"I got to the point that, well the way I was raised--both my parents are college-educated--playing ball right out of school was not something I wanted to do," Lentz says.
His first shot at college baseball, however, was disappointing.
"My No. 1 choice, no-holds-barred--meaning I was ready in October of my senior year [1997] to commit--was Stanford on a scholarship," Lentz recounts. "I was out there in October, turned in my application and it was supposed to be a done deal in a week because the admissions officers were looking at all the baseball players then."
Stanford wasn't impressed.
"They wouldn't let me in," Lentz says. "They said they had never admitted a baseball player with under a 3.0 [GPA]...my grades were just too low in high school."
While the rejection hurt, Lentz still wanted to go to college.
In March he was accepted at both Harvard and Yale and thought about his options. Lentz was worried about rejecting a possible offer from a big league team after being drafted in a early round. He consulted with Lennie Merullo, a friend who ran Major League Baseball's scouting department in the Northeast and was a former major league infielder to boot.
Read more in Sports
Whoopty-Duke: Partial Refs Taint Glorious RunRecommended Articles
-
Lentz Named to Baseball All-Ivy First TeamBrian Lentz was Harvard baseball's version of Clint Eastwood this year. When opposing baserunners took off for the next bag,
-
Lentz Provides Boost At the Plate and Behind ItEntering its four game series with the Harvard this past weekend, Yale's baseball team had 37 stolen bases. At the
-
Kropf, Mann Hope to Catch on With Lentz GoneBallclubs need leadership behind the plate to win. The Harvard baseball team probably thought it had that area covered with
-
Torn Labrum Sidelines Baseball's HordonThe deep freeze abated long enough Monday afternoon for the Harvard baseball team to practice outdoors. Having lost ten seniors
-
Full-Contact LentzBrian Lentz has just been asked whether the fact that he’s never won an Ivy League championship in his Harvard
-
SIDEBAR: Schuyler Mann '05When the comic book-sounding “Sky Mann” was announced at the Beanpot tournament last year, it was oddly appropriate. The man