fbpx
Whitman On Another Trip With MVP International

Whitman On Another Trip With MVP International

The tour in Central Europe has a lot of ties to ODAC schools
By David Driver, MVP Communications

WASHINGTON – The Old Dominion Athletic Conference (ODAC), made up of 10 schools in Virginia and one in North Carolina for baseball, is considered by many to be one of the top Division III circuits in the country and certainly on the East Coast.

Member schools Lynchburg and Shenandoah advanced to the Division III national playoffs this past season while Shenandoah made it to the College World Series in 2009 and 2010.

Randolph-Macon, another ODAC school, is perennially one of the top programs in the league and last advanced to the Division III College World Series in 2018.

Lynchburg has made 11 trips to the national tournament while Bridgewater has made 10.

MVP International – a leader in youth sports travel overseas – has a strong ODAC flavor on its current 10-day trip to Austria, Germany and the Czech Republic.

Carter Whitman and Josh Gjormand were members of Lynchburg this past season; Mitchell Vedder was a freshman pitcher at Bridgewater; and Trevor Gjormand, a rising senior at James Madison High in Virginia, plans to play at ODAC school Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, Virginia after graduating from high school in 2023.

A catcher, Whitman will be making his fifth trip with MVP International. He was teammates with Vedder in high school.

“Just getting to see difference cultures and trying different foods and meet other teams, is a great experience,” Whitman said just before the three teams left last week.

MVP sent three teams to Europe – 12U, 16U and 21U. Whitman, with the oldest team, played travel baseball with MVP in Northern Virginia and has been to Spain, Germany, Italy and Puerto Rico on MVP International trips.

He was joined on the trip this summer by his parents, Heather and Chris, and sister, Hadley.

His sister is a rising junior at South Lakes High in Reston, Virginia and she plays field hockey there. His parents went to college at Juanita in Pennsylvania.

Carter Whitman was a second-team all-district player in baseball as a senior at South Lakes and he graduated from the school with honors.

While on MVP trips, Whitman has been able to play all over the diamond, from catcher to outfield to infield to even some time as a pitcher.

He has seen chapels in Spain, castles in Germany and Rome and the Leaning Tower of Pisa while in Italy.

“It is a lot of fun,” said Whitman. “It is very competitive baseball and it is very cool to be a part of it. It is a blast.”

Whitman aspires to be a physical therapist one day.

Among the coaches on the current tour to Europe include Justin Counts, an assistant at Madison High; Kevin Ford, the head coach at Chantilly in Virginia; Dave Pleasants, a long-time coach in Northern Virginia; and Brian Mitchell, the successful coach of Hanahan High in South Carolina.

Whitman and Josh Gjormand were part of a Lynchburg team that was 36-12 overall this past season.

The Hornets beat EMU twice and Bridgewater once in the ODAC tourney before falling to Roanoke in the title game. Lynchburg then lost in the regional tournament that it hosted in central Virginia.

“Baseball-wise, it is an incredible experience,” Gjormand says of the overseas trips. “It is a different time of game over there, it is a different speed of the game, it is a different level of playing depending on where you are play. Sometimes I would be 16 years old going to Austria or Hungary and playing against 25 or 30-year old men. Once you get that, our 16-year-old skill level may be matched up with their 25-year-old skill level and we can compete since that is their high-level club teams.”

Josh and Trevor Gjormand are the sons of MVP International Founder & Visionary Mark “Pudge” Gjormand, who is leading the trip to Europe again this month. He has won three state titles as the head coach at James Madison High in Vienna, Virginia, where both of his sons have played for him.

The current trip ends Saturday, July 23.

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.

Recent Posts