Making aliyah for Olympic baseball
Some people make aliyah out of a desire to rebuild the Jewish people in their homeland. Others move to Israel because, frankly, the weather is better and you don’t have to pay tuition to send your kids to Jewish schools.
And then there are those who embrace Israeli citizenship to play in the Olympics.
Ten Jewish-American baseball players will become dual Israeli citizens, at least in part to help the country’s team make the 2020 Olympics.
Some of the players, who will visit Israel’s Interior Ministry next week to begin the aliyah process, also represented Israel in last year’s World Baseball Classic, where Team Israel shocked followers by reaching the quarterfinals.
Jewish Baseball News first reported the development on Wednesday.
While players in the World Baseball Classic only have to be eligible to be a citizen of the team’s country, for the Olympics players have to be actual citizens of the country they represent. They also must be citizens of that country for a year before they can start playing officially in pre-Olympic competition, which begins with the European Championship B Pool in the summer of 2019.
The 10 players slated to make aliyah next week include five who played for Team Israel in the WBC: Corey Baker, a retired minor leaguer; Gabe Cramer, a minor leaguer in the Kansas City Royals system; Blake Gailen and Joey Wagman, who play in the Independent League; and Alex Katz, a Baltimore Orioles minor leaguer team player.
The others are Eric Brodkowitz, a former college player; Jonathan de Marte, who plays in the Independent League; Jeremy Wolf, a retired minor league player; and Jon Moscot and Zack Weiss, Major League Baseball free agents.
Eight of the 10 players are pitchers.
Peter Kurz, the president of the Israeli Association of Baseball, has been contacting American Jewish players to gauge their interest in becoming Israeli citizens.
Moscot, who has several relatives living in Israel, including an uncle and cousins, went there before the WBC and was impressed with baseball there.
“I saw what [baseball] was doing for the youth in Israel, and essentially I wanted to be a bigger part of it,” Moscot, who pitched for the Cincinnati Reds in the 2015 and ‘16 seasons, told Jewish Baseball News. “To be able to go back home to the roots of the religion and be a part of something bigger than myself in respect to baseball and the Jewish community — I thought that was a really cool opportunity.”
Because of their ages, the baseball players will not have to serve in the Israeli army after making aliyah.
Baseball will be featured at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo for the first time since the 2008 Summer Olympics. The tournament will consist of only six teams.
The 10 players are scheduled to play with Israel Association of Baseball players in a game next week at the Baptist Village baseball field in Petach Tikvah.
JTA Wire Service
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