Revisiting Robby Snelling's football, baseball prep career ahead of MLB debut

Robby Snelling is set to make his Major League debutfor the Miami Marlins on Friday, May 8.

USA TODAY

The left-handed starting pitcher is ranked as the No. 32 overall prospect in baseball,according to MLB Pipeline, and the No. 2 prospect in the Marlins' farm system. Snelling, 22, was traded to Miami on July 30, 2024, in a package with three other prospects for left-handed reliever Tanner Scott.

Snelling has rebuilt his value as part of the Marlins' organization, posting a 1.86 ERA (second lowest in the International League) with 44 strikeouts (tied for the second most) in six starts this season for the Marlins' Triple-A affiliate, Jacksonville.

However, before Snelling became a baseball prospect, he was also a standout linebacker for his high school, Reno McQueen High, in Reno, Nevada.

Here's a look back at his high school career, which almost led to a commitment as a two-sport star in a major conference:

Robby Snelling, baseball star

McQueen's Robby Snelling is seen pitching against Spanish Springs during their game on April 26, 2022.

Snelling's talent as a baseball player was always evident, excelling as a two-way star in the sport. As a senior, heearned Gatorade Nevada Baseball Player of the Yearhonors in 2022, after finishing with an 8-0 record record and a 0.56 ERA.

He set the single-season Nevada state strikeouts record with 146. He also struck out 20 hitters in a seven-inning game, giving him the state single-game record. At the plate, he hit for a .450 batting average and showed off hispower with 21 home runs at the 2021 All-Star High School Home Run Derbyat Coors Field in Denver. He also hit 94 mph on the radar on the mound.

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Snelling originally committed to Stanford for baseball in 2019, shortly after his freshman season in high school. He, however, de-committed from the Cardinal in 2021, as his football recruitment picked up.

He committed to playing both baseball and football at Arizona, but decommitted when Jay Johnson took the head baseball coaching position at LSU. Snelling eventually signed with LSU and Johnson, who first offered him when he was a seventh grader.

Snelling never made it to campus in Baton Rouge, as the San Diego Padres drafted him with the 39th overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft. He signed a $3 million contract with the organization.

Robby Snelling, star linebacker

Even with the success in baseball, Snelling was a star on the football field as well. In addition to playing linebacker, he was also the starting quarterback for Reno Queens as a senior, helping lead his team to the NIAA 5A State Championship game.

According to 247 Sports Composite rankings, Snelling was a four-star linebacker in the 2022 recruiting cycle. He was ranked No. 311 overall in the country, No. 31 at linebacker, and No. 7 overall in the state.

Snelling had over 20 offers from Division I schools to play football, including Oregon, Arizona, Auburn, and Arizona State.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Robby Snelling's journey from two-sport high school star to MLB debut

Revisiting Robby Snelling's football, baseball prep career ahead of MLB debut

Robby Snelling is set to make his Major League debutfor the Miami Marlins on Friday, May 8. The left-handed starting pitcher is ra...
Stephen Colbert Names ‘White Whale’ Guest He Wants on The Late Show

Late-night hosts have long pursued guests who seem unattainable, figures whose presence alone could transform a show. AsThe Late Shownears its end,Stephen Colbertshared his own take on that chase in a recentinterview. The beloved host revealed thatPope Leosits at the very top of his personal guest wish list, calling him his ultimate “white whale.”

RealityTea Stephen Colbert Names ‘White Whale’ Guest He Wants on The Late Show

Stephen Colbert reveals the guest he wants to interview on The Late Show

Stephen Colbert has shared the name at the top of his Late Show guest wishlist, the interview he wants most before the curtain falls.

In a new interview withThe Hollywood Reporter,the comedian reflected on the upcoming end of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. Colbert shared that he hopes Pope Leo XIV will join him on air before the show ends its run on CBS on May 21.

“The pope is my white whale,” Colbert, an outspoken Catholic, shared in the interview. “I wrote him. I said, ‘Come on!’ No, I said, ‘Your Holiness, I hope this letter finds you well or, at the very least, infallible. Would you please come on my show? We don’t have to talk about politics,'” he added.

Stephen Colbert noted that keeping politics off the table might entice the Chicago-born pope to visit The Late Show.

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“I didn’t really think he’d want to talk about politics or anything like that,” he continued. “Little did I know that the guy could throw a punch [as he recently proved, feuding with Trump over the Iran war]. I said, ‘Let’s talk about being an American Catholic,'” Colbert shared.

President Donald Trump also attacked the pope onTruth Social. In the post, he labeled the pontiff weak on crime and disastrous for foreign policy.

Stephen Colbert also joked he would feel personally betrayed if Pope Leo appeared on a rival late-night show instead. He quipped that he might even reconsider his Catholic faith for Presbyterianism if the pope chose Jimmy Kimmel.

Originally reported by Sibanee Gogoi forMandatory.

The postStephen Colbert Names ‘White Whale’ Guest He Wants on The Late Showappeared first onReality Tea.

Stephen Colbert Names ‘White Whale’ Guest He Wants on The Late Show

Late-night hosts have long pursued guests who seem unattainable, figures whose presence alone could transform a show. AsThe Late Showne...
6 Shipwrecked Teenagers Survived on a Deserted Island for 15 Months. Inside the Real-Life “Lord of the Flies”

William Golding wrote Lord of the Flies in 1954 after being inspired by another book

People The six Tongan castaways in 1966Credit: John Carnemolla

NEED TO KNOW

  • Almost 10 years later, in a situation very similar to Lord of the Flies, six Tongan boys were on a boat when a storm destroyed it and sent them drifting to a deserted island

  • The group worked together to survive for 15 months before they were eventually rescued

Lord of the Flies, written byWilliam Golding, has remained a classic novel since its debut in 1954.

The fiction book follows a group of young British boys who are the only survivors of a plane crash on an isolated island. Soon, a small, older group of boys — Ralph, Piggy, Jack, Simon and Roger — attempt to lead the group.

However, the island dynamics eventually descend into chaos, with the boys turning on each other and desperately trying to survive and govern the younger children.

Around a decade after the book was published, a remarkably similar disaster occurred involving a group of six Tongan teenagers who crashed onto a deserted island and survived for 15 months until their rescue.

Unlike the book, the Tongan teenagers agreed to coexist with each other as respectfully as possible and worked together to stay alive. After surviving for 15 months, the boys were eventually rescued by Australian fishermanCaptain Peter Warnerin 1966.

Thefirst series based onLord of the Flieshit Netflix on May 4.

Here's everything to know about the real-lifeLord of the Flies.

WasLord of the Fliesbased on a true story?

'Lord of the Flies' season 1Credit: J Redza/Eleven/Sony Pictures Television

Golding published his first novel,Lord of the Flies, in 1954, but it was not based on a true story. Although his novel was purely fiction, Golding took inspiration from other stories and firsthand experiences he had as a former member of the military.

Golding specifically referenced the 1857 novelThe Coral Islandby R.M. Ballantyne that told the story of three boys who survived on a deserted island after their ship wrecked.

However, Golding — who was also a philosophy teacher — didn't totally buy into the idea of the three boys cohesively working together and living cordially under the circumstances, perBBC.

"Wouldn't it be a good idea if I wrote a book about children on an island, children who behave in the way children really would behave?" he wondered while thinking ofThe Coral Islandand how his book would be different, according toYale University.

How did a group of Tongan boys get similarly stranded?

The Tongan castaways pictured in 1966Credit: John Carnemolla

Eleven years afterLord of the Flieswas published, a group of six boys from Tonga found themselves in a near-identical situation.

In June 1965, the six Tongan teenagers — ranging in ages from 13 to 18 — were attending St. Andrew's Anglican boarding school on the island of Tongatapu when they "borrowed" a boat in an attempt to sail to New Zealand.

However, a storm took out their vessel on the first night, and the boys survived for eight days "with no food, no rain to drink," until their boat drifted to shore, survivor Sione 'Ulufonua Fataua told PEOPLE in 2020.

The six boys — Tevita Siola'a, Kolo Fekitoa, Mano Totau, Luke Veikoso, Fatai Latu and Sione — eventually found themselves on the remote, deserted island of 'Ata in the South Pacific.

"We were thankful God gave us the island to survive," Sione recalled.

What did the Tongan boys do after they crashed?

Two of the Tongan castaways in 1966Credit: John Carnemolla

As soon as the group arrived on the island, they made a pact to live together just as they had been raised in their families.

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"We all come from close and poor families where, whatever you get, you share," Sione explained to PEOPLE. "If anybody had something they didn't like, they talked about it and we say 'Sorry' and then pray and everything's okay. If someone got really mad — like, if I planned something and they didn't do it — you disappear for a few hours, look at the ocean and clear it out of your mind."

Together, the teenagers agreed to a strict set of rules revolving around food, hunting, gardening and tending to a permanent fire (that stayed ablaze for over a year). The six of them divided into three teams of two to work each day, hunting and gathering everything they needed to survive.

Their luck also turned around when they climbed a 700-ft. cliff and discovered ruins from people who had lived there a century ago, who left behind pools of fresh water, bananas and chickens.

“We tried to live happy. We were good friends, and we shared everything,” Sione recalled.

In addition to ensuring they had all their daily necessities, the boys also prioritized praying twice a day, kept their spirits high with music from a homemade guitar and enjoyed playing makeshift sports, perTheGuardian.

"The boys had set up a small commune with food garden, hollowed-out tree trunks to store rainwater, a gymnasium with curious weights, a badminton court, chicken pens and a permanent fire, all from handiwork, an old knife blade and much determination," Captain Warner wrote in his 2016 memoir,Ocean of Light: 30 Years in Tonga and the Pacific.

How were the Tongan boys rescued?

Peter Warner with the six Tongan castaways in 1968Credit: Golding/Fairfax Media/Getty

On Sept. 11, 1966, Australian sailor and fisherman Warner was driving a fishing boat back to Australia when he passed 'Ata and noticed that parts of the grass were burnt.

Around the same time, he heard someone yelling and eventually saw boys running and swimming toward him and begging for help. Warner radioed out, inquiring if any boys had been reported missing.

“Twenty minutes later, the operator came back and, through tears, said, ‘It's a miracle! These boys were given up for dead. Funerals were held, and now you've found them,' " Warner recalled.

The Captain rescued the boys and brought them home for medical attention.

Where are the Tongan survivors now?

The six Tongan castawaysCredit: John Carnemolla

Despite their harrowing efforts of survival, the boys spent a week in jail for stealing the boat from their school. However, Warner paid for them to get released, while also leveraging a TV deal with a local channel in Sydney.

The boys were released from custody and finally returned home to their families. While they finished school, Warner bought a new boat — which he named 'Ata — and hired all of them to be his crew members. Warner remained close to several of the boys, who called him a "father figure," up until his death in April 2021.

Veikoso pursued a career in boxing and eventually moved to the U.S. After the death of his wife, he moved in with Sione in Oakland, Calif., in 2018. He died in May 2022, per anobituary. Latu (also known as Stephen) and Fekitoa have also both died.

As of 2020, Sione was the head pastor for the Church of Tonga and its 16 U.S. congregations.

"I always say that God kept me alive, so I'll work for Him for the rest of my life," Sione told PEOPLE in 2020. "Luke and I sit around drinking kava and singing that song from the island."

Sione and Luke kept in touch with Mano and Tevita, who both live in New Zealand. The four of them have pursued movie deals to share their story.

“If people today had the mindset of the ‘6 Tongan Castaways'— if we all help each other, not be greedy, care for each other — we can all survive what is happening in the world," Sione shared.

Read the original article onPeople

6 Shipwrecked Teenagers Survived on a Deserted Island for 15 Months. Inside the Real-Life “Lord of the Flies”

William Golding wrote Lord of the Flies in 1954 after being inspired by another book NEED TO KNOW Almost 10 years...

 

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