In
1999, Dean Alford of Conyers, Ga., was dreaming
of building a special baseball field in
his hometown so children with physical or
mental disabilities could play baseball.
What emerged from his dream was the Miracle
League, which currently has about 175 branches
in 44 states and serves more than 25,000
children.
“And
eventually we’re going to have 500 fields
(nationwide),” said Diane Alford, Dean’s
sister and executive director of the Miracle
League, in a 2005 interview with this columnist.
“Communities hearing of Miracle League are
wondering why they haven’t thought of this
before. This country has 5.2 million children
with disabilities. Somewhere in our lives
is a child with a disability, whether a
neighbor, sibling or cousin.”
Children
with disabilities often can’t play baseball
on regular fields. Kids with mobility issues,
including those using walkers, crutches
or wheelchairs, and blind and autistic kids
and others, usually can’t move safely over
elevated bases, infield dirt, and grass.
Alford’s idea was to build a special rubberized
ball field.
My
daughter Abigail had her Miracle League
debut last Saturday. No one kept score.
Her
first hit was a grounder toward third base.
The Miracle League near us in southern Minnesota
started even before receiving its rubberized
field. We should be getting ours within
the next three months. I’m excited, and
so is my daughter, who uses a wheelchair.
Until
the new rubberized field arrives, her team
will continue practicing on a dirt field.
After hitting the ball there, Abigail usually
has difficulty negotiating the base paths
and crossing home plate.
It
felt strange interviewing my daughter, but
who better to ask? “I like Miracle League
because it’s fun and I can meet new friends,”
said 11‑year‑old Abigail Vance.
“I also liked that at the first practice
I wasn’t a total stranger because I knew
someone there.”
Also,
after only two practices and one game, she
lost her fear of being hit by a baseball.
And she enjoys “trading jokes with the person
helping at shortstop.”
Miracle
League has special rules: 1) base runners
are always safe; 2) every player scores
a run before the inning ends; 3) community
volunteers serve as “buddies” to assist
players; 4) and both teams win.
The
Minnesota Twins baseball team financially
supports our particular league. If your
hometown doesn’t have Miracle League, you
don’t know what you’re missing.
For
more, see danieljvance.com
. This column made is possible by a grant
from Blue Valley Sod, bluevalleysod.com.