Adelphi hosts Camp Abilities, a weeklong sports camp for young people with visual impairments. There, Matthew Puvogel and the Long Island Bombers, in a demonstration of beep baseball.
By Charity Shumway
“It’s a dangerous sport, I have to admit it,but it’s a lot of fun.”—Matt Puvogel ’06Enabled by a Beeping Ball and Buzzing Bases
Each summer, Adelphi hosts Camp Abilities, a weeklong sports campfor young people with visual impairments. At Camp Abilities this year,as he has for the last eight years, Matthew Puvogel ’06 will join his team,the Long Island Bombers, in a demonstration of beep baseball.
Beep baseball is an adaptive version ofbaseball, named for the beeping ballpitched to visually impaired batterswho, after hitting the ball, then runto buzzing bases.
Mr. Puvogel started playing beep baseballduring his junior year at Adelphi. He’d firstheard of the sport almost two years earlier,at a conference where he presentedon his experiences as a visually impairedstudent at Adelphi and the support he’dfound through the University’s . But even afterlearning about beep baseball, he tooka while to warm to the idea. As he says, “Itsounds crazy! You’re blindfolded and a ballis flying at you, and you can’t see it.”
Ultimately, Mr. Puvogel came around.“It’s a dangerous sport, I have to admit it,but it’s a lot of fun,” he says. Joining theLong Island Bombers, though, has beena lot more than just fun for Mr. Puvogel,who has been losing his sight progressively.“There’s a whole range of vision losson the team,” he explains. “It’s a team, butit’s also a coping mechanism, seeing howother people deal with their blindness.”
Through the team, Mr. Puvogel met anumber of mentors including his futureboss, Matthew P. Sapolin, who was ableto hire Mr. Puvogel after graduation as amayoral office assistant in the New YorkCity Mayor’s Office for People withDisabilities. Now, Mr. Puvogel works forthe City of New York on issues rangingfrom service dog assistance to adaptivesports and handicap parking awareness.
While his work keeps him busy, his commitmentto the Long Island Bombers hasnever flagged. He continues to appreciatethe challenge of the game, and play oneof the sport’s hardest positions—directlybehind the pitcher, who is just 20 feetfrom the batter. Mr. Puvogel has excelledat the position, and he posted the thirdbest defensive performance at last July’sNational Beep Baseball Association WorldSeries in Ames, Iowa.
“You can’t have any fear. You’re running into abase. You’re hitting a wall. You’re focusing onthe abilities you have,” he says. And now, as ayoung professional and a player with years ofexperience, Mr. Puvogel is in the position tomentor new players just as he was once mentored.“I’m only 28, and you can play BeepBaseball till you’re in your 60s,” he says. “I’mgoing to play for as long as I can.”
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu