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Army’s Jacob Hurtubise gives club new speed

C.J. Gillman, the Cincinnati Reds’ minor league hitting coordinator, knows what it’s like to play against Jacob Hurtubise.

Gillman was an assistant hitting coach at Air Force during the 2019 season when Hurtubise starred at Army as a prolific leadoff hitter and talented defender in center field. When the two schools matched up against each other for the first game of the season, the scouting report on Hurtubise said to prepare for him to bunt.

With his elite speed, it’s important to keep him off the base paths. But that’s easier said than done.

In this 2019 photo provided by Army West Point Athletics, Army NCAA college baseball player Jacob Hurtubise is seen on the field during a baseball game at Johnson Stadium at Doubleday Field in West Point, N.Y. Drafted last year on a late round by the Seattle Mariners, Hurtubise is hopeful of taking advantage of a new regulation that allows cadet-athletes at Army, Navy and Air Force to delay their military obligation upon graduation to pursue professional sports careers. (Mady Salvani/Army West Point Athletics via AP)

Hurtubise laid down a bunt toward third base and reached safely in the top of the first inning. He advanced to second on a passed ball, moved to third on a sacrifice bunt and scored on another passed ball.

That was just a sign of things to come. Hurtubise reached base five times and scored five times. Army won 17-2.

“Hurtubise is an absolute weapon,” Gillman said. “I remember, it was like, OK this guy will bunt. We had our third baseman like a step in off the grass. He still laid a drag bunt down. … It was pretty cool the way he created on-base opportunities and then he was devastating on the bases, stealing bases.”

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Hurtubise signed with the Reds as a non-drafted free agent last summer and he became the first baseball player to sign a pro contract after former Secretary of Defense Mark Esper endorsed a policy to allow military service academy graduates with a realistic chance of a pro career to delay their military service obligations.


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