By Will Jauss
September 10, 2007
Editor's note: Will Jauss, the 11-year-old son of
Los Angeles Dodgers coach Dave Jauss, lives every kid's
dream: He gets to hang out with a Major League baseball team
all summer. Will shared some of his experiences with Yahoo!
Sports.
Email Will at willjauss@yahoo.com.
Normal kids see their dad every night when he comes home
from work. Normal kids spend their summers at camp, the
beach or staying home with their families. I spend my summer
in Los Angeles, 3,000 miles from our home in Boston, just so
I can see my dad while he works. Other times I don't see my
dad for weeks. My family goes to a baseball game almost
every day. Sometimes I get to play catch and take batting
practice on a major league field. This is the life of a
Baseball Kid.

Will Jauss,
center, at the ballpark with, from
left, his brother Charley, dad Dave,
mom Billie and brother D.J. (Jon
SooHoo / Special to Yahoo! Sports)
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I get to go to the ballpark early with my dad and my two
older brothers, D.J. and Charley. My dad keeps all our
baseball gear in his locker. We go to the clubhouse to
change into our workout clothes, then we hit in the
underground cages where the players practice hitting.
Sometimes my dad throws live batting practice to us on
the real field at Dodger Stadium. Last year I never got the
ball out of the infield, but this year I hit the ball to the
outfield and my brothers hit it onto the warning track. It
is a lot harder than you think to hit on a major league
baseball field.
After hitting, we go to the bullpen to pitch to Dad. We
also go to the outfield to long-toss. Once we are done with
our workout, we shower in the clubhouse and get dressed.
One of the fun things I did last summer was spend time in
the outfield shagging fly balls during batting practice. I
had a lot of fun talking to
J.D. Drew, who now is with the
Boston Red Sox, while waiting for fly balls. When a ball
would come my way I would try to make a diving catch unless
it was coming directly to me. I was able to shag fly balls
in places like Arizona, New York and Colorado, but the one
thing that remained the same in every stadium was that kids
and adults in the stands always screamed at me, asking for
baseballs.
In the clubhouse, I liked to do surveys with the players,
asking them to vote for their favorite things. Two of the
surveys I did were, "Who's better,
David Ortiz or
Albert Pujols?" and, "What's better, Dr. Pepper or root
beer?" Pujols and Dr. Pepper won. I was rooting for David
Ortiz and root beer.
MAKING FRIENDS

Will
picnics with other children of
Dodgers players and coaches in front
of the third-base dugout. (Jon
SooHoo / Special to Yahoo! Sports)
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There is a room at Dodger Stadium for the Baseball Kids
and other family members to hang out during games. I gave
wacky nicknames to all the babysitters, like ChiliDog, Sheep
lady, and Quacker man. The nicknames rhyme with their actual
names and help me remember them. Every home game, the
sitters have fun activities like making Play-Doh, playing
musical chairs or creating crafts. Some nights we play
PlayStation games like "Need for Speed" or DDR (Dance Dance
Revolution).
The babysitters usually have the game on TV in the room.
We check on it every so often, but when you are at as many
games as we Baseball Kids are, they can get boring.
When I leave at the end of the summer, I say to my
friends in L.A., "See you next year," but to some of them I
say, "I hope to see you next year." That's what's hard for
Baseball Kids: You meet someone who becomes your best
friend, and then their dad gets traded, released, or signs a
contract with another team and you never see that person
again.
We had
Jose Cruz Jr. on our team last year, and I became really
good friends with his kids. They didn't come back this year.
I was excited to be able to spend two whole summers with my
best friends, the Beimel kids and the Kent kids. I also made
new friends with the Gonzalez kids. We will see who next
year brings.
FLIGHT TO PHILADELPHIA
A couple of weeks ago, we made our way back east with the
team for a six-day trip to Philadelphia and New York. My
brothers and I wore suit coats and khaki pants like dad
because we have to follow the team dress code.

Will
travels with his dad (behind him)
and Dodgers manager Grady Little,
right. (Jon SooHoo / Special to
Yahoo! Sports)
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When we got to Dodger Stadium, the clubhouse guys loaded
our luggage into a white delivery truck. Two buses left the
stadium for the airport, one for coaches, trainers, media
and other front office people, and the other for the
players. The buses drove right into the airport where the
plane was specially parked. The security check was outside
right beside the plane. When it was my turn, I put my
backpack on a table and a guard checked me with a wand from
the top of my head to the bottom of my shoes.
Once on the plane, our family usually sits in the first
rows in coach. Our manager, Grady Little, sits in first
class with the coaches who are traveling without family,
some front office staff and people who have been with the
Dodgers a long time. All the players sit in the back.
Two rows behind us are Brad Zager and Josh Cumming, two
media guys I play PlayStation Portable with. On one flight
we played NHL '07 the whole ride. This trip they slept most
of the flight, which left me to play alone while my brothers
watched "The Matrix."
Sometimes we have a flight attendant who is a magician.
One of the cool tricks he did was change a $1 bill into a
$100 bill. My dad pulled out all of his ones and asked for
change.
On the charter they serve sandwiches, meals (ribs,
chicken or fish with a salad, cookie and vegetables) and
candy. My brothers and I really enjoy the food.
By the end of the flight to Philadelphia, it had been
seven hours because of a delay. When we landed, we got on
another bus and drove to the hotel. It was raining and very
cold. When we got to the hotel there was a table with
envelopes with the keys in them. Each envelope has the name
of the player or coach and a room number.
Because the flight was so long and the time difference
was three hours, we were very hungry. We went to a
restaurant inside the hotel and ate as a family. It was 1
a.m. when we got to the room, and Dad left at noon the next
day for the ballpark.
PLAYING PSP WITH
RUSSELL MARTIN
On the last day of the Philadelphia series, we brought
our luggage to the lobby and another truck took it to New
York.

Will plays
video games during the Dodgers'
train ride from Philadelphia to New
York. (Jon SooHoo / Special to
Yahoo! Sports)
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When the game was over we went to the bus and took off
for the train station, where we were met by Amtrak security
and escorted to a waiting area. My family and I were sitting
there alone until Dodgers catcher Russ Martin came in and
challenged me to a home run derby on my PSP. I picked
Ryan Howard and he picked himself. At first he thought
the match up was unfair because Howard is better in this
game than Russ, but not in real life! Russ won the first
time and I won the second.
The trip to New York was only an hour. It was a much
better travel day than the seven-hour plane trip three days
earlier. When we reached Penn Station, we went up an
escalator and a lady from a different train was struggling
with a lot of luggage. Russ Martin asked if she needed any
help, but she said no. Next thing you know, as she started
up the escalator she fell backwards and one of the Dodgers'
wives caught her.
We spent two days in New York and went to Toys "R" Us in
Times Square to see the Ferris wheel and the little section
of Candyland with all the candy you can imagine, all inside
the store.
When we are in New York, we take a subway to Shea Stadium
called the 7 Train. The ride takes almost 45 minutes. The
last game we saw wasn't so good for the Dodgers. We lost,
4-3.
SAYING GOODBYE TO DAD
Our whole family drove home to Boston after the game. It
was already midnight when we got to our house. We were
excited to be home after three months, but also sad because
Dad had to leave in the morning to rejoin the team in New
York. He hadn't been home since February and we didn't know
when we would see him again.
Still, our summer was unbelievable. We made new friends,
saw a lot of baseball and our family was together. When we
said goodbye to Dad, we said we hoped to see him soon, but
not too soon because we would rather see him in October in
L.A. for the World Series!
That would be the ultimate, especially for a Baseball
Kid. |