Partly Cloudy
45°
Crystal Lake, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Area baseball players knocking on the door of big leagues

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

When it comes to describing his professional baseball career, Mike Benacka doesn’t have a Reader’s Digest version.

“I don’t know where to start,” said Benacka, a Marian Central graduate who grew up in Lake in the Hills. “I took the scenic route.”

After playing at four colleges and spending almost two seasons with an Independent League team, Benacka knows exactly where he wants to end up – in the major leagues with the Oakland Athletics.

“I’m right there on the doorstep,” said Benacka, who was a Class AA Texas League All-Star last season before being promoted to Class AAA Sacramento, the A’s top farm team. “That made it easier to get up in the morning in the middle of winter to go work out.”

Benacka and three other local athletes – Prairie Ridge grad Rick Zagone (Baltimore Orioles), Cary-Grove’s Brett Nommensen (Tampa Bay Rays) and Hampshire’s Jake Goebbert (Houston Astros) – officially got back to work this month with their Major League Baseball organizations.

For Benacka, his baseball work history came together in an unorthodox way.

An A For Endurance

New addresses and perseverance are nothing new to Benacka, a 27-year-old right-handed relief pitcher who is in the team’s minor-league camp in Phoenix this month.

Benacka spent one season as a redshirt at Northern Illinois before playing at Kishwaukee College in Malta, Elgin Community College and Lindenwood University, an NAIA school in suburban St. Louis. In 2006, he failed in a tryout with the River City Rascals, an O’Fallon, Mo.-based team in the independent Frontier League and was left with only resentment.

A year later, after a coaching change and a recommendation from ECC coach Bill Angelo, Benacka made the team, worked out of the bullpen and eventually honed a devastating changeup.

“By the second half of that year, things had really clicked,” said Benacka, who became the Rascals’ all-time saves leader with 33 before being signed by Oakland after the 2007 Frontier League All-Star Game.

Benacka’s changeup continued to give him a boost as he spent the final half of the 2008 season with Class A Stockton (Calif.).

“It spins like a fastball, then it just takes a dive,” Benacka said. “Hitters don’t like it.”

Previous Page|1||||

Reader Poll

How often do you go boating?

As often as possible
A few times a season
Once in a while
Never