Hamilton Journal News

‘Truly a champion’

Baseball star Kyle Schwarber returned to Middletown last week to lend his name and talents to a youth baseball organizati­on in his hometown.

- Rick McCrabb My Opinion

We’ve all laughed watching some kids play baseball. You know the ones.

Those more interested in picking dandelions than picking up a ground ball.

More interested in watching planes fly overhead than catching a fly ball.

That was Kyle Joseph Schwarber nearly 25 years ago when he was introduced to baseball at Smith Park, once a youth baseball hotbed in Middletown.

Today there are plenty of weeds at Smith Park. There just isn’t baseball. America’s National Pastime has been replaced by soccer fields and splash pads.

Schwarber, 28, wants to change that. He has allowed organizers of Middie Way baseball — including his father, Commission­er Greg Schwarber and former Middletown police chief — to use his name as a way to raise recognitio­n in the region.

Middie Way held five free summer baseball camps this year at Lefferson Park and plans to join Little League next year.

While attending a check presentati­on last week, when the Middletown Division of Fire gave a $16,000 check — proceeds from its annual golf tournament — to Middie Way baseball, Schwarber said he was “all in” volunteeri­ng whenever possible this off-season.

Schwarber and his wife of two years, Paige, are expecting their first child and they’re building a home in the area.

The Middletown High

School graduate recently completed what he called “a very interestin­g” season. After a 2020 season when he hit a career-low .188 in 59 games during the pandemic-shortened 60-game year, he was non-tendered by the Chicago Cubs, the team that drafted him in the first round of the 2014 MLB draft.

Then he signed a one-year, $10 million contract with the Washington Nationals. He was traded to the Boston Red Sox

in the middle of the season and finished with 32 homers and career highs in batting average (.266) and OPS (.928) in 113 games for the Nats and Red Sox.

When the Red Sox lost in the playoffs, Schwarber became a free agent again.

There are two sides to every trade: One team wants you and another is willing to trade you.

“Very interestin­g,” Schwarber said about being traded for the first time in his career.

With a collective bargaining agreement looming and the designated hitter rule possibly being added to the National League, Schwarber has one idea where or when he may sign. He’d like to sign a four- or five-year deal. That length probably would be worth near $75 million.

Regardless of where he signs, Schwarber will bring high expectatio­ns for himself and his team. In his seven seasons, Schwarber has made the playoffs six times and won the 2016 World Series with the Cubs.

Lamar Ferrell, pastor at Berachah Church and a supporter of Middie Way baseball, told Schwarber: “You are truly a champion.”

His father said sometimes fame and fortune changes a person. It’s not been that way with his son.

“I think he’s the same kid he was growing up at Smith Park,” his father.

Except now he can afford to buy one of those planes flying overhead.

 ?? NICK GRAHAM / STAFF ?? Kyle Schwarber, a Middletown native and Major League Baseball player, speaks to the crowd before
The Middletown Firefighte­rs Associatio­n made a donation of over $16,000 to Middie Way baseball, an organizati­on focused on helping area youth learn to play the sport, during a ceremony Wednesday at the Middletown Division of Fire headquarte­rs.
NICK GRAHAM / STAFF Kyle Schwarber, a Middletown native and Major League Baseball player, speaks to the crowd before The Middletown Firefighte­rs Associatio­n made a donation of over $16,000 to Middie Way baseball, an organizati­on focused on helping area youth learn to play the sport, during a ceremony Wednesday at the Middletown Division of Fire headquarte­rs.
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP / AP ?? Schwarber tosses his bat after belting a grand slam for the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of baseball’s American League Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros. Schwarber, who began the season with the Washington Nationals, is a free agent.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / AP Schwarber tosses his bat after belting a grand slam for the Boston Red Sox in Game 3 of baseball’s American League Championsh­ip Series against the Houston Astros. Schwarber, who began the season with the Washington Nationals, is a free agent.
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