GETTING THE CALL
Even for Mulberg, just to be a part of Team Israel at all, was a circumstance of everything in his life lining up at the right time.
After graduation and landing his first coaching job as an assistant coach at Division III Franklin & Marshall College, he began to work his way up the ranks, securing a position with Division I Bucknell University as an assistant in the summer of 2016.
While there, he was introduced to Eric Holtz, a manager of a baseball program in Westchester County, New York, and father of a former Bucknell baseball player.
Holtz, who is Team Israel’s manager for the upcoming Olympics, shared a common connection with Mulberg. In the past, both were a part of the United States baseball team at the Maccabiah Games, a Jewish-style Olympic type event which takes place every four years in Israel.
Mulberg had played for team USA in the Maccabiah Games in 2009, a few years before Holtz was a coach on the United States squad.
After moving to his position at Richmond, Mulberg coached a pitcher, Jonathan de Marte who was finishing his collegiate baseball career in the spring of 2017.
The following summer, Holtz was named Manager of Team Israel and Mulberg thought de Marte, who is half-Jewish, would make a great addition to the team, which had hopes of qualifying for the Olympics in 2019.
Holtz and de Marte knew of each other due to the fact that they were from similar areas in New York, and the pitcher quickly became one of the most valuable arms on Team Israel’s pitching staff.
Fast forward to the early summer of 2019. Mulberg got a call from Holtz saying that if Team Israel qualified for the European Championships, he would be allowed to add coaches to the staff. And when the team indeed qualified, Holtz extended Mulberg a formal offer to join in an assistant’s role.
“When he asked me to join the team, I was in tears,” explained Mulberg. “Israel, Judaism, and baseball all just mean a lot to me.”
Now after a miraculous run, Mulberg and Team Israel are headed to Tokyo.