Herts Baseball Club has been awarded a £5,000 grant from the Dacorum Olympic and Paralympic Fund, administered jointly by Dacorum Borough Council and the Dacorum Sports Network.
A select number of organisations have received awards from the Olympic Fund for capital projects that will enhance sport services and facilities for people in Dacorum. The goal is to foster greater involvement in sport, culture and volunteering. Herts Baseball Club – based at Grovehill Playing Fields in Hemel Hempstead – is widely regarded as a positive influence in the local area and their grant application boasted support from local Council members, the Herts Constabulary, the Grovehill Community Centre and many other encouraging organisations.
The funds will be used by Herts Baseball to level the playing surface of a second baseball field, adjacent to their existing diamond in Grovehill. The Club has made a name for itself in recent years, enjoying rapid expansion to become the largest baseball franchise in the United Kingdom. They have a thriving youth Little League programme and an adult team at every level of play in the British Baseball Federation – including the Herts Falcons who joined the venerated National Baseball League in 2009, have secured a winning debut season and will appear in the National Baseball Championships in Croydon, London on August 29-30 to compete for the UK trophy.
Herts Baseball is still awaiting news on another critical grant application which will provide for the clay surfaces, pitching mound and other sport-specific features on Diamond Two, but they've already raised enough funds to assure themselves a level field to play on. The Grovehill baseball facilities are arguably the best in the United Kingdom, and Herts will be the only Club in the nation to boast two professionally-surfaced, adult sized and completely fenced-in baseball fields.
Club President Aspi Dimitrov said, “We are incredibly grateful to Dacorum Borough Council for their continued partnership and support. It would be impossible to offer our services – family-friendly baseball for kids and adults, alike – without the Council's backing. We plan on being a key community presence in Grovehill for many years to come.”


The girls and boys of the Herts Baseball Little League opened the 2009 season in the usual festive fashion.
Dacorum and St. Albans District Commander of Hertfordhsire Fire and Rescue, Simon Brown, said: “It is fantastic to see such a wonderful programme in our community and we are glad that we have a chance to take part in this great event”.
In the first games of the Majors Division, the Red Sox managed to overcome the Yankees 4-3.
This Saturday, 16 May, young baseball players from all around Hertfordshire and the surrounding areas will be heading down to Grovehill Ballpark in Hemel Hempstead.
Last year’s inaugural season ended in a dramatic three-way tie between the Cubs, Red Sox and the Yankees and an extra week of playoff games were required to determine the eventual champions, the Herts Yankees.
The Mets kept pecking away at Goetz through the morning, scoring seven more runs by the sixth inning and leading the Falcons by a score of 8-4. Herts sent the hard-throwing Dan Kerry to the mound in the top of the 7th for his Falcons pitching debut. Kerry was unflappable. Although he surrendered two walks, he also worked a fielder's choice and two swinging strikeouts, buckling the Mets batters with his late-breaking curve.
A wild pitch moved Kerry to third, and then back-to-back walks from Greenberg and Andy Cornish loaded the bases as Sainoji returned to the plate for his second appearance of the inning. The Falcons fans had been screaming with exuberance to this point, but fell silent as Saionji concentrated on the task at hand. He quickly saw two strikes, but remained calm in the batters box, fouled off several pitches, took a few balls and watched the count go full. A smooth, level swing from Saionji squeezed through the gap at second base and the winning run scored easily as the Falcons achieved an incredible 9-8 come-from-behind victory against all odds.
On Sunday, visitors to Grovehill Community Centre in Hemel Hempstead and the surrounding buildings must have been wondering about very manly loud voices grunting and shouting strange things like “Safe”, “Time” and “Yes he did”.
This was the first clinic of its kind to be held in Hertfordshire.
