Herrmann remembers former college coach
KANSAS CITY -- Frank Herrmann will always remember Joe Walsh as a
friend and a person who played a key role in his path to the big
leagues. That is why the pitcher was incredibly saddened when he learned
Tuesday that the Harvard baseball coach had passed away.
"He was awesome," said Herrmann, who pitched for the Indians the past
two seasons and is now with Triple-A Columbus. "He always told me, every
time I talked to him, how proud he was of me, that he could say he
coached a guy in the Major Leagues. He was great. I was upset this
morning and shocked."
Walsh, 58, died suddenly in his home on Tuesday morning. He spent 17
years as Harvard's baseball coach, leading the team to five Ivy League
titles in his tenure. Herrmann, who became the 16th player from Harvard
to reach the big leagues when he broke in with Cleveland in 2010, said
Walsh was the reason he chose to attend the university.
"He took a chance on me," Herrmann said. "I'm a guy who didn't get any
Division I scholarship offers. He committed to me early. It's the only
school I applied to and a lot of that was him. Obviously, it was
Harvard, but meeting him and getting to know him -- my dad and I went up
for a visit -- I instantly loved Coach Walsh."
Herrmann said Walsh convinced the pitcher to hold tight to his dream of reaching the Majors.
"I remember my freshman year, I thought about hanging it up," Herrmann
recalled. "I was thinking about hanging it up, and just going down the
economics course and working on Wall Street. He told me he saw something
in me and to keep plugging away. And then I remember my sophomore year,
I was throwing a bullpen and he told me I just went from suspect to
prospect."
"He was such a good guy and he meant a lot to me," he later added. "He
was a one-of-a-kind guy. I think anyone that knows him would say that."
Frank, you are still suspect.
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