
Originally aired July 14, 1995
Dreaming of the Big Leagues
Reported by Brad Penner,
STATEWIDE Correspondent
This year the Beatrice Bruins are celebrating their 25th anniversary.
Through the years they've established a winning tradition and become one
of the top semi-pro teams in the country. This year they're leading
their league and playing on a newly renovated field thanks to a booster
group who support the bruins and the legion baseball programs. The
Bruins are made up of college players on summer vacation and older guys
who can't give up the game. Beatrice isn't a glamorous place, but as we
found out, it is a place to play.
[Players collecting admissions at the field:] "Hi
there. How're you doin'? $2 please."
"Is that all?"
It's a summer evening at Christenson Field. The Bruins
are playing, and it's a special night.
"Can I get your names and put you in the raffle
here. It's Little Caesar's Pizza night."
Ticket takers Travis Smith and Scott Sasser also do a
little pitching for the Bruins. Travis came from Texas Tech. Scott goes
to school in California.
[Scott:] "Small towns, you know, a lot of people
wouldn't think there'd be much fun around here. But, you know, we're a
pretty tight-knit group. So keep close. Hello. Got your tickets? Do you
want to get in the raffle here?"
[Pitcher Craig Sanders:] "Anybody would tell you
that summer ball is not quite the same intensity, I guess, you could
say."
The team's having a pretty good year, and more people
are coming out to watch them play teams from Manhattan and Salina and
Clarinda and Topeka.
[Pitcher Travis Smith:] "Actually this year our
crowds have doubled or tripled from last year. Our average games -- like
tonight there'll probably be 70 or 80 people here -- 60, 70, 80 people.
Last year we might have been lucky to get 20 when we were playing a
great team."
The Bruins lineup is filled with players from Texas
and California, places far away from Beatrice.
[Travis:] "I had no idea what to expect."
[Brad Penner:] "Where the hell's Beatrice?"
[Travis:] "I knew I was coming to corn
country."
But they don't come here for corn. The Bruins have
earned a winning reputation.
[Jason Parsons:] "I just want to go somewhere in
the summertime where there's a lot of hard-nosed players, you know, who
play good baseball. And there's a small amount of players on a team so
you get to play every game. It's not a glamorous place, you know, like
the Cape Cod League or the, you know, league up in Alaska. But we'll
kick any other teams' butts any day."
Bob Steinkamp
manages the Bruins. You could call him the owner, too, but there's
really not much to own. Steinkamp founded the Bruins 24 years ago
because he wanted a team to play for.
[Bob:] "All these small towns around here had
baseball teams. Beatrice didn't and so I got to thinking one day maybe
we ought to have a team in Beatrice so went out and got a few hundred
bucks together and started a local team and kind of grew from
there."
[Brad Penner:] "Is this the trophy room
here?"
[Bob:] "Yeah, all this stuff is stuff that I've
kind of accumulated over the last 20 years."
It grew into a hardware business -- trophies, plaques,
and pictures symbolizing success.
[Bob:] "We played the best amateur teams or
semi-pro teams in the United States. We've been able to hold our own the
last five years I think that we've been to the National Tournament.
Three of those five years we finished in the final four with a fourth, a
third, and last year a national runner-up finish."
[Chad Dembisky:] "Bob's an interesting character.
'cause what he'll do -- he'll sit there and act like he doesn't see or
hear anything. You know, not say a word. He's pretty quiet in the dugout
unless you get him fired up but the man hears and knows every single
thing that goes on."
Chad Dembisky is a rookie assistant coach from
California. He's also the stat man and groundskeeper, and he wouldn't
have it any other way.
[Chad:] "It's absolutely a throwback to what
baseball's supposed to be. We have uniforms that are five or six years
old. Our facility compared to other facilities is just garbage. It
really is. But we have players with pride, we have players that want to
go out and play hard every single day. And it all starts from the head
guy."
[Bob working with kids:] "Work hard again today.
I want everybody to hustle. Again I want to emphasize we don't want to
get anybody hurt."
Every summer, Steinkamp and some of his players put on
a clinic for area kids. Chris Belding's been here before as a student.
[Chris:] "When you're little, you come out to the
camps. You do everything and you never know if you're good enough to
play with them and it's just exciting to get to play for them after
wanting to all through high school and everything and getting a
chance."
Belding's done with school now. He thought about
getting a job in Texas, but he came back for another summer.
"For one, it's hard to give it up. And two, I'm
just hoping for a chance to play minor league ball somewhere and just
looking for a chance to play pretty much. It's hard to give up once you
start it."
Most of the Bruins are still chasing big league
dreams. Steve Drent is slowly letting his dream go. He had his shot at
pro ball in the Class A Northern League. Now he's back with the Bruins.
[Steve:] "It's a great opportunity for young
players as well as myself. You know, I'm a little old. I'm probably the
oldest one on the team. It's a good opportunity and not so much to get
-- for me to get picked up but for me to play, play really serious
baseball. And it's really good baseball. The level of competition here I
would say is about A ball. I think we could hang with some of the
Northern League teams. Whether it be the Sioux City, Sioux Fall, I think
we could play 500 baseball with those clubs."
Last summer Drent earned his paycheck playing
baseball. This summer he works for a livestock equipment firm in
Beatrice. Bruins don't get paid to play, but they do get help finding
summer jobs with flexible hours.
[Steve:] "I think Bob's done a great job of
setting up like with businesses and stuff like that as far as places for
us to work that understand that we're ballplayers, and that's why we're
here."
And when the workday's done or the game's over, most
of the Bruins go home to their families. Dick and Kay Genrich opened
their home to Jason Parsons and Chad Dimbisky.
"It's better than my family back home 'cause my
parents are never home. So, you know, it's like having the parental
units around all the time keeping us under control."
"These people are opening their house to you and
saying, come on in and be part of our family. That's the neat part about
it."
The Genrich's daughter Mickey has become a substitute
sister.
"I got a 17-year-old sister back home in Montana,
but I left home when she was probably 13 years old. So the years that I
missed for her, Mick kinda makes up for me."
[Kay Genrich:] "They've been wonderful with
Mickey. They really, really do treat her just like a little sister. And
so that has been really fun for me to watch them treat her so
good."
Without families like the Genrichs, there wouldn't be
a Beatrice Bruins baseball team. Financially, it's a shoestring
operation, something that's easy to see when the team goes on the road.
[Craig Doss:] "It gets kind of tiring."
There's no team bus.
[Craig Doss:] "Got to get up at 6:30 in the
morning to go work."
No first-class hotels.
[Craig Doss:] "And then you got to come back
later in the afternoon and play ball."
Rarely do they even spend the night on a road trip.
[Craig Doss:] "We're on the road until sometimes
1:30. That's been about the earliest we've gotten home, I think."
On this day, the destination is Clarinda, Iowa. It's
about a three-hour drive. Plenty of time to talk about baseball.
Steinkamp, who just got a job as a scout for the Chicago Cubs, told a
story about one of his pitchers.
"He pitched for us twice, and I said, you know,
this guy deserves a chance to play some pro ball and so I just signed
him at my kitchen table."
"He was so excited, he misspelled his first name
on the contract, you know. I said, you sure that's right? No, it's
wrong."
There aren't any fancy facilities in Clarinda, but
it's good baseball, and that's what matters. It's another place for
Beatrice native Craig Doss to see how he stacks up.
[Doss:] "I hope to play Division One someplace,
and I hope to get drafted. That's what I've been working for since I was
about two or three years old."
Another late night, a long drive home, but no one
complains.
"If I want to get drafted, I better play so
that's what I gotta do."
Doug Tegtmeiers has been where Craig Doss wants to go.
After a couple seasons in the minors, he came back to his hometown where
a pitcher is expected to know how to handle a rake.
[Doug:] "This is one of the rare places where you
can just -- they're out here to play ball and they're just working their
butts off just trying to do better. And it's one of the few places in
any level I've played at where they just do it because they love it. The
Cinderella story happens year after year and it's fun being a part of
that."
Last year the Bruins set a team record for wins, but
they broke their string of top five finishes at the National Baseball
Congress Tournament. They lost a couple of close games and wound up
11th. The sights and sounds of summertime are back at Christenson Field
this year. Youngsters hoping for a big league break and veterans putting
off the real world for another summer.
"Baseball is a kids' game. You gotta be a kid and
you gotta love it and you gotta love to play, and it is -- it's just
hold onto your childhood and one more year of not growing up yet."
Reporting for STATEWIDE, I'm Brad Penner.
Captioning by Nebraska Captioning Center, Lincoln, Nebraska .
STATEWIDE is funded in part by the Shoemaker Family Foundation of
Cambridge, Nebraska building bridges of understanding between rural and
urban Nebraska through its support of STATEWIDE news programming.
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