Spring Training is usually serious. Players focus on building strength and getting ready for the long MLB season. Pitchers work on control. Hitters work on timing. Coaches study every detail as roster spots are decided. But inside the Boston Red Sox clubhouse this week, things felt different. For a few minutes, baseball took a back seat to laughter.Instead of drills and scouting reports, players gathered for a team presentation. Young left-handed pitcher Payton Tolle had been given a simple task by manager Alex Cora. He was asked to prepare a presentation about Team USA. What sounded like basic homework quickly turned into one of the funniest moments of camp.
Payton Tolle’s Team USA presentation takes an unexpected turn with bold humor and a special video from Joey Chestnut
Cora gave Tolle about a week to prepare the presentation. It needed slides and some real effort. Tolle decided he would not make it boring. He worked on it at night after dinner, building the slides little by little and putting together a short script.“It was a process. I was joking around, ‘I don’t think I’ve worked that hard on a presentation, other than maybe in middle school.’ It was fun,” said Tolle. The final presentation lasted about 10 minutes. At first, it felt like a normal school project. Tolle stood in front of his teammates and went through important moments in American history. Then he added something no one expected.Tolle reached out to competitive eating legend Joey Chestnut and asked him to send a video message. Chestnut agreed and recorded a clip talking about hot dogs and Fourth of July traditions. The video was played during the presentation and quickly became a highlight.“He didn’t, but he sure talked about them,” Tolle said. “It was pretty electric.” As the presentation built toward its biggest moment, Tolle raised the energy in the room. He introduced Chestnut as the “sultan of sausage.” Then he took things even further. He removed his shirt and revealed “USA” shaved into his chest hair. The clubhouse erupted in laughter.Cora appreciated both the effort and the creativity. “He was awesome,” Cora said. “It’s what he’s all about, right? I mean, you’re here for two months. And trust me, there’s certain days that I’m like, ‘Man, what are we going to do today?’ So we decided a few days ago that he was going to give us a lesson on the United States of America. And he did a good job. I was like, ‘He’s gonna kill it.’”Pitcher Garrett Crochet watched part of the presentation before focusing on his own outing. “Nothing that I didn’t already know. I learned a lot about Tolle though,” Crochet said. “He’s a character.”In the middle of a long Spring Training schedule, Tolle gave his teammates something important. He gave them a reason to laugh and a moment they will likely remember well beyond camp.