Metro YOUNG ADULT TEAMWORK / ON THE COVER Stepping Up To The Plate Duo organizes Pitch for Israel charity softball tournament to rally Detroit's young Jews. Robin Schwartz Special to the Jewish News T - Pitch Fror Israel Detroi 1---fotthders Adam Blanck. of•West Bloomfield and Benjy Gordon of Detroit here's something magical about a night at the ball park: the energy of the crowd, the crack of the bat, the simple pleasure of sitting under the stars in the open air. Such was the case on a carefree summer evening in June 2009 when Adam Blanck and Benjy Gordon, two good friends who were college room- mates at the University of Michigan, headed to Comerica Park to cheer on the Detroit Tigers. They don't remember much about the game itself, who the Tigers were playing or the final score, but a conversation they had in the stands sparked an idea that will soon bring together dozens of their peers to raise money for charity and generate excitement about Detroit's Jewish com- munity. Pitch for Israel is an end-of-summer charity softball tournament for 20- and 30-somethings that originated in Toronto (see sidebar). Blanck and Gordon have organized the first-ever local event, with 10 men's teams and 4 co-ed teams. It's set for Aug. 29 at Drake Sports Park in West Bloomfield. "We were talking about how much we love living in Detroit and how the area has such great potential that's not being realized because young people are moving away',' Gordon recalled. "People our age who are sticking around don't seem to have a cohesive sense of community. We wanted to do something to change the Blanck and Gordon, both 23, are exactly the kind of vibrant, enthusiastic young professionals community leaders are try- ing so desperately to retain. Blanck grew up in West Bloomfield and is a graduate of U-M's Ross School of Business; he'll attend law school at 3 U-M in the fall. He recently interned in Washington, D.C. as part of the White House Internship Program and volunteers t as a member of the White House Advance team, traveling ahead of President Barack Obama or Vice President Joe Biden to help plan logistics on domestic and interna- tional trips. Gordon was raised in Huntington Woods and now lives in Detroit. He studied film, communications and American culture at U-M and is an aspiring film producer who has tapped into Michigan's growing movie biz. He's currently working on this third feature film. When the two met several years ago through a mutual friend, they just "clicked." Now, they're working together to reinvigorate the community "We think now is the time not only to encourage young Jewish Detroiters to return to Michigan, but to aggressively sell it',' Blanck said. "Losing talented young people is fast becoming a serious threat to the local Jewish community's future." The Wind Lip Long before they met in college, Blanck and Gordon both attended separate children's summer camps in Ontario. They kept in touch with childhood camp friends across the border and that's how they first learned about Pitch for Israel in Toronto. Last sum- mer, they traveled to Canada to take part in the softball tournament and figure out how to bring the event to Detroit. They say get- ting the ball rolling turned out to be easy. "We both went to our parents and were met with encouragement and enthusiasm',' Gordon said. "Then we contacted YAD [the Young Adult Division of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit] and, from the start, they thought it was a great idea. The positive feedback we were getting kept energizing us." Through YAD, the duo met Jordan Wolfe, director of CommunityNEXT, a new Federation initiative launched in January that also has the goal of attracting and retaining young Jewish professionals. Together, they came up with a game plan, selected a date and location, recruited team captains and players, solicited sponsors and Stepping Up on page 18 August 12 2010 17