Sports
August 2, 2008
Cummings of age
Former SC, WVU pitcher heads to Olympics

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- West Virginia University baseball coach Greg Van Zant still uses Jeremy Cummings as an example for his teams.

"The story I relate to our players a lot was how tough he was,'' Van Zant said of Cummings. "He was just a competitor. He had a thick skin and didn't let any adversity bother him.

"He always seemed to have that way of focusing on the task at hand and not focus on things he had no control over. He would never give in.''

AP Photo
Sunday, Aug. 3, 2008 - Former West Virginia University pitcher Jeremy Cummings never made it to the major leagues, but landing a spot on the U.S. Olympic team is the fulfillment of a different dream.
Cummings has needed every ounce of perseverance to survive the past 10 seasons in the minor leagues. The former South Charleston High and West Virginia University pitcher has never received a call-up to the major leagues, but he finally caught a break this summer.

It wasn't the call that Cummings had been anticipating his whole career, but it'll do. He was informed July 21 that he had earned a roster spot on the U.S. Olympic baseball team, but that didn't come easy either.

It took a call-up to the majors of another player before Cummings was finally added to the Team USA roster. Originally, Cummings wasn't among the 23 players named to the 24-man roster when it was announced July 16.

It doesn't matter now. Cummings received his Team USA uniform this past week in San Jose, Calif., and has a seat on the plane Tuesday as it heads to the Beijing Olympics with a lifetime of memories waiting to be made. Cummings made his debut with Team USA Friday in an exhibition game against Canada in Cary, N.C.

Cummings, 31, told his family this would be his last season in pro baseball.

And who could blame him? After giving his all, he never earned a spot on any major league team's 40-man roster. And he spent four seasons pitching in the winter league in Venezuela, failing to give his arm proper rest, just to make ends meet.

Then he was cut by the Toronto Blue Jays on Easter Sunday, forcing him to travel to Taiwan in May in search of a job, leaving behind his pregnant wife Kelly, a third-year medical student at Marshall.

But the pieces finally started to fall into place for Cummings. The Tampa Bay Rays signed him to a free-agent contract and he was assigned to the Class AAA Durham Bulls. He pitched well enough to play in the Triple-A All-Star Game. 

Now, in just a few short days, Cummings' whirlwind summer tour will take him to Beijing, where he will walk shoulder-to-shoulder with other U.S. Olympians behind the American flag into National Stadium for the opening ceremonies.

"He's always popped back,'' said Bambi Slack, Cummings' mother. "He was just determined.''

Maybe he never will fulfill his boyhood dream of walking onto a major league mound, but Cummings will still have some special stories, maybe even Olympic glory, to share with his son or daughter some day.

"To me, this is bigger than the big leagues,'' Cummings said.

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  • Like most American boys, Cummings dreamed of growing up and playing baseball.

    "From the time he could walk he had a baseball in his hand,'' said Slack. "He was never interested in little trucks or anything.

    "I remember him learning his curveball when he was probably 9 years old. He'd get out in the yard for hours. [Stepfather] Jeffrey [Slack] and he would practice for hours. Whoever would catch him, anybody he could find. He gave a couple of black eyes to his friends.''

    Cummings steadily progressed through the South Charleston Little League and American Legion programs with South Charleston Post 94 and the Huntington Patriots.

    "He's dedicated his whole life to ball,'' Slack said. "He would go play doubleheaders for American Legion, then he would head off to basketball practice. Sometimes he was doing two different teams at the same time. He was always at a ballgame.''

    Bambi and Jeffrey Slack and Cummings' sisters, Megan and Heather, rarely took summer vacations because Cummings was always playing baseball somewhere. Even Cummings' high school graduation took place on a diamond - at Watt Powell Park - because his SC team was competing in the state tournament.

    "We gave up a lot of family vacations because he was always in some kind of all-stars,'' said Bambi Slack. "We always just went to his ballgames [and] supported him. Just a lot of time, but I'd do it again in a minute.''

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  • Roger Chambers could tell right away Cummings was special.

    "He was just really a treat to coach as a little kid because he just wanted it,'' said Chambers, who taught Cummings how to pitch in the South Charleston Little League.

    "We had tremendous kids come through the program. They all had good college careers, but Jeremy had a little extra. He had baseball saavy about him. Even when he was little he had the right tools.''

    Chambers said Cummings mixed his God-given ability with hard work to reach his goals.

    "He was easy to work with,'' said the former coach. "He was a hard worker. He always had that motivation. He was the first one at practice [and] he wanted to practice more. He's always been special.''

    Chambers said by the time Cummings began playing American Legion ball as a 16-year-old he was in control on the mound. 

    "Everything just really fell into place for him there,'' said Chambers. "He was totally in control. He'd call his own game. He was our stud. He's never been overpowering, but he always had a way of getting you out.

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    Posted By: Upper Kanawha (2:06am 08-02-2008)
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    I hope he realizes his dream and makes the majors. The Olympics should bring notice and maybe help him get there.

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