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Tournaments  | Story | 10/3/2015

No sleeping on the Hitters

Photo: Perfect Game

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa – The Rawlings Hitters are no strangers to the annual WWBA Kernels Foundation Championship, participating in the qualifying event every year since it's inception in 2003. They've taken home the championship trophy twice, most recently in 2007, and finished third in both 2012 and 2013.

Last year the younger of the two teams – Rawlings Hitters National Baseball Club 2016's – that Hitters founder R.J. Fergus brought to Cedar Rapids, Iowa won their pool, arguably the toughest in the entire field, but lost in the quarterfinals at the hands of the St. Louis Gamers. In fact, that marked the second time in as many years that the Hitters' championship hopes ended at the hands of the Gamers.

On Saturday on a cool yet brilliantly sunny day in Fairfax, Iowa, the Rawlings Hitters Navy team had a chance at redemption. They entered their 2:00 p.m. contest against the the St. Louis Gamers 17u Blue with a win already under their belt, taking their first contest of the day, 4-1, over the Minnesta Mash Black 18u at Duane Banks Field on the University of Iowa campus.

They did indeed take the second game as well, 7-2, finishing the day at 2-0 with one more pool game to play on Sunday morning. That game will be played against Cangelosi Baseball White 2016, who are also 2-0, a contest that will determine the pool winner and which teams advances to the playoffs for a chance at a paid invitation to Jupiter, Fla. for the WWBA World Championship.

This Navy team is nearly identical to last year's quarterfinal club, especially at the top of the lineup. PG All-American shortstop Gavin Lux continues to provide as steady of a glove as you can find up the middle while also serving as the team's leadoff hitter. Justin Lavey, who batted second last year, is in the three hole this year. And Rortvedt, yet another 2015 PG All-American, is now batting cleanup after batting third a year ago.

It's great,” Rortvedt said prior to the Hitters second game on Saturday of playing on this Hitters squad. “I've known these (guys) for a while. Gavin (Lux) and Justin (Lavey), we've been playing (together) for a long time. And Jarred Kelenic is going to be really good as he's coming up. It's a lot of fun to play with a lot of your best friends.”

Rortvedt, who is currently ranked 21st in the nation and has committed to play for Arkansas, did his job in the cleanup role on Saturday. In their first game on Saturday he hit a double to lead off the fifth inning which began a three-run inning. He added another double in game two, this one driving the first run of yet another three-run inning in the opening frame.

Lux and Lavey also did their jobs, as each went 2-for-4 in that second game. Lux scored the first run on Rortvedt's double after leading off the game with an infield single and Lavey capped the scoring with a solo home run in the seventh. Kelenic enjoyed a 2-for-3 performance in the first game, as the four batters are collectively 9-for-23 (.391) through the first two games.

Kelenic and the other 2018 on the Navy team, Alex Binelas, yet another Louisville recruit, are proof that the organization from top to bottom, and the corresponding talent in the state of Wisconsin, is strong well past this year's class. Kelenic is currently ranked 10th in the class of 2018 and has quickly embraced a larger role with a team made up almost entirely of high school seniors and a handful of juniors.

Justin Lavey is a really good leader. Obviously Gavin and Ben, all of the kids look up to them,” Fergus said of his impact performers. “But all summer long Kelenic, the 2018, has been the hitter. He had a big knock today, he's been light's out. He can really, really hit, in certain situations better than others, but he's been the one that took the zero off the board and put a one or a two up.”

The pitchers did their job as well. In the Hitters first game of the day Ryan Hoerter, Ben Dragani, Troy Hickey and Jacob Lindemann combined to one-hit the Minnesota Mash. In the afternoon contest, recent Oregon State commit Nathan Burns, a rising 2017, struck out 12 in 5 2/3 innings.

While Lux, Lavey and Rortvedt are the seasoned veterans on the team and the three players the rest of the squad turn to for leadership, the talent does end with that trio. Of the 17 players listed on the roster, 13 have commitments to Division I universities. This group of players has been playing together now for several years, and the talent they individually, and collectively possessed at a young age was evident.

We knew when these kids were incoming freshmen that we had a really high level class,” Fergus said of his now upperclass squad. “They did really well at the youth levels. I talked with a few of the college guys around and I sat down with the parents and said “we're going to put these guys on the same U17 team travel schedule, playing U17 baseball, they're going to take their lumps but they're going to learn to play.” They really learned how to compete at 15-years old and what it takes to win.”

The more this team has played together they more they have won. Outside of individual showcase events, such as the National Showcase and the Area Code Games, this squad spent the majority of the summer with one another.

This summer we had one of our most successful summers,” Fergus added. “When we were full strength, with everyone together, we went 29-2. They come in and work everyday. It's nice to have a bunch of committed guys chasing either pro money or to be prepared when they get to college, to continue our legacy. They don't want to go there and not play. They've chosen big schools and if they get there and they're not ready they're going to sit and watch.”

You have an Arizona State at short, a Louisville at second, a Louisville at first, Arkansas behind the plate, Illinois, Louisville and Louisville or Jacksonville in the outfield. And an Oregon State guy on the mound,” Fergus said of his lineup on Saturday afternoon. “Since Gary Arndt played at Missouri we've had a shortstop at the major college level for 15 or 16 years.”

PG All-American Gavin Lux bats leadoff for the Rawlings Hitters Navy

Rortvedt and Lux (who is ranked 31st in the nation) lead a promising class of players from the state of Wisconsin. There are currently 17 players from the state ranked among Perfect Game's 2016 high school player rankings. Thirteen of those players are in Cedar Rapids taking part of the Kernels Championship, and five of them play on this Hitters Navy ballclub.

Both Rortvedt and Lux helped their stock quite a bit over the course of the summer, which began at the National Showcase in Fort Myers and continued with stops in Cary, N.C. for the Tournament of Stars, Joplin, Mo. to claim the Premier Baseball Senior National Championship, Long Beach, Calif. for the Area Codes Games and finally Petco Park in San Diego for the 2015 Perfect Game All-American Classic.

Rortvedt was quick to point out how all of those experiences helped him grow, playing with and against the best players in the nation.

Just having confidence,” Rortvedt said of what allowed him to succeed the most during his busy summer. “First at the National, seeing how I could play, knowing that I could play (with the best players in the nation) and letting my game speak for itself.

It was a lot of fun, it was a blessing. I was just happy to be invited to all of those events, so I was just trying to make the most of it.”

So much of their success can be linked to the growth of baseball in the state of Wisconsin, something that Fergus has played a large part in.

Last year Fergus and the Hitters opened a state-of-the-art indoor training facility that is over 40,000 square feet full of batting cages, workout equipment and a full-size infield that allows his players to play live games and practice game situations to better prepare themselves when they travel south to compete during the summer months.

When I started doing this (travel baseball) it was us and Andy Stack with the Waukesha Blazers (now known as the Reds Midwest Scout Team) at the time and that was it,” Fergus said of the growth of baseball in the state. “(We) were the only two that were crazy enough to take these kids out for a whole summer. Now, just in a 20 minute drive (in Southeastern Wisconsin) there's probably five or six teams. And then you have the GRB (Greg Reinhard Baseball) Rays in Madison and the Stiks (Academy) in Oconomowoc, and the kids are training more year round.

With all of the talent that's coming up it's also helping the pro coverage that we get in Wisconsin. Whether it's our program or whether it's other programs, people are starting to realize that Wisconsin isn't just a football state. We love baseball.”

A year ago Lux spoke to Perfect Game about the number of rising stars emerging from the state of Wisconsin, over six months before he and his teammate, Ben Rortvedt, were selected to participate in the Perfect Game All-American Classic, and how they were trying to change the perception of players that lived in colder climates.

I think it's programs like the Hitters, and then there's a couple of other pretty good programs in Wisconsin, and I think that contributes to it a lot,” Lux said at last year's Kernels Championship. “We're kind of sick and tired taking losses from teams from farther down (south). We're starting to work harder and moving toward the right direction.”

A year later, his Hitters and PG All-American teammate still knows that playing with a chip on their shoulders help them compete with the best in the nation.

Everyone sleeps on us,” Rortvedt added on Saturday. “Now that we can travel to those events and have been compared to those players, we know we can play with them. It's just knowing that we're not as bad as everyone thinks. Just the competition we play (changes that). When you go down there you want to prove yourself for sure.”

Not surprsingly, Fergus is quick to agree with his two young rising stars.

I think because of the facility that we were lucky enough to build we have a real chance of competing with anyone in the country moving down the line because we're no different than anyone. (When inside) the pitcher, the catcher and the infielders are no different than being out here. Our baserunning has gotten better and our infield has really gotten better.”

No one is sleeping on the Hitters in Northeast Iowa at the Kernels Foundation Championship, and that includes the “junior” team that also came to play, the Rawlings Hitters White. The White team, made up predominantly with 2017 position prospects and 2016 pitchers still looking for a college commitment, also opened the tournament at 2-0 with hopes of advancing to the playoffs on Sunday.

It would mean a lot for our program,” Rortvedt said of the possibility of winning the Kernels championship and a paid invitation to the WWBA World Championship in late October. “Just winning this would be huge for us. It would be a huge honor. Having a lot of our younger guys go down there (to Florida) and have that experience would be fantastic for them.”

 


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