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The gym at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in the Alexandria section of Fairfax County, Virginia, was packed Saturday as 25 young athletes with disabilities took part in the schoolâs first adaptive baseball clinic.
The event was hosted by the schoolâs varsity baseball team and led by Andrew Haydon, a 17-year-old junior who created it. He said the idea grew from his experience with his 13-year-old brother, who has autism and other learning disabilities.
âThis whole camp is deeply personal to me,â Haydon said. âMy younger brother has autism and an array of learning disabilities.â
He called his brother his âsuperheroâ and credited his mother for encouraging him to turn the idea into reality.
Haydon said he wanted to give kids like his brother a chance to discover adaptive baseball. âI feel like this is a great opportunity to give kids like my little brother, who werenât aware of adaptive leagues, a chance to get experience with adaptive baseball and maybe fall in love with baseball and continue playing,â he said.
Twenty members of the schoolâs varsity baseball team volunteered as coaches, guiding the athletes through drills. Haydonâs brother Nick helped out in the sensory room.
âItâs a room where thereâs fidgets. Theyâre supposed to help with kids if they get overwhelmed,â Nick said.
The clinic was overseen by varsity baseball coach Jennifer Hammond, who said the team is focused on more than teaching skills. âWe are realizing weâre not just helping shape baseball players, but weâre trying to shape good humans on and off the field,â she said.
Parents filled the gymâs sidelines and watched as the young athletes worked on batting, running and throwing skills. Shannon LaBarbara brought her son Edison and said the clinic left her feeling encouraged.
âI feel very inspired,â she said. âThis group of young men feels inclined and encouraged to do this and to bring inclusion to everything that theyâre doing.â
One athlete, Kai, seemed to know everyone there. His mother, Candita Sabavala, said the 13-year-old has always loved sports. âWe drag him to his older brotherâs games all the time, so itâs nice for him to be able to have something of his own,â she said.
Between running, batting and throwing balls, WTOP asked Kai what he liked most about the baseball clinic.
With a laugh, Kai said âEverything.â
This article was featured on wtop.com Jimmy Alexander on February 22, 2026
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