Santa Fe New Mexican

Players’ coach

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Wake Forest in the fall of 2010. He needed a transplant, but no one in his family was a match.

Walter volunteere­d to be tested and offered Jordan one of his kidneys when he was found to be a suitable donor. The transplant was performed Feb. 7, 2011, and both men have had few, if any, complicati­ons.

“We look at these players like they’re part of my family,” Walter said. “When somebody in your family needs something, you give it to them. I tell people all the time it was the best decision I’ve ever made. What I got in return is more valuable than what I gave.”

Jordan ended up playing 124 games from 2011-15. He’s now a high school baseball coach and a teacher at a middle school about 15 minutes from the Wake Forest campus in Winston-Salem, N.C. Had he not received Walter’s kidney, Jordan said, it would be a “toss-up” whether he would be alive.

“I would say for sure I wouldn’t have been able to play college baseball,” Jordan said, “and that was one of my dreams since I was 12.”

Walter, who is white, said he often was asked how it was medically possible for him to be able to donate an organ to Jordan, who is Black. Walter’s response: “My blood and his blood are the same. That’s all that matters.”

During the 2020 summer of racial unrest following the death of George Floyd, Walter and Jordan worked together to found the nonprofit Get In the Game. The organizati­on gives participan­ts resources to address social justice through conversati­ons and service projects. It operates in schools and youth organizati­ons throughout North Carolina as well as in Cleveland and Philadelph­ia.

Walter’s Wake Forest teams also have raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for charities and have had 100% player participat­ion in community service for nine straight years. The team took a service trip to the Dominican Republic in 2012.

“It is so awesome to see him having success,” said Cincinnati Reds outfielder Stuart Fairchild, who played at Wake Forest from 2015-17. “I got an opportunit­y to play my freshman year with Kevin Jordan, the player who coach Walter donated his kidney to. That’s a testament to the kind of guy he is. He’s always putting his players above everything else.”

The Deacons are the most complete team in the nation, with a pitching staff that has a 2.72 ERA, an offense batting a combined .304 with 104 home runs and a defense that ranks in the top 30.

They haven’t lost consecutiv­e games and are the only team to come out of the regular season with fewer than 10 losses.

“The thing that has been the most pleasing about being around this team is how much these guys care about each other and how much fun they have,” Walter said. “They have great energy, they care about the program, they are invested in winning.”

With staff ace Rhett Lowder projected to be among the top 10 draft picks and slugger Brock Wilken expected to go late in the first round, Wake Forest has its best chance to make the College World Series since it won the national title in 1955.

For all the twists and turns of Walter’s career, Jordan said, this is the type of season the coach richly deserves.

“You can see he is continuous­ly giving,” Jordan said. “When you do good things, things work out. Humanity could use his story a ton. If the baseball gods are listening, I think Wake Forest should have a College World Series.”

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