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Perkins Sees The World Through Baseball

Perkins Sees The World Through Baseball

Washington & Lee University standout went with MVP International to Germany, Dominican Republic, and Puerto Rico
By David Driver

WASHINGTON – Zach Perkins hadn’t been outside of the United States before he went to Germany with MVP International in 2017.

“It was an incredible experience, my first time overseas,” says Perkins, who was an all-Old Dominion Athletic Conference player last year for Washington and Lee University in Virginia. “I didn’t know what to expect. Some of the best players we saw in Germany were from the Caribbean. We played junior teams that were around our age. We played the Stuttgart Reds; they had a beautiful field there.”

But that was just the beginning of his baseball sojourns – the graduate of James Madison High also went with MVP International to the Dominican Republic in 2018 and then the following year on a trip that included stops in Puerto Rico, Curacao, and Aruba.

The trip to the baseball-crazy Dominican had a Major League connection for the American team.

“We played against one kid who was Bartolo Colon’s nephew,” noted Perkins of the former pitcher who won 247 games in the majors. “We also faced a kid who was throwing 94 miles per hour. That was the hardest I had seen up to that point. It was a really cool experience.”

The last of the two trips made an impact on Perkins.

“They really opened my eyes, but not from a baseball perspective but from a societal and life perspective,” said Perkins, a business administration major in college. “It just makes you take stock and not take anything for granted. They are so passionate about baseball in the Dominican.”

Perkins knew about Max Kepler, a German who broke in with the Minnesota Twins in 2015, before the MVP trip to Europe.

 

Zach Perkins has hit better than .300 the past two seasons for Washington and Lee University in Virginia.
He went on three overseas trips with MVP International for baseball.

 

Some of the other members of the MVP team to Germany included Josh Gjormand, who hit .347 this past season for Lynchburg; Longwood’s Dylan Wilkinson; and Matt Howatt, a lefty pitcher who had an ERA of 3.32 for Division I William and Mary this past season. The reliever led the Tribe in appearances in both 2019 and 2020. Another player on the trip to the Dominican was Kyle Novak, another Madison High alum who led the Colonial Athletic Association in RBI this past season as an infielder for James Madison University.

Perkins is one of several alums from the James Madison High program of Northern Virginia now playing at the college level.

“Growing up in Vienna, every kid wants to play at Madison,” he notes.

Perkins was in Little League in Vienna at the same time as James Triantos, an infielder who helped Madison win the 2021 state title and is now at Single-A in the Cubs’ system.

“He was the best player back then. It is not surprising what he is doing now,” Perkins says of Triantos, a high pick in the second round by the Cubs last year out of Madison.

Perkins played at Madison High for Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, the Founder and Visionary for MVP International.

Those MVP trips helped Perkins prepare for a college career at Division III Washington & Lee, which is part of the powerful ODAC. Shenandoah and Lynchburg of the ODAC both advanced to the Division III national field this year while Shenandoah has made two trips to the Division III College World Series. Hampden-Sydney, also in the ODAC, qualified for the World Series in 2005.

Perkins hit .348 last year for the Generals and this past season batted .339 as a junior outfielder.

He has an internship this summer with a consulting firm in Northern Virginia and also hopes to play some in the Northern Virginia Collegiate League as time allows.

And he looks back fondly on those MVP International trips.

“We are more fortunate to have some things in the U.S. Those experiences really opened my eyes and made me more thankful and grateful,” Perkins notes.

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. His book “From Tidewater To The Shenandoah; Snapshots of Virginia’s Rich Baseball Legacy,” written along with Lacy Lusk, will be published this summer. Driver can be reached at @DaytonVaDriver and www.daytondavid.com

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