If your reason for not making aliyah was not having your kids be raised on baseball, you had better pack your mitt on your next trip as may have found it's new favorite pastime (assuming they have the patience for nine innings). Sure, Israelis think baseball is a Hollywood sport and ranks on the popularity charts next to sunflower-seed-spitting, but Israel's first baseball league held tryouts this week, and apparently, they didn't suck as badly as they thought they would. Their goal: to teach Israelis that headbutting a 95-mile-per-hour baseball hurts, and to be invited to the 2009 World Baseball Classic. Check the article  or just see it below:

Note: Dan Kurtzer, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel, is the league's commissioner, and Marvin Goldklang, a minority owner of the New York Yankees, is on the board of advisers. Pretty freakin cool.

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Dozens of Jewish athletes flocked to a Baptist convention center in the heart of Israel on Friday in hopes of realizing a deeply American dream: becoming a professional baseball player.

Israel's fledgling pro baseball league held its first tryout for local ballplayers in this Tel Aviv suburb, putting them through a grueling battery of sprints, fielding drills and simulated games under an unseasonably warm November sun.

With the pop of leather mitts and crack of wooden bats filling the air, the scene resembled a typical ballgame in small-town America. But the tryout had a decidedly Israeli feel.

Players included Orthodox seminary students, Israeli soldiers and Mideast peace activists. They freely mixed Hebrew and English baseball jargon — there apparently is no Hebrew word for “curve ball” — and some people left early to get home in time for the Jewish sabbath at sundown.

Larry Baras, the American businessman spearheading the effort to launch the league, was ecstatic over the turnout of roughly 70 prospects, far exceeding initial expectations in the single digits.

“I was sitting back there, just taking it all in,” he said after getting his first glimpse of the local talent. “It was no different here than it was in the states.”

Baras envisions a six-team professional league, modeled after small-market minor league baseball in the U.S. He already has scheduled opening day for next June 24.

Despite the signs of progress, Baras still faces some considerable obstacles. Israel has few playing fields, a minuscule fan base, and most critically, a dire shortage of world-class — or even high school varsity level — baseball players.

“We'll have a lot of affirmative action,” Baras conceded. “But I think the caliber today was higher than we thought it would be.”

Baras expects the league to be comprised overwhelmingly of foreign players, mostly American college players or former minor leaguers. The league is also looking toward the increasingly competitive Australian baseball scene.

After a tryout in Massachusetts last summer, the league has signed four players, including a fireballing pitcher with a 93 mph fastball, and expects to bring in more than 10 others, Baras said.

Intent on developing a local talent base, Baras has drafted Dan Duquette, former general manager of the Boston Red Sox, to be the league's director of player development.

Duquette scouted the players at Friday's tryout, scribbling notes on a clipboard. He watched stone-faced, even as players struck out and bungled ground balls.

“The talent level is representative for the country,” he said. “There were some good plays and there were some forgettable plays.”

Duquette said he expects to sign roughly half a dozen players from Friday's tryout. But that tiny number mattered little to most participants.

“Potentially I have a good shot. I haven't played in two years. I just have to warm up,” said Gilad Schenker, 21, a pitcher and center fielder on Israel's national baseball team who now spends his days in an Israeli combat unit.

Organizers hope the two-month summer league will attract interest in baseball and help develop local talent. They expect to bring in more Israeli players in the coming years with the goal of enabling the country to field a team for the 2009 World Baseball Classic.

“We have a lot of work to do,” Duquette said. “But we're going in the right direction … I'm encouraged.”

In addition to Duquette, Baras has drafted a high-powered lineup to get the league off the ground. Dan Kurtzer, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel, is the league's commissioner, and Marvin Goldklang, a minority owner of the New York Yankees, is on the board of advisers.

Major League Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig also has voiced support, and Baras has been busy seeking sponsors to buy the local teams and working with local officials to find suitable playing fields. The tryout Friday took place at the “Baptist Village,” a visitors' center that is home to Israel's only full-size baseball diamond.

He has no doubt the league will be ready to play next June.

Perhaps the biggest question: If Baras builds it, will they come? Israeli is a soccer and basketball-crazed nation with no tradition of baseball.

Baras hopes to create a fan base by appealing to the tens of thousands of American immigrants living here, as well as tourists who come during the peak summer season.

Dan Rothem, an Israeli-born pitcher, said it could be a tough sell.

“Average Israelis look at baseball and see nine guys standing there,” said Rothem, 30, who played at Gardner-Webb University, a Division One program in North Caroline.

Rothem, who said he was the first native Israeli to play college ball in the U.S., is expected to be one of the first signees in the new league.

“Hopefully if we can get a good league up and running here, people will be more open to what baseball really is,” he said.

Girls have a shot at the big time too
Israeli girls have not been neglected by “America's national pastime.”

Under the guidance of coach Adriana Urbandt, girls as young as 8 are getting exposure to balls and strikes, grounders and popups in softball teams scattered around the country — mostly in towns which have American immigrants. Urbandt, herself from Argentina, coaches them all — a situation which places her in a sticky predicament when the teams face each other.

Urbandt says it's all in good fun. “For Israeli girls it's a novelty, but for some girls from the United States or with American-born parents, it's a taste of home and the chance to live the American dream.”

Field conditions are far from American standards. The girl's softball team from Raanana must contend with horses and manure in the outfield and occasional attacks from predatory birds.

“It's hard to catch a fly ball when a bird is coming at you at the same time with its claws,” said Lironne Koret, 13, a second baseman from Ramat Hasharon.

But there are benefits for the young Israeli softballers: occasional tournaments in Eilat and Europe and maybe, just maybe, a shot at a place on the 2008 Olympic team.

“I hope there aren't any attack-birds on the field in Beijing,” Lironne said.

The AP contributed to this report.