Hamilton Journal News

Schwarber, Middie Way Baseball ‘the perfect marriage’

- Contact this reporter at 513-581-7612 or email Rick. McCrabb@coxinc.com.

MIDDLETOWN — If not for the seeds that were planted more than 20 years ago on the dusty baseball diamonds at Smith Park, recent Major League Baseball history could have been rewritten.

Kyle Joseph Schwarber, then a young boy, may never have been introduced to the game of baseball, the same sport that has made him a multi-millionair­e and a folk hero with fans of the Chicago Cubs, Washington Nationals, Boston Red Sox and Philadelph­ia Phillies.

“That’s a real thing to think about,” Schwarber said when asked if his life would have been different without baseball at Smith Park. “That’s where I met all my friends growing up. Heck, I might not be playing baseball.”

Schwarber’s teams have qualified for the playoffs eight of his nine seasons in Major League Baseball, and he helped the Cubs win the 2016 World Series over the Cleveland Indians, ending their 108-year drought.

Minutes before, Schwarber, sporting a black beard, Middie pullover jacket and baseball hat, accepted a $9,820 check from Middletown firefighte­rs, proceeds from their annual golf tournament at Wildwood Golf Club.

The money was donated to Middie Way Baseball, a grassroots youth program that started three years ago in Middletown after knothole baseball was void for about 15 years. In the last three years, the golf outing has donated close to $35,000, said Lt. Mike Jones.

When the tournament organizers were looking for a worthy cause to support, youth baseball was an obvious choice, said Jones. Middie Way Baseball’s board president is Greg Schwarber, Kyle’s father and retired Middletown

police chief.

“We wanted the fire department to be a staple and help something grow,” Jones said Thursday afternoon after the check presentati­ons at fire headquarte­rs.

Schwarber, 30, a 2011 Middletown High School graduate, has supported charities in all the cities he has played through his nine-year career. He signed a four-year, $79 million deal two years ago with the Phillies.

He was the Phillies’ nominee for the Robert Clemente Award for his work with Schwarber’s Neighborho­od Heroes, which started in 2017 “to express gratitude for the unique sacrifices of first responders and their families by creating positive experience­s, as well as funding wellness, education and crisis needs for first-responder families.”

It made sense to continue that process in Middletown where he and his wife, Paige, were raised. They have built a home in the Germantown area and are expecting their second son.

“This place is special to us,” he said of Middletown. “It’s always going to be special to us.”

Eventually, once Schwarber retires in 10 or so years, he will have more time to be hands-on with Middie Way Baseball. Right now he has attached his name to the organizati­on.

Mark Kerns, a retired Middletown teacher and coach, called Schwarber “a great ambassador” for Middie Way Baseball and the entire city.

Combining Schwarber and youth baseball was “the perfect marriage,” Kerns said.

Kerns said he wonders about the missed opportunit­ies to introduce kids to baseball.

“I really feel bad for the kids who didn’t have that opportunit­y,” he said. “It sets the kids back. It puts everybody behind the 8 ball.”

Eventually Little League baseball championsh­ips may find their way to Middletown. But it will take years. Greg Schwarber said 280 kids played two years ago and 306 played in 2023. He’s expecting more this year.

The board plans to make some capital improvemen­ts to Goldman Park, home of Middie Way Baseball, Schwarber said. The board hopes to purchase equipment, batting cages and upgrade the shelter.

Make Goldman Park “a place to be proud of,” he said.

Eventually, the snow-covered diamonds will be replaced by sunsplashe­d fields. Baseball will be back.

“That’s heart-warming,” Greg Schwarber said with a smile. “It puts me back a lot of years.”

When his son was introduced to the game he now calls a career.

Kyle Schwarber, 30, a 2011 Middletown High School graduate, has supported charities in all the cities he has played through his nine-year career. He signed a four-year, $79 million deal two years ago with the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

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 ?? RICK MCCRABB / STAFF ?? Middletown firefighte­rs donated close to $10,000 to Middie Way Baseball, a youth program in the city. The money was generated by the annual firefighte­rs golf outing at Wildwood Golf Club. (From left) Kyle Schwarber, Lt. Mike Jones, Greg Schwarber and firefighte­r/paramedic Adam Stitsinger.
RICK MCCRABB / STAFF Middletown firefighte­rs donated close to $10,000 to Middie Way Baseball, a youth program in the city. The money was generated by the annual firefighte­rs golf outing at Wildwood Golf Club. (From left) Kyle Schwarber, Lt. Mike Jones, Greg Schwarber and firefighte­r/paramedic Adam Stitsinger.
 ?? NICK GRAHAM / STAFF ?? Kyle Schwarber and his wife, Paige, wave during the 2022 Middletown Santa Parade. A Middletown native, Schwarber served as grand marshal.
NICK GRAHAM / STAFF Kyle Schwarber and his wife, Paige, wave during the 2022 Middletown Santa Parade. A Middletown native, Schwarber served as grand marshal.
 ?? ?? Rick McCrabb
Rick McCrabb

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