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For professional baseball player CIUā€™s DBA is in the ā€œstrike zoneā€

Josh Lindblom plays in the Milwaukee Brewers organization. (Photo: Kirsten Schmitt/Milwaukee Brewers)

September 16, 2022

By Bob Holmes

It was a sharp ā€œcome-backerā€ to the mound that got thinking about his future beyond professional baseball. The hard-hit ball broke the pitcherā€™s shin bone.

ā€œThere I am rehabbing with a broken tibia, and just thinking, ā€˜if this were a serious injury, what would I do?ā€™ā€ said Lindblom who has made a living in professional baseball at the Major League and Minor League level, and has also played in Korea.

Today, Lindblom, Ģżwho is 35 years old and married with four children, plays for the , the AAA Minor League affiliate of the Major Leagueā€™s But he is preparing for life after baseball. He is a student in ŠĒæÕĪŽĻŽ“«Ć½ā€™s new Doctor of Business Administration (DBA) program. Lindblom says the fully online program is perfect for the unique schedule of professional baseball where a game is played almost every day from March through September and, if your team makes the playoffs, into October.

ā€œI get to the field about two or three (oā€™clock) in the afternoon, and I get home at 11 at night, so I have all morning to work ā€” read and write and research ā€” itā€™s very conducive,ā€ said Lindblom, who also earned undergraduate and graduate degrees online. ā€œThatā€™s what I realized very early on in my career ā€” that Iā€™ve got all this time that Iā€™m wasting. I might as well utilize it.ā€

Lindblom was drafted into the Major Leagues in 2008 while a junior at Purdue University and threw his first Big League pitch with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2011. He has played for a total of six Major League teams over seven seasons. Along the way he earned his bachelorā€™s degree from Indiana Wesleyan and masterā€™s degree from Grace School of Theology in Texas, both in Biblical Studies. He hopes to focus his DBA on bringing the Bible and Business together to help other athletes.

ā€œI recognized early on that baseball was not going to be forever and there is a bridge that every athlete has to walk across when their career is over. I want to help athletes shorten that bridge,ā€ Lindblom said. ā€œSo, when their career is over, itā€™s not going to be a Golden Gate-sized bridge, it might be a little hop over a stream.ā€

A big attraction to CIUā€™s DBA for Lindblom is the programā€™s strong emphasis on mentorship, guiding each student through their doctoral project.

ā€œI can trust their advice, and their mentorship and their guidance along the way,ā€ Lindblom said. ā€œItā€™s people who care about your heart and passions.ā€

And thatā€™s a good feeling for a pitcher who can sometimes feel alone on the mound with the game on his shoulders. Lindblom describes that first Major League appearance with the Dodgers and the public address announcer booming out his name.

ā€œAbout four pitches later I had runners and second and third with nobody out,ā€ Lindblom recalls with a chuckle. ā€œI ended up getting out of it, so that was nice, but thatā€™s not the way you draw out your first four pitches in the Big Leagues.ā€

Fortunately for Lindblom, when he gets in a jam working on his DBA, heā€™ll get relief.Ģż

ā€œFeeling supported along the way is a primary reason that I chose CIU.ā€

Details on theĢżDBAĢżand CIUā€™s other accredited online degrees are atĢżciu.edu/online-degrees. See Dr. Kevin Jones, the dean of CIU Global, discuss the DBA on theĢżprogram on WIS TV with hostĢż.Ģżor request information on enrollment by contacting Admissions at (803) 807-5024 orĢżadmissions@ciu.edu.ĢżĢżĢż

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