Roy Hobbs Is Playing Shortstop For The Buckeyes…And Henry … – Press Pros Magazine

Posted: April 6, 2023 at 12:06 am


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Whos having more fun? Henry Kaczmar is hitting .270 through 25 games and playing beyond his years at baseballs most athletic position. (Press Pros Feature Photos)

The Buckeyes freshman shortstop comes as close to a natural assimilation to college baseball as one could imagine. And no saw it coming this quickly.

Columbus, OH Ohio State freshman Henry Kaczmar probably never heard of Roy Hobbs. Hes too young. Never saw The Natural, filmed in 1984.

Robert Redford? Wouldnt get the comparison, or irony.

But if you can appreciate his start as a rookie shortstop in the Big Ten Conference through 25 games .270 average (24 for 89), a home run, 5 doubles, 16 RBIs and solid glove play youd swear that no one looks more natural in his evolution to college baseballs highest level than the former Walsh Jesuit Warrior, just one year removed.

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For sure he never heard of Pop Fisher (Wilford Grimley), who took a chance on playing Hobbs over the incumbent right fielder for the make-believe New York Knights, based on a batting practice tryoutnot unlike first-year coach Bill Mosiello taking a chance to play Kaczmar at shortstop as a freshman based on his high school credentials and what he saw in fall practice.

But twenty five games into this script the ironies, the comparisons, and the reality of it happening are front and center evident, undeniable given the challenges of playing arguably the most athletic position on the field.

Its sure fun to watch, said Mosiello following Saturdays 6-2 win over Minnesota a game that saw Kaczmar got 3 for 4 with his first collegiate home run, and played flawlessly at shortstop in the midst of a gale winds and impending storms.

Ive had a lot of great young players, and some freshman All-Americans. But I like what hes doing and I sure wouldnt trade him because you want your kids to have success, and its neat to watch him have that success, just like its hard to watch when theyre failing. Anytime someones playing like he is its fun to watch. Henrys doing a really good job.

Deeply steeped in a culture of baseball from childhood up, what hes doing looks as natural against Minnesota as it did against Akron Hoban last year. Originally a commit to play at Michigan, he flipped that commitment when Michigan coach Erik Bakich pulled up anchor and left for Clemson during the summer.

Kaczmar capped of a three-hit day Saturday with a two-run homer in the eighth, his first in college baseball.

His father, Chris, was the long-time coach at Walsh Jesuit (26 years), winning 600 games and four state titles with the Warriors. So Henry Kaczmar is no stranger to expectation and challenge. What hes doing now, frankly, feels pretty natural to him.

I feel like Im never really satisfied with what Im doing, which isnt a good thing sometimes, he said following Saturdays win over Minnesota. So Im always focused on being better, and just going out there and be myself, regardless of who Im playing for. I just try to be natural, and relaxed. I dont look at the numbers, I try to give it all I have.

In a higher culture of baseball now, where body language is akin to trash-talking in basketball, Kaczmar has exceptional body language for one so young.

Yeah, and thats something that Mo preachesactions speak louder than words, he adds, smiling.

And for the record, Henry Kaczmar smiles a lot.

Body language is such a huge part of the game, and its something that you cant fakenot only for yourself, but to others who are watching. If opponents see youre down, theyre going to attack. Offense or defense, your body language needs to be you on the attackput your foot on their throat. Im always conscious of it, because it is such a huge part of the game.

To be sure, hes had some down moments. Striking out with runners in scoring position. And last week he got picked off first at Indiana in one of those rare baseball moments that you cant explainor justify. The trick isdont dwell over those moments. Play on. Learn from it. Think of it as something that makes you better, not something that cause others to question. And believe it, no ones questioning.

The manner in which hes played shortstop is everything you can ask. What he gets to he catches. What he catches he comes up throwing, and almost without exceptionchest-high to first base. He and sophomore second baseman Josh McAlister have quickly bonded to become a dependable double-play combination, and already have turned 18, almost the total for the entire 2022 season, when the Buckeyes had 22 in 51 games.

The only question coming out of fall baseball washow much can he hit? But no one, at present, seems concerned. Cue the Roy Hobbs clip:

For as long as Ive played I always think I have two choices, he offers. If I do something wrong I can be upset about it and have it affect the rest of the gameor I can move on from that and actually have a good game. You always have an option. You can go farther up the line towards positive, or you can go farther down the line towards negative. Thats how I think. And Im always trying to go farther up the line.

Editor/publisher Sonny Fulks writes OHSAA sports and Ohio State baseball for Press Pros Magazine.

Hes eloquent to speak on topics baseball well beyond his years, or the average freshman. He credits his dad for preparing him for that, along with about any other phase of the game. Hes remarkably comfortable with interviews, and questionslike he is with the next ground ball.

His focus following Saturdays game was that of appreciation for the first conference win, but he wasnt dwelling on it. Dont rest on your laurels. The important game is Sunday, because that determines the series farther up the line. You have the choice, you know.

His motivation? Need you ask? Hes been prepared for this all his life. But realistically..

My dad, he adds. I think he misses coaching, but hes been to every game so far, hes excited for the Bucks, and I know hes excited for me.

Naturally!

The Buckeye Diamond club is proud to sponsor coverage of Buckeye baseball on Press Pros Magazine.com.

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