DREAM panel helps guide young ballplayers
7:43 AM UTC
TEMPE, Ariz. — As Ron Washington took the stage alongside MLB Network host Harold Reynolds on Friday night, the impressionable audience before him — many of whom hadnât even taken their first steps yet when he began his big league managerial career in 2007 — rose to their feet to offer a standing ovation.
The Angelsâ manager was one of a series of guest speakers invited to the 2024 DREAM Series, a Major League Baseball and USA Baseball development event for predominately Black elite high school athletes geared toward the dynamics of pitching and catching. It was fitting for Washington to be in attendance, given that the event — held annually since 2017 in concurrence with Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend — takes place at Tempe Diablo Stadium, the Spring Training home of his new club.
In front of more than 80 DREAM Series participants packed into the neighboring hotelâs amphitheater, Washington pulled out a sheet of paper upon which he had handwritten notes that contained as much of the knowledge about a life in baseball as he could come up with for those aspiring toward the same.
âI was once like you guys,â Washington said. âIt had been a goal to be a Major League Baseball player, but I didnât have the opportunity that you guys have. Iâve never been flown somewhere to get trained from a Major League player, Major League coach, Major League managers — never had that opportunity. And Iâll tell you what, take advantage of it. Because my trail to where I am today wasnât easy.â
The same could be said for all the current and former players who took the stage to share their experiences of breaking into the big leagues, including Jerry Manuel, Chris Young, Cole Tucker, Micah Johnson and Josiah Gray. In what became the theme of the evening, each guest spoke about the ways in which he had to overcome adversity in order to make his MLB dream a reality.
For Tucker, a 2014 first-round MLB Draft pick out of Mountain Pointe High School in Phoenix, baseball had always come easy. That changed when he reached the Majors with the Pirates in â19.
âI got handed my first bit of real true baseball adversity as a 22-year-old in the big leagues, playing shortstop, hitting leadoff, scared out of my mind,â said Tucker, whoâs currently a free agent. âBut I want you to know that thatâs not everybodyâs journey. I mean, some of you guys are going to go on to be All-Stars, World Series champions — baseball can do so much for you. But the grind and showing up every day, thatâs what you learn. And thatâs the separator of getting there and not getting there.â
Gray, who was ranked on MLB Pipelineâs Top 100 overall prospects list starting in 2020, similarly coasted through his Minor League career. But in â22, the Nationals right-hander gave up the most homers of any MLB pitcher (38) and the most walks of any NL pitcher (66). In â23, he earned his first career All-Star selection.
âLast year, I did a really deep dive into, âHow can I become the pitcher I want to be?â ⊠I was only a few years removed from dominating, being a top prospect within a couple of different organizations,â Gray said. âSo I was like, âHow do I get back to that?â I went out there with the best confidence that I could, using every resource that I had available to me.â
For Johnson, the adversity came earlier in the journey. He told the story of his Cape Cod League coach, who came to his house in the summer of 2011 to tell him to go home because he wasnât going to get enough playing time at that level. Four years later, Johnson later became the first player on that team to reach the Majors.
âItâs true, maybe I wasnât the best player on that team at that time,â Johnson said. âThat just told me I need work, so Iâm going to stay here and work. Iâm not going to go lower my standards to another league. Iâm going to stay here and compete with the best players.
âAnd whatâs cool about that is what baseball really teaches you, because you do fail so many times and there are coaches [you] will go through who donât think youâre good enough or [say] youâre not going to play as much as you think you should play. That applies to life.â
Itâs a lesson Johnson carries with him in his new career as an artist, one whose work has been featured on the cover of TIME magazine. And itâs a point that Young reiterated, knowing that not all of the DREAM Series participants will go on to have 13-year MLB careers like him.
âI hate to be the bearer of bad news, but every single one of you in this room right now feels like youâre going to be in the big leagues,â Young said. âI was your age. When I was that age, I knew for sure that me, my homeboy next to me, my other homeboy — we all were going to be in the big leagues, and itâs going to be the best ride of our lives and itâs going to be amazing. But itâs just not reality.
âSo I think events like this matter because it equips you for more than just being a big league ballplayer. If you guys arenât big league ballplayers, you can still be extremely successful in life.â