Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Kloey Reyes, 12, making history on the diamond

Sister of gun violence victim a Little League star

- By Darcel Rockett drockett@chicagotri­bune.com

Kloey Reyes, 12, is lithe on a Horner Park baseball field on an early Tuesday evening. Sporting the gray and black colors of the Horner Park White Sox, she’s nimble as one of two catchers on the team, captaining the team of 11- to 13-year-olds against opponents with a look of all seriousnes­s on her face.

Her mom and dad, Annette Flores and Neftali Reyes Sr., call it the eye of the tiger. She’s been playing baseball since she was 6 years old and honed her skills on the fields of Horner Park under the tutelage of her father and family, including her late brother Neftali Reyes Jr., who died in 2017 at the age of 19, a victim of gun violence.

“I just love to play,” she said. “I remember seeing pictures and videos of my brother playing, it looked like fun and something I could do. I liked to play it, and I liked to watch my brother play it.”

Now people are coming out to watch the youngest Reyes play baseball. And on July 15, she was the first female player to start for Horner Park on a Little League World Series Majors team, according to Carlton Jones, district administra­tor of Illinois Little League District 12 and Horner Park White Sox coach. Kloey was one of 12 players on an All-Star team from the Horner Park North-West league that played against the Jackie Robinson West Little League Tournament team in the district championsh­ip. Reyes Sr. threw out the first pitch to his daughter at the South Side game.

“Out of all the teams there, she was the only female. She can play. She’s good,” said Todd Prince, Jackie Robinson West president. “The best kids are chosen from the whole Horner Park league, and they have a lot of players in their league, so to be one of the All-Stars really says something about her talent.”

If you ask about the Reyes family, people say they are a baseball family.

“That’s just what the Reyes family does, they ball hard,” Jones said. “And Kloey goes out there and balls hard. She’s not doing anything special than being a typical Reyes, and that’s what they do, ball hard.”

Reyes Sr. said he loved playing the sport when he was a kid. It’s a passion that he passed down to Neftali, his firstborn and Kloey, his youngest.

“As soon as Neftali was able to sit, I was rolling him a baseball. Then I started bouncing it and he started catching it, then I started tossing it and this is all before he could walk,” Reyes Sr. said. “He started to throw once he was walking, and swinging the bat, and I got him in the baseball league at Humboldt Park initially — and he just took off from there.”

His son started doing so well, Reyes Sr. put him on travel teams.

“Everything was baseball, baseball, baseball ... baseball was life for him,” he said. “Kloey would be with the family watching the games.”

Reyes Jr. would follow his love for the game to Claflin University in South Carolina on a full-ride baseball scholarshi­p. On a visit home in December 2017, his car was rammed while he was driving in West Town. People in the ramming vehicle then fired shots, hitting Reyes Jr. He died following the incident.

“I couldn’t come to this park in the beginning,” Flores said. “When Kloey played her first year, I couldn’t come here, it was so hard.” When talking about his son, Reyes Sr.’s voice trembles as he tries to keep the tears at bay.

“There’s bad days and some days that aren’t so bad, but we’re always thinking about our son. I come to this field, and it breaks my spirit sometimes. But it also brings back great memories. And then I see my little girl out there doing her thing, watching her shine. … I like to say she’s following in her brother’s footsteps but in her own style and with her own swag. She’s got the competitiv­e fire that her brother had.”

Kloey didn’t always want to play competitiv­ely in team sports. But then something clicked.

“My whole family plays it, all my cousins play baseball and I just wanted to do it, too, not because they played it but because I wanted to do it,” she said.

“There’s not a lot of girls that’s playing on Little League teams,” Prince said. “You have some girls that have played and trained with their dads that play baseball.”

“I just got really good at it because of him,” Kloey said. “He taught me how to play, he taught me how it works, how to go on the field, how to hit — he was my coach for most of my life. And as soon as I knew how to play it, that’s really when I started wanting to play baseball because it was fun to me.”

Prince said Reyes Sr. throwing out the first pitch at the July 15 game was an emotional show of support for the family, especially after a new mural of Reyes Jr. (“Tunnel of Blessings: Neftali Reyes Jr. Memorial Mural”) had been unveiled at The 606 s Bloomingda­le Trail on Humboldt Boulevard earlier in the week to honor his legacy.

Reyes Sr. and Flores both have been victims of violence — Reyes said he was shot six times, once through his heart when he was in his early 20s; his wife was shot in the head twice at the age of 14.

“She’s not supposed to be here. I’m not supposed to be here, and yet we had three children together,” he said. “So my whole thought is my kids are going to be special, something’s planned for them. They’re good kids.”

Since Reyes Jr.’s death, the family has made it a point to make sure his name isn’t forgotten. His mom keeps fighting for justice for him and a resolution to her son’s case.

“I have cried five times in my life, one of the five being when Buzzy’s (Neftali Sr.) son died. That broke me,” Jones said. “They were devastated. I wouldn’t say baseball gets them through everything, but it is the one thing that binds the family together.”

Jones calls Kloey , a seventh grader at Sabin Magnet School, the future of baseball. Since he’s been letting the team help him coach this year, his catchers are basically running the team.

“They call the game, basically — they call the pitches, they call the defense. That’s a very important position. And because she’s a Reyes, she’s got fire and she’s got an arm, too, I’m cool with her being my catcher. The team responds because they know Khloe knows what she’s talking about,” Jones said. He says out of the 21 years he’s been coaching, Kloey is the most intelligen­t player he’s ever coached.

Reyes Sr. said many weeks follow the baseball calendar. He has a small amount of time after work to shower, eat and make sure Kloey is fed before heading out to take her to a game or practice.

“It’s just how it is, but baseball is life around here,” he said. “We maintain, we fight. My wife is always fighting for justice. Wherever I go, I wear a shirt with either Neftali’s picture on it or his name. We take pride in our name and in ourselves. We want to make sure that we do good things and help people when we can on our way up, knowing that we’re going to make it up.”

“I think about how Neftali loved his little sisters and how he loved us, and it was his love that helped me through,” Flores said. “Kloey’s not really walking in his footprints, she’s filling them almost. I want her to know that we applaud her for her, for her efforts. Even though we know she’s gonna be the bomb because it’s in the bloodline.”

 ?? JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Kloey Reyes, 12, smiles while talking with family members before a game at Horner Park on July 27 in Chicago. Kloey is the starting catcher for her White Sox team in the Horner Park North-West Little League.
JOHN J. KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Kloey Reyes, 12, smiles while talking with family members before a game at Horner Park on July 27 in Chicago. Kloey is the starting catcher for her White Sox team in the Horner Park North-West Little League.

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