A group of Minnesota high schoolers competed in a USA Baseball national tournament last summer against teams from the southwestern part of the country.
Kids from that talent-rich geographical quadrant have the good fortune of playing baseball outdoors year-round. Minnesota kids throw snowballs outside in the winter.
The tundra teens captured fourth place out of more than 100 teams, losing a pair of one-run games in the semifinals and bronze medal game. They opened some eyes.
“They basically were like, I didn’t know they play baseball up in Minnesota,” said Max Arlich, a pitcher on that MASH club team and standout at East Ridge High.
Despite weather obstacles, Minnesota baseball is healthy and prosperous, especially on the pitching side.
A handful of pitchers who participated in that national event will be on display at the state tournament starting Thursday. In fact, nearly a dozen pitchers competing in the tournament have signed or committed to play for high major Division I college programs. The list that includes Texas A&M, Ole Miss, Alabama, Tennessee, North Carolina, TCU, Iowa, Purdue, Indiana and the Gophers.
That doesn’t account for standout hurlers whose teams didn’t advance to state or underclassmen who are on track to play major college baseball.
“The last couple of years there has been a lot of pretty darn good arms that have been coming through the state,” said Rockford, Minn., coach Cody Hallahan, who has one of those darn good arms in junior Will Haas, a Tennessee commit.