UA catcher safe at new home

UA catcher safe at new home
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As a teenager, Arkansas catcher Kayla Green served as a parental figure for her two younger siblings while her mother battled substance abuse. (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Ben Goff) (

NWA Democrat-Gazette/BEN GOFF / Ben Goff)

Kayla Green has the typical scars of an SEC softball catcher. She has marks on her hands from the foul tips.

She's battled vision issues, the effects of two concussions caused by direct hits to her face mask.

At A Glance

KAYLA GREEN

AGE 21

POSITION Catcher

CLASS Junior

CHATTER A three-year starter at catcher. … As a freshman, had 12 doubles, 6 home runs and 26 RBI. Also had an 11-game hitting streak. … As a sophomore belted 5 home runs and led the team in walks with 24. … In a shortened junior campaign, batted .375 with 3 extra-base hits in just 23 games. … Named the SEC Player of the Week after going 6-for-9 in a February series. … Hit a walk-off solo home run on March 10 in a 1-0 win at Kansas in what proved to be the final game of the season.

She overcame the physical ailments to hit .375 to lead the No. 19 University of Arkansas (19-6) regulars during the 2020 season that was cut short by the coronavirus pandemic.

But the 21-year-old Green knows more about adversity than a few injuries can teach.

Her story is nothing that anyone would believe, how a barely teenage girl was forced to become the parental figure for two younger siblings after her mother Amy was placed in drug rehab along with her stepfather.

That's why it was understandable the budding softball star chose to leave her hometown of Temecula, Calif., to continue her career

"I wanted to go somewhere small, to a college town and where softball could be the center of attention," Green said.

Then she paused, as if to say about any place in the world might fit that description after what she went through.

Said Green: "I trusted my gut on Arkansas with my commitment -- and got out of California."

It was more of an escape than a commitment. Arkansas provided a respite from a bizarre set of circumstances.

"Oh, I think I do have plenty of [scars]," she said. "I think my first two years [at Arkansas], I probably did have mental issues. I probably swept them under the rug for a long time.

"I finally asked for and got help. That's what makes this place so special, that it's a place where everyone cares for you and tries to help you. Arkansas is not like California."

At the age of 13, she found herself raising her two younger siblings as her mother and stepfather battled -- and often lost -- to substance abuse. There was time served in prison for both.

"They were addicts and were in and out of rehab," she said. "The bills didn't get paid a lot of the time. You have to know that our house was close to the biggest casino in California. My mom was a user.

"I'd feed my brother and sister and get them off to school. Usually, there wasn't any food left for me. That's how little we had. I'd get to softball practice completely [hungry]. But I didn't care because softball was my one place I could forget about all of our problems and just lose myself in the game. I called it my happy place."

Green found solace in the red dirt. It was there that she also found a savior.

Brian Jendro had been the coach for Green's travel softball team, the So Cal Athletics, since she was 9. Jendro and his wife Nicole took in Kayla and her siblings, providing a stable living environment that the children desperately needed. She calls them mom and dad now.

It was also around this time that Green found her real mom living in an orange grove.

"She was homeless, living under a bush," Green said. "I took her to rehab. No child should ever have to do that, but I'm glad I did."

Green and her mother Amy have established a relationship since then. In fact, her biological mother recently surprised her with a trip to Fayetteville to celebrate her 21st birthday. It was a trip that Jendro applauded.

"I was so pleased her mom made the trip to Fayetteville," he said. "We are all so proud of what Kayla has accomplished. I wanted her real mom to see that."

Of course, Jendro and his wife -- and his other children -- get part of the credit, too.

"They are my parents, Brian and Nicole," Green said.

Brian Jendro said his family looks at Green the same way they do their other two children, Marley and Cody.

"Marley and Kayla were teammates since I started coaching them at age 9," Jendro said. "They weren't close and didn't hang out.

"So when we took Kayla in, we sat down and told them the options. They both started crying and said, 'Yes, absolutely.' "

The other option -- with the mother and stepfather in prison -- was for Green and her two biological siblings to go into foster care.

"They didn't want that to happen," Jendro said of his children. "It was an adjustment. But it worked out great.

"Kayla had basically been living on her own, raising her brother and sister. We took them all at first, but then the younger two went with some grandparents. Kayla stayed with us."

It wasn't an easy decision for Green, but eventually she was adopted.

"He was my coach and was hard on me, just real tough sometimes," she said. "I didn't know how that was going to work when we got home. But he kept coaching and being a dad separate. It was wonderful.

"I don't know where I'd be without Brian and Nicole."

Jendro admits his coaching methods were tough.

"I've always been hard on them when we are on the field," he said. "But at home, that wasn't me. I'm fun and I joke around. But because of the way I coached, I know she was hesitant to make the decision to come with us.

"It worked perfectly. There was never one issue. Kayla is just like my other two children. She is my daughter and I love them all. She knows that."

It was around the same time that Green became the target of many of the nation's top softball schools after batting .342 at Great Oak High School in 2016. Several of Jendro's top players picked Arkansas when Mike Larabee and Sue Carpenter were the coaches.

"I believe Kayla was 14," Jendro said. "She had probably 25 offers from all of the top schools. I decided I'd take her to see schools. I don't know that she'd moved in with us at that point, but I took her to Fayetteville."

It was love at first sight.

"We landed in Fayetteville," Jendro said, "and as soon as we got off the plane she said, 'This is where I'm going to school and I'm never going to leave.' And, that's how it's turned out."

Green committed to Larabee, but has played all three seasons for Coach Courtney Deifel. It has turned out to be a great learning experience. Like Green, Deifel was a freshman starter behind the plate at California, where she grew into an All-American and won two national championships.

Green plans to play two more years at Arkansas after the NCAA restored her junior year because of the pandemic.

"I'm going to get my masters, and I'll be 23 and I don't think I will leave," she said.

Her undergrad degree is in criminal justice and social work. She'll go for a masters in counseling.

"I've taken some courses in substance abuse [counseling], and I think that's what I want to do," she said. "It will probably seem like I've been here forever when I'm done, but these first three years have flown by.

"The things I've gone through are going to help me with what I want to do. There are things that no one should have to do -- like pull their mother from under an orange bush. But I did it. I can talk about it, and sometimes I can do it without crying.

"I know what the statistics say about what my chances were to make it through what I did. I beat the statistics."

Jendro knows that's true.

"What I see now is a mature young adult," Jendro said. "When I start them out as a coach, I tell them all my goal is that we learn about life. Yes, I teach them softball, but what I really want is from when they are 10 to 18 that they turn into strong independent women.

"That's all I care about. I want them to be able to handle any issue that comes their way."

Green struggled at the plate during her first two years at Arkansas, but some of it was related to the vision issues caused by concussions. After her sophomore year, eye doctors gave her some vision focus drills.

"That was crazy," she said. "But they definitely helped. What I found this year was that I could see [pitches] again. I didn't really understand those two years that it was the concussions causing my struggles.

"I talked to Brian about it, and he was kind of hard on me. I was hard on myself, too. Why couldn't I hit? Softball had always been my happy place, and now I was struggling."

Jendro recalls the phone calls.

"I just listened most of the time," he said. "She was too hard on herself. I got on her for that.

"I'd say, 'Hey, with what you've been through, you are going to let something on the field get you?' I just don't think she had ever struggled on the field before. She was surprised success wasn't easier."

Eventually, it all fell into place.

"I knew it would," Jendro said. "She is a very humble kid and had survived so much. Obviously, she is a lot more mature than most, and she is very skilled on the field. I told her to just keep working harder and that's what she did."

While her offense was a bit off her first two years at Arkansas, the defense was always spectacular. There was an obvious connection with pitcher Autumn Storms, a high school and summer league teammate from Great Oak in Temecula who was All-SEC last year.

"Autumn and I are more like sisters than teammates," Green said. "We didn't hang out growing up, but now we are inseparable. I guess I've played with her since middle school.

"I can talk to her in a way that no one else can, and she can do the same to me. My teammates say I speak a Storms language. I know what she's going to do next before she does it and she is the same with me."

The message is often the same.

"I'll tell her to stop thinking and just do," Green said. "She'll tell me the same thing."

Arkansas had won a game at No. 9 Alabama this season. And, there was a doubleheader sweep of Kansas with Green hitting a walk-off home run for a 1-0 victory in the nightcap March 10.

That was the final pitch of the season.

Now there's no softball, and hardly anything else.

"I take a daily walk with two dogs," said Green, who is in Fayetteville. "That's all there is. I keep saying this is good preparation for my next stage in life, when college is over and there is no more softball for me.

"I'm bored out of my mind. I've got a broomstick that I pretend is a bar with weights, and I put it behind my shoulders. [Sophomore outfielder] Sam Torres and I have thrown a little. But for the most part, softball has been completely taken away. It sucks."

It's not the worst thing to ever happen. Green knows that.

"No, this isn't like having to take care of your siblings," she said. "You learn who you are and what you can do pretty quickly.

"I kind of laugh when some of the freshmen get to school and they've never washed their own clothes before. No, this is pretty easy. I learned to do for myself. There was a time when I was about 7 when we lived in such a bad area that my mom had to walk me to school. I could hear gun shots. It was just tough.

"I wouldn't call where I lived a home. It was just a place to sleep. I can remember charging my phone in a car because there was no electricity because the bills were not paid. There was no TV. I had to grow up."

She's thankful for everything she's got now.

"I committed to the previous coaches," she said. "I didn't know what was going to happen, but Courtney Deifel welcomed me and is like another mom. She took a chance. I guess she saw something in me, like Brian and Nicole did. I can't repay them enough.

"I absolutely love it here. You can ask for help and you are going to get it."

Sports on 05/17/2020

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