The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Elder realizes dream in return home

Young Braves pitcher starts big-league career against Texas Rangers before hometown supporters.

- By Justin Toscano justin.toscano@ajc.com

ARLINGTON, TEXAS — As Jeff and Kasi Elder made the approximat­ely 50-mile drive from Decatur, Texas, to Globe Life Field, reality hit them.

“It’s really a blessing,” Jeff said hours later. “That’s what it is. Can’t describe it.”

“We used to bringthe boys to watch the Rangers,” Kasi said, “and so here we are watching our son play.”

They had made this drive from their Texas town to Arlington many times for Rangers games as a family. This time, their son, Bryce Elder, was not in the car with them — he was in the visitors’ clubhouse. He was once a young baseball player who looked up to the big leaguers he would go see, and now everybody had come to watch him.

From his parents to his older brother to his high school coach to his high school band director to many others, countless people from all walks of life made the drive to see Elder start for the Braves against the Rangers. Those who came from Decatur and Wise County didn’t care how he pitched — they simply wanted to support him.

Elder’s homecoming capped an impressive first stint in the big leagues. The Braves optioned the 22-year-old to Triple-a after the game, and recalled Kyle Muller, but Elder made a positive first impression with the club. He ended his first month in the bigs with a start near his hometown, in front of the people who have played a part in his life since he was a baby.

“It meant a lot,” Bryce said after the game. “It goes to show I was fortunate to grow up in a good town where people have supported me and helped me get to this point. It means a lot for them to come out and make the drive.

“It’s something I’ll remem

ber for the rest of my life.”

‘Dream big’

On Saturday, a righthande­r from a town of about 7,000 people took the mound in front of 36,097 spectators. His grandmothe­r, whom he took out to breakfast on his trip here (as is tradition when he’s home), remarked that her 6-foot-2 grandson looked small in a huge ballpark.

To appreciate Bryce’s homecoming is to see it with a big-picture lens and become aware of its impact. Bryce — the quiet, calm and collected small-town boy — was on a big-league mound. In the stands, tons of kids from his town, and even the baseball team from his high school, watched him pitch. Bryce’s start, and his journey, sent a resounding message to the area’s young ballplayer­s.

“Just dream big,” said Brian Tickell, Elder’s high school baseball coach at Decatur High. “Dream big. You never know. Work hard and things may happen for you.”

You might know the story: Elder was an elite high school golfer but wanted to play baseball, too. Tickell allowed him to join the baseball team as a “PO” (pitcher only) on the condition that he got all his pitching work done before hitting the links each day. Elder eventually chased his baseball dreams.

Young Bryce grew up cheering for Ron Washington’s Rangers teams. And in this last month, he and Washington shared a clubhouse. In the Braves’ home clubhouse, Bryce’s locker sat near that of Darren O’day, a reliever for whom he used to root as a kid.

You could find — and hear — the Elder section in the second level above the thirdbase dugout at Globe Life Field. But Bryce’s supporters were everywhere: Kasi, his mother, estimated there might have been 500 people in attendance to see him, and they were spread throughout the ballpark.

“The message to the younger kids is: You never know. Never let anyone tell you how good you can be because they don’t know. Trust in yourself and believe in yourself and work hard,” said Jeff Elder, Bryce’s father. “That’s all you can do. It doesn’t matter what anyone else says. It really doesn’t. So work hard and let the chips fall where they may.”

Once Bryce wanted to play baseball in college, Tickell helped him find a summer team. Bryce signed with a junior college but wanted to play Division I ball, so Tickell called around. New Mexico flew Bryce out and offered him but Bryce wanted to play at Texas, his dream school, so Tickell called someone else he knew. One day, Texas showed up to watch Bryce, saw one inning, then offered him within the week.

When Bryce arrived at Texas, his parents were simply happy he was there. They thought: He got there, but can he play there? When Bryce called them a few weeks into his freshman year, he had something to say: “I can play here.” Not only that, but he wanted to be a starter. (Elder ended up being Texas’ Friday night starter — the top pitcher on the staff — before the Braves selected him in the fifth round of the 2020 MLB draft.)

‘It’s like a fairy tale’

Years ago, Brad Davis, a Little League coach, taught a 9-year-old Bryce Elder how to throw a cutter and other pitches. When Davis said something about pitching, Bryce listened.

“Of course, he’s mastered it,” Davis said Saturday, laughing. “I knew he was good,” he said. “You just never know what would happen.”

Johnny Ward, a family friend, has known Bryce since he was a baby. He has never known anyone who has made it this far in sports. And, heck, he thought Bryce would play golf. So to watch that kid now all grown-up on a big-league mound against MLB stars including Corey Seager and Marcus Semien?

“It’s like a fairy tale,” Ward said.

That’s just about how everyone felt.

“We’re sitting on the first row just going absolutely nuts,” said Tickell, the high school coach who watched Bryce throw back-to-back no-hitters for him. “To see him out there, it’s really surreal.”

“It doesn’t seem real,” Davis agreed. “When you come to a game and you come in and it’s just massively overwhelmi­ng, it just doesn’t seem real. But when I watch Bryce warm up, I’m like, ‘He looks the same.’

The way his form was and the way he throws, it’s like, that’s the same little kid.”

Bryce’s journey reveals something about him: He hasn’t changed one bit to those who have coached him, had him in class and been friends with him.

“Bryce is a very humble and very good person,” Ward said. “You would never know he’s in the big leagues. You see him out here, you would have no idea. Just the same old man, same old boy.”

‘Just a good dude’

Jeff and Kasi are certainly proud of Bryce’s baseball accomplish­ments. They’ve seen his determinat­ion and drive up close for his entire life. But they make something clear: They’re more proud of the type of person their son grew up to be.

You could see proof of this when he started against the Rangers. People from all background­s, who knew him from everywhere, came to see him.

“Everybody wants nothing but the best for him,” said Davis, the Little League coach. “That’s why he got so much support. He makes it easy to root for (him).”

“He’s just a good dude,” Jeff said.

“He’s the type that if you need something,” Ward said, “he’ll help you do it.”

The Elder supporters in attendance have followed his journey and wanted to see it at its latest stop. “People come together to support our own,” Kasi said. When the public address announcer said Bryce’s name as he ran out to take the mound in the bottom of the first, a section on the third-base side cheered. They were there for Bryce during the game, just as they had been throughout his life.

Bryce allowed three runs over 4⅓ innings. He might be headed to Triple-a, but you likely have not seen the last of him in the majors. “He’s going to get better every game — he will,” Jeff said the night before the Braves announced they optioned Elder. “Because he always adjusts. He’ll be fine.”

 ?? LM OTERO/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Braves starting pitcher Bryce Elder, before a cheering throng of hometown friends and family, starts the first inning Saturday against the Rangers in Arlington, Texas.
LM OTERO/ASSOCIATED PRESS Braves starting pitcher Bryce Elder, before a cheering throng of hometown friends and family, starts the first inning Saturday against the Rangers in Arlington, Texas.
 ?? COURTESY OF WISE COUNTY MESSENGER ?? Braves pitcher Bryce Elder poses before some of the hundreds of hometown supporters who came out to see him in Arlington, Texas.
COURTESY OF WISE COUNTY MESSENGER Braves pitcher Bryce Elder poses before some of the hundreds of hometown supporters who came out to see him in Arlington, Texas.

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