anyway but he prepares them to execute and compete. That is what you want out of a high school player coming to college.”

Those family trips overseas were so beneficial for Novak that his mother, Tara, a former college athlete, eventually began working for MVP International and is now an Operations & Flight Manager.

Gjormand recalls Novak hitting a long homer during a trip to the Dominican Republic in 2018, just before the slugger entered JMU. The veteran coach says Novak started as a freshman at Madison and was a consistent force on the infield.

Novak has one more year of eligibility left for college; he plans to play this summer in a wooden-bat league for a team in Vermont in the New England Collegiate League. Among the Major Leaguers to come out of the NECL is Stephen Strasburg, the MVP of the 2019 World Series with the Nationals.

Novak has no regrets about those trips with MVP.

“I would say go on those trips,” he said. “If you have a chance to go, go for it.”

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

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