
Episode 20 - Donny Hale
Beyond the Dugout PodcastEpisode Notes
Welcome everyone to Beyond The Dugout Episode 20 with Softball New Zealand’s legendary Slugger Donny Hale 28th August 2021.
Tonight’s episode is an exclusive to first announce Donny’s Hales induction to the SNZ Hall of Fame!! This episode is more like a version of this is your life…. With a bunch of surprises for Donny as we go along. We hope you all enjoy Donny’s story as he has dazzled fans all over the world with his Massive home runs!!
For 20 years, the ‘Halestorm’ - three-time Black Sox world champion Donny Hale - was of the most feared and respected softball sluggers in the world.
Donny – who is still playing professionally in Japan today in his mid-40s - drifted into softball as a youngster in Auckland after being star-struck watching New Zealand power hitters Ian Stringer and Murray McLean blasting home runs in a television game in the 1980s.
Drawn to Mt Roskill’s Fearon Park, Donny set the scene for a career as a hitter by slamming three homes in his first game as a 10-year-old.
Like a lot of other talented Black Sox athletes, he first made his mark for Auckland, and was selected as such for his Black Sox tour to North America in 1994.
There was a logjam of pitching talent in New Zealand then, and it took a couple of years for Donny to resurface in a Black Sox jersey.
The 1.95m all-rounder reinvented himself as a long ball hitter after initially adding 15kg in the gym to give him more speed on the mound.
“I decided that hitting the ball was more fun,’’ Donny said in Relentless, the book devoted to the Black Sox’s 2004 world championship title victory. “I wanted to be the guy who hit the home runs.’’
For the next 15 or so years, he was just that – a regular in the middle of a power-packed New Zealand batting unit collectively acclaimed as the best the game has seen.
Donny – who earned 110 Black Sox caps - went on to dominate pitchers in elite competitions in New Zealand, North America and Japan, winning titles everywhere he went.
For all his innate physical gifts, Donny was also renowned for being a student of the game, particularly the art of hitting a ball long and far. He talked at length with Mark Sorenson about the mental aspects of hitting and gleaned a lot of insights too from playing and coaching overseas.
At one point, Donny was even writing a regular column about batting for a Japanese softball magazine.
While power was Donny’s most obvious asset, former