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One of country’s oldest baseball leagues starts season in Va.

The home bullpen at Jim Barnett Park as the Winchester Royals prepare for Opening Day of the Valley League. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)
Royals players, who have had only a couple days to practice with each other, prepare for Opening Day. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)
The team store at Jim Barnett Park features official Royals gear at a fraction of the price of professional clubs’ gear. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)
The Royals’ upcoming schedule features games every day against other members of the 11-team Valley League. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)
At the gates, the Opening Day special guest and first pitch thrower greets fans. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)
The sun sets over a Chamber of Commerce Opening Day in the Valley League. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)
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WINCHESTER, Va. 鈥 The mid-Atlantic region is blessed with multiple major and minor league baseball teams, and even independent league teams within an hour or two鈥檚 drive. But along the stretch between the Blue Ridge and Allegheny Mountains that cradles Interstate 81 as it darts southwest through the Shenandoah Valley, baseball is just starting for the summer, as it has every year for more than a century, in a league older than the American League.

Yes, really. The Valley Baseball League has undergone various transformations over the decades and teams in the area can be tracked back as far as the Staunton Baseball Club in 1866. But it first came into being as an organized league as the Valley Base-Ball League in 1897 with five charter members: Edinburg, Front Royal, Strasburg, Winchester and Woodstock. The original Washington Senators, who would relocate to Minneapolis and become the Twins in 1961, wouldn鈥檛 be founded for four more years.

The Valley League saw its most drastic renovation in 1993, when it became one of the dozen or so college wood bat leagues around America affiliated with Major League Baseball (there are more than 40 such leagues overall). If you track collegiate baseball in the area, you probably know about the Cal Ripken Collegiate Baseball League, featuring teams in D.C., Maryland and Northern Virginia. But the CRCBL was founded just in 2005 and doesn鈥檛 have nearly the history of the Valley League. For the past 25 years, the Valley League has been home to potential professional prospects looking to hone their skills and catch the eyes of scouts over the summer.

From a fan鈥檚 point of view, it鈥檚 unmistakably the same game, with many of the same comforts. Walkup music plays from the PA for each player, along with familiar songs for certain results on the field. Multiple cowbells celebrate good plays by the home side. A shaggy lion mascot roams the stands.

鈥淎 lot of people who aren鈥檛 aware of the team, once they come, they say this is a hidden gem,鈥 said Donna Turrill, general manager and housing coordinator for the Winchester Royals. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just a good, family outing, it鈥檚 inexpensive, concessions are inexpensive, and it鈥檚 just a good time.鈥

She鈥檚 not kidding on the concessions. For those who have grown wary of the sticker shock of major league or even minor league food prices, the sign looks like a misprint. Hot dogs run just $2, cheeseburgers $3.50. The Chick-fil-A sandwiches on sale are cheaper inside the gates at Jim Barnett Park than they are on Wisconsin Avenue in Northwest D.C.

Tickets are also just $5, $3 for seniors and just $2 for kids. With a home field that fits under 1,500 spectators, revenues are small relative to professional clubs.

The entire affair is run on a tight budget, thanks to some help from MLB and through the sponsorships sold along the outfield wall. But the Valley League has been nonprofit since 2011, relying on homestays for players. The Royals鈥 only full-time paid employees are their three coaches and head of concessions. Even Turrill is a volunteer.

New members of the community step up each year to help keep the team going, receiving nothing but a free season pass and gratitude in return. It鈥檚 the spirit that embodies everything that happens here.

鈥淏ut we do have families that come back year after year,鈥 Turrill said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been housing players for seven years myself.鈥

***

Lyndon Coleman, head coach of the Winchester Royals, fills out his Opening Day lineup. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)

Above the field at the far end of the press box, Royals head coach Lyndon Coleman fills out his lineup card in a cozy office, half dressed, the rattle of a window-unit air conditioner humming under his excitable voice. Coleman is a Valley League alum himself, playing in the summer of 2011 before his senior year of college. Now the head coach at Pasco-Hernando State College in New Port Richey, Florida, north of the Tampa area, he鈥檚 in his third season of coaching the Royals over the summer.

There are players from Florida all over Coleman鈥檚 roster, which he is in the ongoing process of molding and shaping as the year winds toward summer. Most of the non-Floridians hail from junior colleges and universities along the Eastern Seaboard. Tyler Swiggart, a right-handed pitcher from George Washington University, is the lone local product.

鈥淚 would say the biggest thing is whoever鈥檚 recruiting the team, it depends on where their connections are at,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淎 lot of my contacts are in the southeast region. And then, from doing this and coming up here, I鈥檝e started to know this area of the country.鈥

Coleman finalizes his 29-man roster by June 6, a few days after the league opens play on June 2. That number will whittle over the summer down to 22 or 24 as players leave for summer school or sustain injuries. Last year, he lost catcher/infielder Gabriel Garcia for the best reason 鈥 he was drafted by the Milwaukee Brewers in the 14th round. Garcia signed a professional contract and was playing rookie ball in Phoenix a week later.

One name on Coleman鈥檚 roster stands out in particular:聽Lorenzo Hampton, an outfielder from the University of California. Rated as the 151st best player in the country out of high school when he made his college commitment, Hampton looks the part, towering over teammates. The son of the former Miami Dolphins running back of the same name, the ball pops off his bat. He鈥檚 slashing .500/.583/.833 thorough the Royals鈥 first five games. He鈥檚 a player Coleman has had his eye on for a few years.

鈥淲hen I was down in Miami recruiting another kid off Pace High School, I saw him play a couple years ago,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淭hen, about a month ago, I found out he didn鈥檛 have a summer team, and so I called him up to see if he was interested in coming here.鈥

Jim Phillips pops his head into Coleman鈥檚 office. A Valley native, Phillips has been working in one capacity or another for the Royals since 1979, long enough to see players like Jimmy Key and Reggie Sanders swing through on their way to the big leagues. He was here when Dayton Moore, now GM of the Kansas City Royals, spent four seasons coaching in the league during his days as head coach at George Mason.

鈥淚鈥檝e been vice president, general manager, official scorer, I even drove the bus a while,鈥 he said. “Whatever needed to be done.鈥

So when Phillips talks, Coleman listens.

鈥淒o you think there鈥檚 gonna be a lot of balls hit to center field?鈥 Phillips asked.

There鈥檚 a pregnant pause, as Coleman furrows his brow, trying to decipher the logistics of the question he鈥檚 being asked.

鈥淲hy?鈥 he finally responded. Phillips hands him the lineup card with a smile.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e got two center fielders.鈥

鈥淗ampton鈥檚 at 9 (right field),鈥 Coleman said, laughing as he makes the change to the card and gets ready to head downstairs.

Before we can play ball, he has to water the field.

***

Royals players and coach work in tandem to prep the field for each home game. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)

Everybody pitches in to make the operation run. Players chalk the batter鈥檚 box. Swiggart, the Colonial, carries three dozen new balls in boxes from the bullpen, his tattooed arms protruding from the short, Kelly-green sleeves of his jersey for the summer.

Beyond the field itself, there are few of the facilities one associates with professional or even college ball. Notably, there鈥檚 no clubhouse attendant, because there鈥檚 no clubhouse.

A pregame snack of fruit and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches is consumed in the dugout or press box. Postgame meals are served on the picnic tables down by the bullpen.

But there is still a full team鈥檚 worth of gear that needs to be cleaned every day and prepared for the next game. So one of the players is hired to do laundry for the team for the summer.

Players hand bats off to one another, the new instrument of their game a communal weapon (the league is sponsored by Baum Bats, who provide the lumber). They hustle from the dugout to their positions and back. In between innings, they wander the concourse, splitting concessions lines, to get to the ballpark鈥檚 lone bathroom, back behind the home plate bleachers. It鈥檚 one of the more popular spots, by necessity.

鈥淲e give them practice shorts, a practice shirt and their hat, and that鈥檚 what they use for practices and pregame warm-up,鈥 said Turrill. 鈥淭hen, at 6 p.m., they get their uniforms on.鈥

That change happens wherever the players can manage it. A few teams have college facilities, complete with full locker rooms (Harrisonburg plays on campus at James Madison University), but that鈥檚 the exception to the rule.

The 11-team Valley League plays a 42-game season running from early June through late July, with the top eight teams advancing to playoffs for the Lineweaver Cup Championship. Teams play every day, but the top and bottom of the league is only separated by about a three-hour drive, so teams travel home from their road game destinations the same night.

鈥淲e鈥檙e not spending time and energy traveling,鈥 said Coleman. 鈥淲e鈥檙e spending time and energy getting better at baseball.鈥

Winchester鈥檚 longest drive is to Covington, down Highway 64, a few minutes south of the Jefferson Pools and just a few miles off the West Virginia border. Minus the hotel stays, the lifestyle gives the players a taste of what to expect in the glamour-free minor leagues 鈥 no school, lots of bus travel and baseball every day. Coleman believes the daily games and the change in bats are the biggest adjustments to make, the most telling sign of whether they are cut out for pro ball.

鈥淭hey don鈥檛 have to worry about school, they don鈥檛 have to worry about studying, they get out of their house,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey are just fully immersed in a baseball experience (with) a town that really gets behind them.鈥

The scouts will show up as the season wears on, especially for the All-Star Game July 9 in Harrisonburg. There will also be a round robin showcase against other National Alliance of College Summer Baseball teams in Kannapolis, North Carolina, the following week. They鈥檒l hope to duplicate the success of Atlanta Braves scout Gene Kearns, one of the Valley League鈥檚 most frequent visitors.

In 2011, Kearns saw an impressive reliever out of a small college in Indiana hitting low 90s on the radar gun with a wicked curveball. He found out the player hadn鈥檛 done much pitching at school, playing third base and had gone undrafted. Two years later, Brandon Beachy was in the rotation in Atlanta. He struck out better than a batter an inning and won 14 big league games before his career was cut short by arm injuries.

***

Cozy Jim Barnett Park in Winchester fits about 1,500 spectators. (海角精品黑料/Noah Frank)

There are stray Nationals hats here and there in crowd, the only sign that we are anywhere close to Washington. Jim Barnett Park sits 81 miles from 1500 South Capitol St., but it might as well be 1,000. That doesn鈥檛 mean the trail from here to there hasn鈥檛 already been blazed, though.

In 2005, a second baseman out of Jacksonville University 鈥 a school that had yet to produce even an average big league player 鈥 stormed through the Valley League in his second year on the circuit playing for the Luray Wranglers, batting .347 en route to MVP honors. Eleven years later, Daniel Murphy duplicated that batting average in his first year in Washington, finishing second in the National League MVP race.

As the clock ticks toward the first pitch of the season on a picture perfect Friday summer evening, Little League games run on adjacent fields around the complex, the sounds of baseball 鈥 pings of metal bats, swells of cheering parents 鈥 floating in from all directions.

鈥淲elcome, baseball fans 鈥︹ the public address announcer calls out to the crowd still trickling through the gates and getting settled, greeted at the entrance by tonight鈥檚 celebrity guest, the Chick-fil-A cow.

鈥淔oul balls are yours to keep tonight, thanks to Chick-fil-A,鈥 says the voice from above.

That doesn鈥檛 mean there are any balls to waste, though. The Chick-fil-A cow itself is tonight鈥檚 ceremonial first pitch thrower, muscling an underhand heave in the general direction of home plate that reaches the catcher off a bounce. One wonders if cows even have UCLs and, if they do, how they might feel about the act of throwing a rawhide ball. But there鈥檚 no time to answer such frivolities 鈥 fresh dirt spot and all, Royals starting pitcher Daniel Collins needs that ball back. He鈥檚 got a game to pitch.

Metal bleachers stretch in five sections around the backstop and dugouts, 10 rows deep behind the plate and 15 up the baselines. A foul ball rockets back over the screen and out of the stadium toward the parking lot, making one reconsider how much of the close parking availability was a result of foresight, rather than fortune.

In the stands, the next night鈥檚 starter helps with the 50/50 raffle, selling strips of tickets measure by the length of his arm.

As usual at any game, baseball wisdom rains from the stands. With runners at the corners in the first inning, Front Royal starter Keagan McGinnis (a Haymarket, Virginia, native and Virginia Tech product) heaves a second pick-off throw to keep Alex Reynolds close at first base, soliciting the first jeer.

鈥淎w, leave him alone over there,鈥 a fan barks.

鈥淗e throw it over there again, he might throw it away,鈥 another drawls in response.

鈥淗e might.鈥

He does. McGinnis鈥檚 toss skips past first base and Dillon Reed scampers home from third with the first run of the 2017 season.

As the sun sets over glowing country sky to the west, the Royals win a back-and-forth affair 7-5 to open their season. It鈥檚 the start of the yearly, two-month love affair between the towns of the Valley and their neighborhood teams, steeped in the game鈥檚 history. For Turrill, it all began when she was introduced to the Royals by friends from church already involved with the club. Balancing this work with her job, she hasn鈥檛 been to bed before 1 a.m., for weeks getting everything prepared, but she wouldn鈥檛 trade it for anything.

鈥淚 absolutely love my summer sons,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 am hooked.鈥

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