PRD Baseball Academy goes to bat for our nonprofit with fundraiser
PRD Baseball Academy goes to bat for our nonprofit with fundraiser
PRD Baseball Academy has adopted The Marisa Tufaro Foundation as a beneficiary of its first annual Holiday Clinic and Fundraiser, from which all proceeds will be equally split between our nonprofit and academy families.
The two-hour clinic for players age 7 through 12 and 13-and-older, which runs from 10 a.m. until noon, costs $40 per player and will be held Dec. 28 at the Jersey Shore Sports Center in Ocean.
The baseball academy is also home to club tournament teams from ages 9-and-under through 16-and-under.
According to former Monroe High School and current Ranney
School head baseball coach Pat Geroni, who heads PRD, one lead parent from each
of the academy’s age groups collaborated to launch a fundraising campaign with
a goal of donating money to worthy causes while simultaneously offsetting costs
families incur during the summer for travel to national tournaments.
“We will have a variety of different events (in the coming months) targeted to accomplishing these goals and we hope to be able to make a difference in New Jersey communities,” said Geroni, whose academy designated our nonprofit as the charity for its initial fundraiser.
Established just over two years ago, The Marisa Tufaro Foundation has already made a profound impact, donating more than $100,000 and spearheading multiple community initiatives to fulfill its mission of helping pediatric patients and other children in need throughout the greater Middlesex County area. Our nonprofit has also donated thousands of toys, nonperishable food items, winter jackets, baby supplies and other items upon which we have placed no monetary value. In addition, the foundation awards college scholarship dollars to exceptional high school students who advance its mission, and provides elementary and middle school students with scholarships to attend a weeklong summer camp at Rutgers University’s Zimmerli Art Museum.
More than a dozen of the high school-age players who
currently compete for PRD are from Middlesex County towns including Colonia,
Monroe, South River, Spotswood and Woodbridge.
Members of PRD’s training and coaching staff also hail from
Middlesex County including Monroe High School graduates Nick Dini and Marc
Magliaro.
Dini made his Major League debut with the Kansas City Royals earlier this year and Magliaro recently retired from professional baseball after reaching the Double A level with the Colorado Rockies organization.
Magliaro will be working the Holiday Clinic along with
former MLB pitcher Jerry Vasto, former Midwest League All-Star Shawn McCorkle
and other trainers and coaches from the academy.
McCorkle’s wife, Michelle, is part of the driving force behind Metuchen High School’s annual Proving Ground Team Building Challenge and Mud Run, which has served as a fundraiser for The Marisa Tufaro Foundation each of the past three years.
Geroni said PRD is passionate about helping players grow on the field, in the classroom and as individuals in life. The fundraising campaign affords PRD players an opportunity to give back to the community and help others.
The Dec. 28 event will be age-bracketed for participation in
hitting and defensive clinics, which will be conducted in separate sections of
Jersey Sports Center’s spacious 20,000-plus square foot facility.
Various games and competitions with a baseball twist will immediately follow the clinic from noon until 1 p.m. Games may include pitching target practice, velocity readings, knocking down objects with a baseball, hitting competitions, a home run derby and more. Those who participate in the games, which are open to everyone, are not obligated, but can donate any amount they wish to the cause.
For more information, please text or call 201-304-3004. To register, visit the PRD website.
Marisa Tufaro, who would have been a junior this year at Edison High School, was born with a complex cardiac defect that required six open-heart surgeries. Despite being hospitalized for more than two years and maintaining hundreds of doctor’s appointments, she lived a vibrant life that inspired. After her sixth surgery, Marisa developed two life- threatening conditions that necessitated a heart transplant. A postoperative complication developed into a rare form of cancer that riddled her brain and body. Marisa succumbed to her illness on Jan. 30, 2017. She was just 13 years old.
Following are some of the ways in which our nonprofit has made a profound impact on pediatric patients and other children in need.
By MarisaFoundationBlog|2019-12-12T23:42:39+00:00December 12th, 2019|Uncategorized|Comments Off on PRD Baseball Academy goes to bat for our nonprofit with fundraiser