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Showing posts with the label baseball4africa

News Article About Dad's Impending Visit to Africa for Baseball4Africa

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  Baseball4Africa founder Tamarack expected in Kenya ahead of championship The arrival of Tamarack will play a pivotal role for the teams in the league series. In Summary The baseball guru is set to visit baseball-centred areas including Makueni, Kilifi, Kajiado, Kiambu and Nakuru.  The local league mainly comprise university students and women who benefit largely from the last tournament that attracted baseball supporters. A prolific trainer turned coach Jim Tamarack. Image:   HANDOUT A prolific trainer turned coach  Jim  Tamarack is expected in the country for the 20th edition of the Africa National Baseball Championship.   Tamarack, the former professional baseball player and lifetime trainer,  is seeking to upscale players in the game. He started a program in 2004 and has been jetting in annually for the last two decades in a bid to ensure the equipment donation program running and benefiting worthy players.  In an interview, his spokesma...

2015 Kenya National Baseball4Africa Tournament

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Teams gather from all across Kenya for the National Tournament Hitting Strategy Talks at the Plate This season of baseball4africa has culminated in an amazing National Tournament held at the Machakos Teachers College here in Kenya on Saturday, Oct 10th. It has been a very productive season. For the first time ever we have had 4 coaches here volunteering with the program. We were able to get two teams from the Machakos Teachers College up and ready for the tournament. Two pretty strong teams from Nairobi showed up that have been trained by Jim in the past. A community team from Kabete hired a matatu (shared van) for the day to come play. And one of our past students, Darious, managed to bring two of our normal schools out bringing the total to seven teams to compete for the trophy.   After a few stressful minutes spent finding someone to open the gate to the fields we entered the Machakos ball fields with brand new baseballs, bats, and trophies in town. Following us...

Teaching Baseball to Baseball's Future Teachers

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Drills at MTTC   Being thrown off a little bit by the teachers strike this year Baseball4Africa has been able to direct its resources outside of the secondary/highschool age groups here in Kenya. One of the schools that we have been working closely with this season is on the outskirts of Machakos town called the Machakos Teachers Training College, or MTTC. What is so different about teaching baseball to these students, is that they will actually carry the game with them into different schools around Kenya once they graduate and become teachers. Coach Joe teaching the grip   They have picked up the game very quickly, and have greatly benefited from having four coaches working with them. Coach Jim has been here every year for the past 12 years teaching, it is my 3rd time helping out, Coach Jack just graduated university and flew out from NY to help, and Coach Joe recently wrapped up a baseball teaching program in Ethiopia and is now here for Baseball4Africa as well. So...

Kiongwani Reunion for Friends of Baseball4Africa

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Reunion with Ms Sarah   Yesterday we took a day off from teaching baseball to revisit Baseball4Africa's roots. There is a very interesting story of how this program came about and it goes a little something like this...    For as long as I can remember my father, Jim, had talked about retiring to Africa to teach baseball. However, when the day came that he actually retired he had no real set plans to start such an endeavor. But, so many people had heard about his retirement plans that all of a sudden used baseball equipment started to show up on our doorstep. So with a renewed sense of motivation Jim set off driving across Africa on a 100 day search for the place to teach baseball. He traveled from South Africa to Mozambique, from Malawi to Tanzania, and finally reached Kenya.  Now, little did Jim know that while he was on this epic journey there was a dinner party being held thousands of miles away in Sleepy Hollow, New York. At this party a long time fr...

Introducing Baseball with the King of Twitter in Nakuru, Kenya

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3 teams at once. Chief Kariuki brings out the entire Nakuru community with one message on Twitter Meeting the Chief George and Jim carry equipment for a new team     It has been a whirlwind first week for baseball4africa here in Kenya. At first the schools closing due to the teachers’ strike threw our baseball teaching plans into disarray. But with some quick networking with a few incredible friends here in kenya baseball4africa is looking stronger than ever.        Nice form Jack coaching the community boys We trained about 70 kids in the Nairobi village of Kabete who were brought together by the volunteer manager of a neighborhood sports program called Kabete cares and a good friend of Baseball4Africa, George Kinuthia. George then proceeded to take three days off to drive north with us to check in on the baseball program Jim started in Elburgon town four years ago. It was absolutely amazing to see the kids playing...

Baseball4Africa Begins:2015

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I always tell people who are interested in coming to Africa that South Africa is a good, easy place to start. Cape Town is a like little Europe, and the whole country has wonderful animal parks with easy roads and great infrastructure. Kenya on the other hand has pot hole filled roads, layers of fine dust that gets into everything, and corruption in the government which leads to the bad infrastructure. However, Kenya provides something that countries in Southern Africa don’t quite have, that wild Africa feeling where the animals still rule. The beauty of the wild animals, the incredible views like the endless savannas, the rift valley, and volcanic geology, and also amazingly nice people are what make Kenya so special. Over the last few days we have driven through herds of zebra and wildebeest in the savanna, we sipped a cold coke out of a glass bottle while overlooking the rift valley, but the most memorable things have been our interactions with people in different communitie...