Every Game Is A Tie; Everyone Wins: Welcome To The Miracle League

September 29, 2009

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Every game ends in a tie. Every player hits; every player scores. There are no strikeouts, no errors. Everybody wins.

Welcome to the Miracle League.

It’s a baseball league for disabled and special needs persons. With players from ages 3 to 63, there are 14 teams that play on the two fields at the Mitchell Homes Miracle League Park on Nine Mile Road. The fall season started Saturday, and will run ever Saturday until November 7.

“Abigail rounds second! She looks good this year, all decked out and playing some ball,” announcer Crystal Martinez says during an afternoon game at the Miracle League. “Loooook at her go! She’s headed home! She scores! Yeah Abi!”

miracleleague20.jpgThat’s just the way a Miracle League game goes — always.

The players are in wheelchairs and walkers. Some handicaps are mental, some are physical.

Joshua heads toward the batter’s box  in his walker to take a swing at the ball with his “buddy”. Each player has a “buddy” assigned to them to help them hitch, catch, throw or run the field.

“Go Joshua!” Martinez announces. “Good job!”

In the end, the game between the Orioles and the Twins was tied, just as every game has ended in a tie for the past nine seasons.  The stats for each of the 150 players will be the same at the end of the season — perfect.

“It’s a wonderful thing for these kids,” Martinez told NorthEscambia.com after the game. “It’s about them getting to play a sport that otherwise they could not play…it’s about the smiles. I love to say that they are all stars when I am announcing.”

“I think it is a great thing,” said Stephen Gruenwald of Pensacola. His son James, 5, plays Miracle League ball from his wheelchair. “He enjoys it very, very much. And he loves the people; the volunteers are one of the best things.”

miracleleague44.jpgPlayers and volunteers come from not just Pensacola, but Mobile, Crestview, Brewton and points in between. Everybody is a volunteer that participates with the Miracle League. The are paid only in smiles.

“It’s a beautiful thing. Everybody here does it for one reason” volunteer Larry Powell said, placing his hand over his heart. “It’s here, in your heart, for these kids.”

“We have a guy that was a Marine for 32 years,” Powell said. “He will sit on that field with the smallest child and help them. It really gets to you.”

Each of the two Pensacola Miracle League fields is made up of 180,000 pounds of recycled tires formed into tiles painted to match a regular field. It provides a softer landing spot for a hard fall, while still providing a good bounce for the hollow core ball that is also designed to lesson injury potential. There are two seasons at the park, spring and fall. The rubber surface gets too hot to play in the summer.

The Miracle League needs more volunteers to serve as buddies, work the concession booth, pickup trash and many more tasks around their area of the Nine Mile Road ballpark.

The public is always welcome and encouraged to cheer on the players.

“It’s a special place here,” Powell said. “Everyone should watch one of these games. It will touch you.”

For a NorthEscambia.com photo gallery from a Twin versus Orioles tie at the Miracle League, click here.

For more information on Miracle League, or to volunteer, visit www.miracleleaguepensacola.org.

Pictured top: Abigail gets a high five after a base hit during a Miracle League game in Pensacola. Pictured top inset: James takes a swing: Pictured bottom inset: Headed for home. NorthEscambia.com  photos, click to enlarge.

Comments

6 Responses to “Every Game Is A Tie; Everyone Wins: Welcome To The Miracle League”

  1. John Miller on September 30th, 2009 6:48 pm

    I just wanted to say God bless you on your endeavor. We are fixing to start construction on our field and are very excited. God Bless

  2. Willene on September 29th, 2009 5:13 pm

    This is so special.

  3. A. Davis on September 29th, 2009 10:58 am

    I love this. This makes me smile when children can feel good about theirselves.

  4. jennifer on September 29th, 2009 8:11 am

    My boyfriends nephew Christopher Cole plays for this league! It is so great for the kids and it’s great to watch them play. They get such enjoyment out of this. Way to go!

  5. Tina Wheeler on April 8th, 2009 3:50 pm

    This is a fabulous thing for the children. My nephew Joshua Walters who lives in Molino plays in this league. It is a real blessing. If you are looking for something to do on a Saturday go see these kids play and donate to the league it will Bless your heart!

  6. Mickey Powell on April 6th, 2009 6:32 am

    You can not appreciate a story like this, untill you have a child that is strugling like mine.