Daily Southtown

SWITCH CRAFT

From earliest T-ball days to Lincoln-Way East, Kentucky recruit Bell has hit from both sides of plate

- By Steve Millar

Lincoln-Way East’s Tyler Bell has been turning heads on baseball fields for well over a decade.

After all, it’s not often you see a switch-hitting T-ball star.

“When I was 3 or 4 years old, my dad (Shane) got me in the backyard on one of those old, plastic tees and taught me to hit lefty,” Bell said. “So, he taught me to be a switch-hitter way back then.

“It’s been great for my baseball career. Switch-hitting gets me out of the same side curveball, same side off-speed. Those are tough pitches for a hitter, and I never have to deal with them.”

From hitting for power and average from both sides of the plate to routinely making highlight reel-worthy defensive plays, there’s not much the senior shortstop can’t do for the Griffins (5-4).

It’s why Bell, a Kentucky recruit, is considered one of the state’s top prospects for this summer’s MLB draft. Prep Baseball Report rates him as the No. 2 player in Illinois for the 2024 class.

As a junior last season, Bell

earned all-state honors by hitting .446 with 54 runs, 32 stolen bases, nine homers and 46 RBIs.

A highly touted player since before even starting high school, Bell has not let the hype get to his head, according to senior outfielder Matt Hudik.

“I think he’s handled it pretty good,” Hudik said. “I don’t think he’s let it get to him too much. There are always scouts at the game watching him, and I feel like he just tunes it out and plays his own game.”

Bell does his best to ignore the outside noise. That includes his recruiting rankings and potential draft status.

“I try to stay focused on the next day,” Bell said. “That’s still a long way away. A lot of stuff can happen and you won’t know until it’s here.

“I’ll have conversati­ons with my parents and coaches and everything whenever that time comes to make sure I’m going down the right path.”

One of Bell’s potential roads has taken on a different look over the past year. A longtime Pittsburgh commit, Bell switched his choice last summer to Kentucky.

“Kentucky was my No. 1 school and it all worked out in the end,” he said. “The coaches are great, the facilities are great. It’s playing in the SEC against the best and continuing to challenge myself, just trying to get better every day.”

John McCarthy, who’s in his first year at Lincoln-Way East, had to game plan against Bell over the past several seasons when he was Homewood-Flossmoor’s head coach.

McCarthy is glad to have Bell on his side now.

“I think his natural instincts are

 ?? JON CUNNINGHAM/DAILY SOUTHTOWN ?? Bell, right, crosses home plate after hitting a three-run homer as Providence catcher Enzo Infelise looks on during a 2023 game.
JON CUNNINGHAM/DAILY SOUTHTOWN Bell, right, crosses home plate after hitting a three-run homer as Providence catcher Enzo Infelise looks on during a 2023 game.
 ?? VINCENT D. JOHNSON/DAILY SOUTHTOWN ?? Lincoln-Way East’s Tyler Bell settles in after batting practice in Mokena on Wednesday.
VINCENT D. JOHNSON/DAILY SOUTHTOWN Lincoln-Way East’s Tyler Bell settles in after batting practice in Mokena on Wednesday.

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