Next Level

Alumni

College Park has a proud tradition of developing young athletes who go on to excel at the highest levels of baseball. The ultimate achievement for any young ballplayer is reaching Major League Baseball, and College Park has produced players who’ve done exactly that, plus being a launching pad for student-athletes who’ve earned scholarships and opportunities at prestigious universities across the nation. Players have gone on to compete at powerhouse programs, including the University of Oregon, UC Santa Barbara, Fresno State, UC Berkeley, Kansas State University, and many more.

 

Next Level Players

Josh Kasevich — MLB 2nd Rd, Toronto Blue Jays (University of Oregon)

Joe Ammirato — UC Berkeley
Nate Bacosa — Whittier College
Anthony Divittorio — Coppin State University / De Anza College / Gavilan College
Mason Eng — UC Santa Barbara
Wesley Harper — Sacramento State / Boise State University
Conner Henriques — Santa Clara University
Michael Mitchell — UC San Diego
Josh Mollerus — MLB 10th Rd, Toronto Blue Jays (University of Oregon / University of San Francisco)
Garrett Arnold — Ball State University / Newman University / Modesto Junior College

James Bose — Loyola Marymount University / West Valley College
Aidan Kelly — Mission College / Cuesta College
Sam Kim — Westmont College
Will Gnibus — Kansas State University / Campbell University / Mission College
Christian Klostermann — Spring Hill College / College of San Mateo / Canada College
Wonny Kwak — Pomona College / Pitzer College
Kyler Bacosa — San Jose State University / University of Redlands
John Damozonio — Saint Mary’s College
Matt DiCicco — Occidental College
Ethan Payne — Fresno State / Cal State Dominguez Hills / Canada College
Dominic Rolla — Claremont McKenna College
Austin Turkington — UC Berkeley

Jack Harper — De Anza College

Niko Gomozias — University of San Francisco
Chase Knight — Fresno State / Modesto Junior College
Paul Montgomery — Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
Michael Moriarty — University of Puget Sound
Chris Rudell — Westmont College
Caden Sta Maria — University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo / College of Marin
Logan Vieira — De Anza College / West Valley College / Modesto Junior College

Sean DeBoard — Westmont College

Rowan Kelly — UC Santa Barbara

Liam Kropp — California Lutheran University

Ishaan Khambal — San Jose State University
Brandon Kim — Macalester College
Sawyer Stout — Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Nate Turkington — West Valley College
Paul Wheeler — UC Santa Barbara / University of San Francisco
Ryan Bays — West Valley College
Christian Duarte — Santa Clara University
Apolo Lapiz — West Valley College
Sam Mendoza — Skyline College
DJ Dunne — Cuesta College
Dash Knight — Modesto Junior College
Evan Tavarez — West Valley College

Josh Kasevich (MLB Toronto Blue Jays)

Standout Player #1

Josh Kasevich (born January 17, 2001) grew up around the game in Palo Alto, California, after moving from Connecticut when he was about one or two years old. As a kid, he followed his older brother into Little League, spending his earliest days playing constantly at home and moving around the infield in youth ball. As he got older, he sharpened his game with College Park. That blend of Little League reps and high-level travel competition helped him develop into a polished infielder (and a capable pitcher early on) before starring at Palo Alto High School. He went on to play college baseball at the University of Oregon, where he became a key infielder and steady offensive contributor. In 2022, Kasevich was selected by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 2nd round (60th overall), turning the foundation from his youth baseball years into a pro career.

Photo credit: Icon Sportswire / Cliff Welch/Icon Sportswire

Josh Mollerus (MLB Toronto Blue Jays)

Standout Player #2

Josh Mollerus (born October 6, 1999) grew up in Campbell, California and started playing baseball extremely young. After driveway wiffle-ball sessions with his dad, he began T-ball around age five. Josh added structure and competition as he got older with his time at College Park. He developed into a high-level arm at Bellarmine College Preparatory before moving on to college baseball at the University of San Francisco and then the University of Oregon, where he emerged as a late-inning bullpen weapon. In 2023, Mollerus was drafted by the Toronto Blue Jays in the 10th round (304th overall), turning those early Little League and travel-ball reps into a professional opportunity.

Photo credit: University of Oregon Athletics

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