The Central Georgia Sports Report

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Underdog Macon RBI now on a big stage, far from home (with roster, schedule, awards)

By Michael A. Lough

The Sports Report

centralgasports@gmail.com

 

          When you’re used to the big stage, nerves can be managed a bit.

Schedule
(Revised)
Wednesday
8:30 a.m., Macon vs. Dominican Republic
4 p.m., Macon vs. Chicago White Sox
Friday
Pool play
Quarterfinals
9 a.m., 10 a.m.
Semifinals
3:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m.
Championship
Friday, 9:30 a.m.

          Clearly, the Macon/Braves RBI 15-under team has the baseball part down. Now, can the locals handle what playing good baseball brings?

          Like, the pressure of a World Series? Of playing opponents in programs that have been around for decades, not less than a decade, and have two or three or four times as much funding?

          Shoot, the first task was keeping calm for what is the first airplane flight for many. Like Jayden Reese.

          “It’s my first time flying,” said Reese, who goes to Howard. “My grandma, she likes flying, she likes traveling. She told me to chew some gum, so when your ears pop, it doesn’t hurt that bad.”

          There may be some nerves when the team arrives at the host site, the Jackie Robinson Training Complex in Vero Beach, Fla., about two and half hours north of Miami and nearly two hours southeast of Orlando.

          It is, after all, Dodgertown, spring training home until 2008 for the Los Angeles Dodgers, having since undergone a major change.

          If Macon’s Braves can reach the championship, they’ll play in Holman Stadium, the sterling 6,500-seat centerpiece of a massive complex handling baseball, softball, soccer, and includes several batting cages and bullpens as well as multipurpose rooms and fields.

Donate to the Macon RBI program here

          “We have been nervous,” utility player Bryce Talley said. “But we always continue to fight in games.”

          The nine-year-old program – launched with the help of the Cal Ripken Foundation - is joining much older groups at the eight-team Nike RBI World Series that starts Monday.

Visit here to see “good luck” videos from John Smoltz, Brian Jordan, Ryan Klesko, and Bud Dupree

          Macon’s opener is at 4 p.m. on Tuesday against the Dodgers, followed at 8:30 a.m. Wednesday against the Dominican Republic and 4 p.m. against the Chicago White Sox.

          The quarterfinals for the 15-under junior division start Friday morning.

          The World Series, including the senior 18-under division, takes place at the Jackie Robinson Training Complex, in the shadows of the Vero Beach Regional Airport.

          Teams from New Orleans, Durham, Cleveland, and New Jersey are also in the junior field.

Macon RBI roster
Manager: Brandon Harris - Team Manager
Assistant manager: Shawn Livsey
Coach: Nick Wiggins
Coach: Rodney Mangham
Team:
Westen Griffin
Kyle Howard
Caden Abrams
Teyton Braswell
Kevin Durr
Chris Frazier
mir Harris
Jake Hendley
Jacob Krivanek
Kaelix Marcus
Justice Morrison
Peyton Nauss
Jayden Reese
Jeremiah Reiss
Bryce Talley
Chadburne Woolcock

          The team gathered Saturday at Vernon Sinclair Field, the turf and lighted facility behind Hartley Elementary on Anthony Road and centerpiece of the Tom Fontaine Complex to get the Southeast Region banner, and hand out awards for the season.

          It’ll be a different life for a few days for the college of mid-teens from Macon, Warner Robins, and Atlanta, reaching a level they didn’t necessarily expect when the season started.

          “We didn’t expect this,” Talley said. “When the Atlanta kids came down, they made us play harder.”

          There are no geographical boundaries the MLB RBI program. Macon director of baseball operations Michael Rodgers note that players have come from Milledgeville, Eatonton, Jones County, Monroe County, Houston County, as well as Henry County. This team has three players from Atlanta and three from Houston County.

          “The competition is a lot more hectic in Atlanta, and kid feel as though they might not get playing time,” Rodgers said. “So those who live south of Atlanta may come down here.”

          As impressive as Macon’s play has been to win the Southeast Regional in Jacksonville, Fla. to make the World Series, the seamlessness of adding some out-of-towners bolstered things.

          “At the beginning of the season, our chemistry really wasn’t all there,” Reese said. “As the season (went) on, we got to the big tournaments, and our chemistry got better and better.

          “We got the team together, and it made us better as a whole.”

          The chemistry led to confidence, somewhat culminating in a 9-0 win over Atlanta Metro in the regional tournament.

          “After the Atlanta Metro game … everybody thought that was a big, bad team,” Reese said. “Nobody thought we could beat them, and we ended up beating them 9-0.”

Team Awards
18-under
Most Valuable Player: Jaidyn Pennington
Most Improved: Joseph Rodgers
Golden Arm Pitching Award: Daniel Young
Slugger Batting Award: Steve Robinson Terrell Cordy
Golden Glove Award: Matthew Blount
16-under
Most Valuable Player: Amir Harris
Rookie of the Year: Bryce Talley
Golden Arm Pitching Award: Blaze Griffin
Slugger Batting Award: Amir Harris
Golden Glove Award: Ellijah Rozier
Most Improved: Jayden Reese
Minor League
Most Valuable Player: Westin Griffin
Golden Glove Award: Johnnie Temple and Isaiah Quainton
Golden Arm Pitching Award: Jayce Veal Golden
Rookie of the Year: Charles Collier
Most Improved: Tyus Harrison
Slugger Batting Champion: Ty’Shawn Murray

          Then Macon came back during the championship game, lost the lead in the seventh, and won it with a walk-off in the bottom of the eighth inning on a passed ball to win 10-9.

          Macon RBI founder Jeff Battcher and Rodgers noted that nearly 20 players have progressed through the program on to college, a bigger priority than properly hitting a relay man or fielding grounders.

          Charles Jackson is a Central grad who started out at Division II Claflin and finished at Division I Grambling. Rodgers said about 10 Macon RBI alums will be on a college roster in 2025, including Connor Polk, who played at Morrow and will attend Columbus State.

          Rodgers said the program continues to expand, and now fields teams on three levels. No doubt reaching the World Series will only add to fuller rosters in 2025.

          Success won’t change the mission, which is reviving baseball in inner cities, thus the RBI title.

          “The difference between our program and other programs – I won’t call their names – the millions of training programs is they expect you to come in and play at that level,” said Rodgers, in his sixth season as director of operations. “If you can’t do it, they just kind of jettison you.

          “We don’t have that expectation. We have the expectation of potential.”

Macon RBI founder Jeff Battcher (second from left) and Macon-Bibb mayor Lester Miller (far right) hold up the Southeast Region championship banner to put posted at the team's main field, Vernon Sinclair Field behind Hartley Elementary on Anthony Road. Players in the picture, from left to right: Intern Christian Hill, Jake Hendley, Kaelix Marcus, Westen Griffin, Kyle Howard, Bryce Talley, and Jayden Reese.

Photo: Michael A. Lough/Central Georgia Sports Report