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From booking acts to pitching for Team Israel

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(JTA) Before last November, Shlomo Lipetz already had his dream job.

After drinking coffee and listening to a morning news podcast – The Daily from the New York Times – he would take the L train from his Brooklyn apartment and head to his job as vice-president for programming at City Winery, a music venue and wine bar franchise headquartered on the Hudson River in Manhattan’s Chelsea neighbourhood.

There he would dig straight into his emails – an estimated 500 to 700 per day – and get to work on lining up some of the thousands of shows that the City Winery franchise hosts in its more than 10 venues across the country each year. He recently booked, for example, dozens of post-rehab comeback shows for comedian John Mulaney and a cross-country tour for the provocateur pop star Sinead O’Connor (who promptly decided to retire from music after agreeing to the concerts).

But starting in autumn, Lipetz added a new routine to his morning schedule: baseball workouts.

That’s because he is a member of the Israeli baseball team that’s headed to the Tokyo Olympics, which started last week.

The chilled out, baritone-voiced 42-year-old with a mullet happens to also be a 6-foot-4 pitcher who has been known as a pioneer in Israeli baseball since his teenage years in Tel Aviv.

“Anyone who’s in the music business knows just how hardcore the job is. And I think I’m for sure living my dream,” he said on the phone from his office last month. “But I’m probably living other people’s dreams who wish they [weren’t] just stuck in an office. I’m able to do both.”

For people who are both music and sports fans, it does sound surreal – on a normal week, he interacts with music industry stars and insiders, and during international competition season, he plays against some of the best athletes from around the globe.

He’s popular in both worlds, too – Rhett Miller of the country band The Old 97’s and Peter Buck of R.E.M. (who plays in a side supergroup band called The Baseball Project) tell Lipetz that he’s often the topic of conversation in a group text about baseball that they have with other well-known musicians. He also gets free vinyl from many of his musician friends, and in return, he sometimes gives back signed baseballs – they’ve been in high demand.

In Arizona, Team Israel player Ty Kelly – whose locker is normally next to Lipetz’s because their numbers are close to each other – turned to Lipetz (and the team’s few other Israel-born players) for insight into the recent violent Israel-Gaza conflict, which unfolded while the team was at training camp.

Keeping both gigs has meant a little less sleep than usual for Lipetz and some extra coffee. His typical morning from November until May became: coffee at 06:15, an hour drive north of the city to a baseball facility in Pleasantville, a 90-minute workout, a drive back to Brooklyn, a quick stop to change clothes, then a walk to the train. Some nights he would continue his workouts after finishing a day of work at about 20:00.

An intense competitive drive pushes him through it all, he says.

“I just get into my own kind of baseball world, I don’t check my phone. I just like competitiveness,” he said. “I mean, I’ll wake up at six o’clock in the morning, have a crazy, crazy week, and it doesn’t matter – I’ll wake up early, and go play a baseball game, a doubleheader in, you know, 100 degree [37C] weather, just because I love it. It’s just this really purifying experience for me.”

Lipetz isn’t the only multitasker on the team. The Wall Street Journal recently profiled Eric Brodkowitz, a Yale graduate who has been able to keep working remotely as an analyst for Goldman Sachs. Many of the other players are current or former American minor leaguers who have earned Israeli citizenship in order to represent the country and keep their professional careers going. The team’s trainer recently described the squad as “a combination of the Bad News Bears and the Jamaican Bobsledding Team”.

But in spite of the fact that baseball isn’t a popular sport in Israel, the team has a chance of winning a medal in Tokyo. Only six teams are competing in the sport, which hasn’t been played at the Olympics since 2008. And Team Israel has impressed the baseball world in recent years, placing a surprise sixth out of 16 teams in the 2017 World Baseball Classic. They are led currently by former major league All-Star Ian Kinsler and Danny Valencia, a former MLB infielder with 96 career home runs.

These days, the Israel Baseball Association, with funding from the non-profit Jewish National Fund-USA, is deep into an effort to popularise the sport in the Jewish state, starting with building multiple baseball fields. IBA President Peter Kurz, a Mets fan and American expat who has lived in Israel for more than three decades, wants the fields being constructed in the central Israeli city of Beit Shemesh to host winter leagues in the near future, similar to those organised in Latin American countries, Florida, and other warm places where professional players go to hone their skills during the MLB offseason.

Kurz thinks winning a medal in Tokyo would open Israelis’ eyes to the possibilities of baseball. It excites Lipetz, but he has some complicated feelings about his home country, in particular regarding its government and its views on diversity.

“I’m not a nationalist. You know, I think I’m very liberal in my thoughts. I wish we had an Arab Israeli on our team. And I wish we had an Ethiopian Israeli on the team,” he said. “For me, [Israel is] a mixed bag.

“But you’re representing a country that definitely fills me with pride, and you know, it reminds me in a sense of being part of something that’s bigger than you,” he added. “I love the country, and I’m proud to be representing Israel.”

He’s also proud to have the dual life that many dream about.

“I’m in this world where, you know, actors always want to be musicians, musicians want to be athletes, athletes always want to be something else,” he said. “So anyone in the industry, in the music industry that I work with, and especially the musicians, just absolutely love this.”

Then it was back to the emails.

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