Thursday, July 15, 2021

ON THE SABBATH, PITCHER WALKS TO AND FROM THE BALLPARK

Diamondbacks select Jacob Steinmetz, first known Orthodox Jewish player drafted

 

 

 

 

Jacob Steinmetz made history Monday afternoon.

The Woodmere, L.I. native became the first known Orthodox Jewish baseball player to get drafted, selected in the third round (77th overall) by the Diamondbacks. It has a slot value of $805,600.

The 6-foot-6, 224-pound right-hander, who has signed with Fordham, now has to decide if he will go to college or begin his professional career.

Steinmetz keeps kosher and observes the Sabbath. From sundown Friday until sunset on Saturday, he cannot ride in a car, bus, train or plane. He can only walk. For baseball tournaments, he traveled ahead of time and arranged hotels within walking distance of the fields. Sometimes, that meant five-mile hikes the day he pitches. He does play during the Sabbath and on Jewish holidays, and explained to teams during the draft process how he could continue to juggle both his faith and baseball career.

Apparently, the Diamondbacks were confident enough in what they heard from Steinmetz to pick him in the third round.

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