November 17, 2024

Local pitcher fulfills dream as Savannah Bananas come to Philly: ‘It’s pretty surreal’

Connor Higgins sat in the stands at Citizens Bank Park as a kid and dreamed of taking that mound in front of packed house.

It’s safe to say he never pictured himself wearing a Mummer’s suit as he did it.

Higgins, a left-handed pitcher from Allentown, Pa., reached a lifelong goal in an unconventional fashion on Saturday night as the Savannah Bananas, a popular entertainment-based barnstorming baseball team that plays its own version of the sport known as Banana Ball, put on an exhibition in Philadelphia. He suited up for the opposing Party Animals at the Bank in front of an announced crowd of 45,000, the largest attendance the Bananas have attracted to date.

ASU Baseball: Connor Higgins becomes fifth Sun Devil picked in 2018 MLB  Draft, taken by Angels - House of Sparky

He didn’t don red pinstripes — or even a baseball jersey — but Higgins toed the rubber in the ballpark he grew up attending. He spoke about what the opportunity meant to him in a conversation with Phillies Nation leading up to the game.

“It’s pretty surreal,” he said Friday during Bananas rehearsal.

Higgins, 28, grew up in the Lehigh Valley and loved the Phillies as a kid. His family often took him to games during the glory years of 2007 to 2011 as Philadelphia claimed five straight National League East division titles. He fell in love with baseball in the stands, rooting on the best teams in Phillies history.

“That was a good time to grow up as a Phillies fan,” Higgins said. “… Huge Phillies fan, especially Cole Hamels, Cliff Lee. Being a left-hander, they were my guys.”

ASU Baseball: Connor Higgins becomes fifth Sun Devil picked in 2018 MLB  Draft, taken by Angels - House of Sparky

A few times, Higgins went as a Phillies player for Halloween, sporting the cream alternate uniform as his costume. On Oct. 31, 2008, a 12-year-old Higgins skipped out on trick-or-treating to head to Philadelphia for the World Series parade. He remembers sitting on the first-base side — either Section 112 or 113 — as Chase Utley delivered his notorious “world (bleeping) champions” speech at Citizens Bank Park.

Those memories made his homecoming so much sweeter.

“I even stood on the mound today and got a little choked up,” Higgins said.

Once he got a little older, Higgins developed into a standout pitcher for Allentown’s Parkland High School. He graduated in 2015 and moved on to Arizona State, playing three seasons for the Sun Devils. The Angels then selected Higgins in the 30th round of the 2018 draft, and the lefty pitched professionally for four seasons in the minor leagues for Los Angeles and Arizona.

After struggling in Double-A and High-A in 2022, Higgins went home and trained, unsure of what was next. He received a call a month later from Berry Aldridge, the Bananas’ coordinator of Banana Ball operations.

Aldridge had an offer. The organization wanted Higgins to come down to Savannah, Ga., and try out to be a left-handed pitcher for the team. It wasn’t an easy decision.

ASU Baseball: Connor Higgins becomes fifth Sun Devil picked in 2018 MLB  Draft, taken by Angels - House of Sparky

Higgins had always been a serious pitcher with a hope of making the majors. His career hadn’t gone to plan, but leaving pro ball was difficult. Accepting a role with a gimmick team, baseball’s version of the Harlem Globetrotters, meant an end to that chapter of his pitching career and life. He ultimately decided to give it a go, and he was “hooked from Day 1.”

The former minor leaguer now throws yellow baseballs in games where fans can catch foul balls for outs, runners sprint around the bases on walks and players dance, walk on stilts and do backflips.

“I feel like this is the best route I could’ve chosen,” Higgins said. “I’m the happiest I’ve been these last two years playing ball. The minors can be a tough draw. … But this is a nice little alternative — I shouldn’t say alternative. This is a great path for me.”

The fun-loving Higgins joined the Savannah Bananas for their “world tour” last year before “an off-season trade” to the Party Animals for the 2024 season. To go back to the Globetrotters comparison, the Party Animals are no Washington Generals. They compete with the Bananas and bring an edge to the program. Higgins was more than happy to swap jerseys.

ASU Baseball: Connor Higgins becomes fifth Sun Devil picked in 2018 MLB  Draft, taken by Angels - House of Sparky

“We always joke about how the Bananas are for the kids and the Party Animals for the moms,” he said, smiling. “We’re more twerking and champagne and fireworks, and they’re more Disney Channel, as we kind of say. It fits my personality a little bit better.”

Touring with the Party Animals this year, Higgins has had the chance to play in four major-league stadiums with a fifth scheduled in October Miami’s loanDepot Park. None will be quite like his trip to Citizens Bank Park.

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