Center fielder and quarterback Dan Morse,
the former Randolph High star, recently completed his record-setting baseball
and football career at Tufts University. He holds Jumbos' marks for most career
hits, runs and stolen bases, as well as single-season records for hits, runs,
and home runs. He also holds Tufts' football records for career rushing touchdowns
and total offense.
A political science major,
Division 3 All-American in baseball, and Rudolph J. Fobert Award recipient
as the outstanding athlete at Tufts, Morse started going to the South Shore
Baseball Club 10 years ago in its first year of existence. "Young kids can
get more individual instruction at SSBC than in Little League or Babe Ruth
where coaches are usually parents volunteering to help," Dan said. "They aren't
necessarily knowledgeable baseball people. SSBC has experienced baseball guys
like Frank (Niles) and Vinnie (Hillyer).
"There's a big difference
playing for and against all-star type teams like I played for SSBC. You get
better playing with and against better competition. The SSBC team I played
for in Florida as a senior in high school had (present minor league) pitchers
Mike Spinelli (Red Sox) and Pete Fisher (Minnesota). It helped me become a
leader, too. When you're a veteran on a team like that, some of the younger
players look up to you, and that also happened to me at Tufts."
Morse is waiting to find
out if he'll be caught in the Major League Baseball draft or signed as a free
agent. If not, he'll probably play in a summer league like he has the past
few years, and get into coaching, possibly at SSBC.
"If it ever came down to
baseball or football," Dan answers a question he's heard too many times, "I
would have picked baseball. I'll just wait and see what happens (in terms
of playing pro baseball). I'd like to play baseball at the next level and
eventually get into coaching. Even if I don't play pro baseball, I'm still
going to play baseball. I want to be a baseball coach and I'd really like
to get into coaching as an assistant in a college program."
SSBC was the foundation
by which Dan Morse built his still budding baseball career. "SSBC definitely
effected my baseball career," he concluded. "It really helped me a lot as
a kid, the education I received and individual instruction. The people at
SSBC know how to talk to young players."