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Original Article Published On The JNS

“We love baseball, and we love Israel. What better way to spend time than cheering on Jewish sports,” Jeff Goldstein of Toronto, who went to see the players with his whole family, told JNS.

Much ink has spilled on the players and officials who make up Israel’s baseball team, which finished 1-3 at the World Baseball Classic in Miami. Israel competed often in front of crowds that were overwhelmingly rooting for—and drumming and trumpeting vuvuzelas on behalf of—Israel’s rivals. But those who made the trek to Florida to cheer Team Israel on are as die-hard fans as they come.

When Jewish baseball fans heard Team Israel would play in the World Baseball Classic, many rearranged their schedules to make the pilgrimage from Chicago, Toronto, Hartford, San Antonio and Atlanta. Some came from relatively “nearby” Jacksonville—five or six hours south down I-95 or I-75, depending on traffic.

Some brought their kids, others their parents. Some ditched their wives and kids to continue a 30-year tradition that predated their marriage. One clergy member bought tickets for any congregant willing to meet him in Miami and join him for dinner at Ben’s Kosher Delicatessen Restaurant & Caterers.

Brian Yancelson, a recent college graduate, and his mother Melody came to Miami from San Antonio, Alamo City, to create different sorts of memories. 

The baseball-obsessed pair—who have visited all 30 MLB stadiums and 29 minor league stadiums, and have been to a 2017 World Baseball Classic game in San Diego, Field of Dreams and the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown—is already planning a baseball trip to the Dominican Republic.

Brian Yancelson and his mother, Melody, from San Antonio. Photo by Howard Blas.

Originally from Mexico City, the Yancelson mother-and-son duo felt like it fit in with both the Jewish and Latino fans. Israel was in a pool with Venezuela (4-0), Dominican Republic (2-1), Puerto Rico (2-1) and Nicaragua (0-4).

“It is really cool for Israel and Jewish people to see you don’t have to be in a little lane; you do everything at the highest level and represent the Jewish people, even if you are not so religious,” Brian, a play-by-play broadcaster and reporter, told JNS. “Being Jewish can be a lot of things for a lot of people.”  

Brother-and-sister Andrew and Jennifer Small hail from Connecticut. He now lives in Manchester and she in Hamden. They have both followed Team Israel from the start. Although both of their parents are Jewish, they joke about coming from a “mixed” marriage between a Yankees fan and a Mets fan.

Andrew, who proudly sported an orange shirt with “Tigers” written in Hebrew, allowed that it could be confused for the Detroit Tigers, though he intended it to boost 44-year-old Shlomo Lipetz, who pitched for the Netanya Tigers in the 2007 season.

“I’ve been rooting for Team Israel since the World Baseball Classic qualifiers in 2017 when they captured my imagination and interest,” he said.

He went to a pre-Olympics exhibition game in Hartford and recounted, “I can’t describe how emotional it is just hearing ‘Hatikvah’ every time.”

When Israel played in the Olympics in Tokyo in 2021, Andrew stayed up late every night to watch them. “Seeing them win the Nicaragua game on Sunday was amazing,” he said.

Jennifer is glad Israel automatically qualifies for the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

“It means so much as American Jews to see us on the international stage and to see legit Jews like [Jacob] Steinmetz,” Andrew said of the Orthodox pitcher.

Brother and sister Andrew and Jennifer Small of Connecticut. Photo by Howard Blas.

‘We are all Zionists’

Jared Green and a half-dozen friends have a 30-year tradition of visiting ballparks that dates back to when they were fellow staffers at Camp Ramah in Canada.

The lead organizer is Mark “Liebs” Lieberman. “Please be advised that I will be out of the office participating in the 30th Annual Baseball Road Trip commencing on Friday, March 10, 2023, until Wednesday, March 15, 2023,” the Toronto law partner’s out-of-office message reads.

“Our trip is ultimately about friendships,” he told JNS. “For this year, our 30th annual baseball road, seeing Israel play made it extra-special.”

“While there wasn’t much to cheer about during the game itself, just being there together to witness Israel participating in the event itself was a great way to culminate our annual trip,” added Lieberman. “It will certainly be an experience we will all remember.”

Green, a Toronto native who lives with his family in Chicago, told JNS that the group goes to a different city each year. “We have been to every city with an MLB team,” he said. “We went to Oakland last year and went to Buffalo the COVID summer when the Blue Jays didn’t play in Toronto.”

Jeff Goldstein of Toronto come to Miami with his wife and three sons: Michael, 11; Alex, 8; and Brayden, 4. Photo by Howard Blas.

Coming to Miami made sense since one member of the crew—hailing from Toronto, Hamilton (Canada), Chicago and Jacksonville—has a daughter who celebrated her bat mitzvah in Jacksonville. The group got to attend those festivities and catch Team Israel.

“We are all Zionists. We thought it would be fun to cheer on Team Israel,” said Green.

Not only did Jeff Goldstein of Toronto come to Miami with his wife and three sons (Michael, 11; Alex, 8; and Brayden, 4), he brought his parents as well.

A kidney specialist, Goldstein took a break from his medical practice, figuring that it would be an important part of his children’s education, even though they missed a few days of school.

“We love baseball, and we love Israel. What better way to spend time than cheering on Jewish sports,” he told JNS.

Draped in Israeli flags and singing ‘Hatikvah’

Jesse Holzer, a cantor in Jacksonville, recalls staying up late to check Team Israel’s scores when it competed in Asia. He was pretty sure he was the only person in the 29,000-seat stadium wearing a Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp kippah. That may sound like an unkosher oxymoron, but the Jumbo Shrimp are a Jacksonville Minor League team. (Team Israel catcher Ryan Lavarnway played for the Shrimp in 2022.)

Holzer also donned a blue-and-white Israel soccer jersey with “Hazzan” (“cantor”) emblazoned on the back. He had hoped to wear a Team Israel jersey, but it didn’t arrive on time for the World Baseball Classic, so he had to improvise. The team has become so popular that he can no longer find game-worn Team Israel jerseys on eBay, as he used to be able to.

Cantor Jesse Holzer of Jacksonville, Fla. Photo by Howard Blas.

“They are nowhere to be found,” he stated.

Watching batting practice before the March 13 game against Puerto Rico on the field, Holzer could hardly contain his excitement. “To be here, to experience the moment of Jews draped in Israeli flags and singing ‘Hatikvah’ in this country, post-COVID,” he said. “To be here to support Team Israel is bashert” (the Yiddish word for “soulmate”).

At the synagogue where Holzer works, they joke that the rabbi, a Yankees fan, stands on one side of the bimah while Holzer, a Red Sox fan, is on the other. He also brings sports, which he calls “my second love,” into his work. For example, if people ask him whether it is a day to receive tachanun—a sobering prayer that is skipped on certain festive days—Holzer answers that depends on whether the day’s sports news is good or bad.

Team Israel being in town—just a five- or six-hour drive from Jacksonville—brought out the cantor’s generosity. He bought 18 tickets (a lucky Jewish number and a chai in Hebrew, meaning “life”) and offered to subsidize any congregant willing to come to Miami.

“It is mostly retirees—people who love baseball and kosher food,” he said. Holzer enjoyed dining with fellow congregants at Ben’s Deli, and, in line with stadium policy, was able to bring one deli sandwich into the game.

A Jewish cardinal (fan)

Robyn Faintich of Atlanta is a lifelong fan of the St. Louis Cardinals. An education consultant, she uses baseball and Judaism in her work, and thinks that Jewish educators can find teaching fodder in Israel’s participation in the World Baseball Classic.

When Israel played Puerto Rico, she had a dilemma, as the latter’s manager is former Cardinals legend Yadier Molina. Her love of Israel prevailed, she told JNS.

Having watched two films about Team Israel’s World Baseball Classic and Olympics runs, Faintich was drawn to the way players were connecting for the first time with their Jewish identities.

“They guys had to trace their lineage, which they had never considered. They were discovering and figuring out their heritage and relationship to Israel—and all of a sudden were making aliyah,” she said.

“This part of the story is a major piece for kids without a major connection. They can see all of these players on MLB teams as a case in point,” she added.

When Kevin Youkilis, a Team Israel coach, took off his cap during the Israeli national anthem to reveal a Team Israel kippah, Faintich saw a teachable moment. 

“It tells the story of taking Jewish heritage and turning it into an expression of Jewish identity,” she said. “These players are good role models for Jews who may be disconnected.”

Robyn Faintich of Atlanta. Photo by Howard Blas.

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Original Article Published On The JNS

There was no “mercy rule” needed in this game though.

Despite an extreme lack of hitting the past couple of days, Team Israel forwent batting practice on Wednesday, ahead of its game against Venezuela. The players looked sufficiently rested after playing three games in three days—two of them shortened “massacres” due to the so-called mercy rule.

The day with no batting practice helped Israel outhit and outscore its prior two games but its nine hits came up one short—and more important, four runs short—of Venezuela, which won 5-1. The daytime crowd in Miami was small at 18,277.

Ian Kinsler, Team Israel’s manager, reflected after the loss on the team’s experience as it exited the World Baseball Classic.

“We competed. We had a good time,” Kinsler, a four-time All-Star second baseman, two-time Gold Glove winner, and a member of the 2018 World Series champion Boston Red Sox, said. “That first game was obviously a good way to start the tournament. Then it was pretty tough for us, but we played hard as long as we could.”

Whether Kinsler’s future includes another World Baseball Classic with Israel remains to be seen. His family and his day job—working with the Texas Rangers—are his priorities. “We’ll see where that leads,” he said.

Compared to the previous games, Wednesday’s ended unceremoniously after nine innings. Israel sent up six pitchers, with Robert Stock, who gave up three runs on three hits (and a wild pitch) in the first, getting the loss.

Venezuela, which came from behind to beat Nicaragua 4-1 on Tuesday, has a lineup with some big league standouts: second baseman José Altuve (Houston Astros), outfielder Ronald Acuña (Atlanta Braves) and pitcher Edwin Escobar (Yokohama DeNA BayStars). Yet Stock settled down, retiring all three in order in the second and giving up a hit in the third.

The mini, two-out rally Israel strung together in the second, on back-to-back singles by left fielder Alex Dickerson and third baseman Danny Valencia, was more hits than it recorded in its 15 prior innings.

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Original Article Published On The JNS

“This is an opportunity to come together to promote friendship between the Latino and the Jewish communities,” says Jesse Rojo, director of the Philos Project.

The Israeli and Dominican Republic baseball teams will face off on the field at Miami’s LoanDepot Park this evening as part of the World Baseball Classic. But the two teams had a very different sort of encounter this morning.

Rather than competing on the diamond, players and coaches from both teams joined diplomats from the two countries, as well as the baseball team from David Posnack Jewish Day School in Davie, Fla., to discuss and strategize about antisemitism and to sign a Memorandum of Understanding, or MoU.

The origin of the group, which gathered at the Dominican Republic’s consulate and a downtown Miami park, dates back several years to when the Dominican Republic’s ambassador to Israel asked Israeli counterparts if the two nations’ baseball teams might begin to communicate, Jordy Alter, president of Israel Baseball, told JNS.

Independently, a Christian Zionist group in the Dominican Republic—part of the Philos Project—also contacted Alter about bringing a Christian group to Israel, he told JNS.

A relationship was already blooming. A delegation of Dominican players offered a clinic for Israelis at Ezra Schwartz Field in Ra’anana, and six Israeli players went to the Dominican Republic to train.

“At the end of the day, we hope that through baseball and nonviolent means, we can expose antisemitism, bring it out into the open and bring an awareness to help defeat it. I think baseball is a good way,” Alter told JNS on the field on March 13, prior to Israel’s loss to Puerto Rico in a near-perfect game.

On the morning of March 14, the Israeli and Dominican Republic baseball teams signed an MoU at the Dominican consulate.

Alter was enthusiastic about the development when he spoke to JNS at the event. “It was crazy,” he said. “It says the Dominican Republic will help Israel with baseball.”

Players from the David Posnack Jewish Day School in Davie, Fla., on March 14, 2023. Photo by Howard Blas.

‘We share the same dream’

Jesse Rojo, director of Philos Latino at the Philos Project, told JNS that members of his organization love Israel and also hope to expand relations with Israel’s baseball organization.

“This is an opportunity to come together to promote friendship between the Latino and the Jewish communities,” he said.

Amid a rise in antisemitism, Rojo said it felt like a “good time to step up and promote friendship.”

Jews and Latinos have lived in the same communities for hundreds of years, both in the Dominican Republic and the United States, said Rojo. He cited a long history of Jewish and Dominican neighbors living together in Washington Heights, the neighborhood in the northernmost part of Manhattan where he grew up, also home to Yeshiva University. Of course, it wasn’t without some tensions; it’s something to note and move forward with, Rojo alluded to in his comments.

“Let’s just get along and promote understanding for all human beings,” he said. “We share the same dream. This is what baseball does. It brings people together.”

Rojo brought three Dominican baseball players to Israel last November. “It is the birthplace of Christianity and the more Christians come to Israel, the better,” he said. “I fell in love with Israel.”

Flags of Israel and the Dominican Republic, March 14, 2023. Photo by Howard Blas.

He expected 25 people to turn out for the baseball clinic in Ra’anana. “There were 300!” he reported.

At the event at the park, Alter welcomed attendees and introduced players, coaches and elected officials. Israeli team manager Ian Kinsler was on hand, as were Israel’s bullpen coach Nate Fish and players Dean Kremer and Assaf Lowengart. Nelson Cruz, general manager of the Dominican Republic team, was present, as was Frank Valdez, the team’s assistant hitting coach.

Maor Elbaz-Starinsky, consul general of Israel in Miami, and representatives from the Miami City Council were also present.

Everyone at the event received a white rose.

Alter told those assembled that “the White Rose was a German anti-Nazi group founded by non-Jewish medical students,” most of whom were killed during World War II. He called on everyone to “internalize the message and create our own non-violent responses” to antisemitism and hate.

At the event, Kinsler said that visiting Israel brought him closer to his Jewish identity and to the country. He also spoke of his long-standing friendship with Cruz, a seven-time Major League Baseball all-star.

“We are here for connections between neighbors,” he said.

Cruz told those assembled that it is important to love one another and be on the same page. Prior to the event, he told several journalists: “There is no difference between races. We try to bring that awareness to kids.”

“Hopefully, what starts today will grow all over the world,” Cruz said at the event.

The local Jewish day school’s baseball team had the chance to pose questions to players and coaches—like “How do you know when a curve ball is coming?” and “How do I recover after a long game pitching?”—before posing for photos and singing the Dominican Republic, Israeli and U.S. national anthems.

Even after the event ended, players, coaches and students lingered for a while, chatting informally. That kind of continuing communication seems to be just what the organizers had in mind.

Jewish day-school players hold up the team’s mutual flags, on March 14, 2023. Photo by Howard Blas.

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Original Article Published On The JNS

Jordan Gladstone got permission from his Jewish day school to play hooky for a week.

It was a muggy, cloudy day in Miami, but it was comfortable in the air-conditioned stadium with a retractable roof, where Team Israel was taking batting practice on March 13 ahead of its second game—this one against Puerto Rico following a win the night before against Nicaragua.

Adam Gladstone, who works in operations for the team, confided in JNS that his mother-in-law did not believe her grandson’s Jewish day school would offer him a week’s respite to be the team’s batboy.

Gladstone and his wife, Julie, had indeed asked Beth Tfiloh Dahan Community School in Baltimore for permission for Jordan to serve as a batboy for Team Israel in the World Baseball Classic for a week.

“She bet me $5 that Dr. Schorr wouldn’t approve,” Gladstone told JNS.

He took the bet and won. Zipporah Schorr, the school’s director of education, is proud of the 14-year-old resident of Pikesville, Md.

“What a wonderful opportunity for a Jewish day-school student to enhance his connection to Israel in a positive and meaningful way,” Schorr told JNS. “Jordan Gladstone, as Team Israel batboy, embodies a sense of pride as a strong Jew and confident BT kid,” she added, using the abbreviation for Beth Tfiloh. She also said the experience was a “true statement” of Am Yisrael Chai (“The People of Israel Lives”).

Julie is pleased Schorr and Yehuda Oratz, a rabbi and middle-school principal, supported her son.

“They said, ‘Wow, what an honor,’” she told JNS. “All of his teachers have been so supportive of this opportunity that he has been given. They are so excited for him to be representing his Jewish school as well as Israel.”

She is sure that working with a team that represents Israel on the world stage will have a lasting impact on him.

Jordan, who celebrated his bar mitzvah a year ago at the Reform Har Sinai-Temple Oheb Shalom Congregation, has attended Beth Tefiloh since preschool.

“Judaism is a big part of my life,” he told JNS on the field in Miami. He reports not being particularly observant ritually but is proud he remembers most of his bar mitzvah portion, the story of Noah. (He calls the narrative “relatable.”)

Although his parents let him look at a variety of schools, Jordan chose to study at a Jewish day school. “He fell in love with the school,” said his father. “He absolutely loves it.”

Jordan, whose favorite subjects are math, history and gym, chose Beth Tfiloh because all of his neighbors went there. “I was the last one who didn’t,” he said.

Gladstone is not surprised that his mother-in-law owes him $5. His son was also a batboy for the team prior to their 2021 run at the Tokyo Olympics.

“When he was a batboy, he thrived at school. There is mutual admiration between him and the school,” he said.

‘The place went crazy after each hit’

Jordan told JNS he loved working with Team Israel leading up to the Olympics.

“One coach in charge of physical training asked me and another kid to lead all of the stretches before a game, and were surrounded by the whole team,” he said. “We were shy.”

Jordan’s first game as Team Israel batboy this time was Israel’s come-from-behind win against Nicaragua.

“Last night was crazy. The atmosphere. The place went crazy after each hit,” he told JNS. “I got a headache.”

As batboy, Jordan gets the bat from the plate following a hit, he told JNS. “I am excited about what tonight has in store,” he said of the March 13 evening game, although Jack, son of coach Ian Kinsler, was slated to be batboy at that game.

And even though he is some 1,150 miles away from school, he is still getting a Jewish education for the week.

As he noted: “It is cool to see the different corners of the baseball world Jews come from—Israel, the minors and the majors.”

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